By 5 p.m. Friday, more
than 85 race teams had unloaded in the Martinsville infield in preparation for
Sunday’s Virginia is for Racing Lovers 300. That number was expected to top 90
by Saturday morning. Saturday will be a full day for teams and NASCAR
officials, with cars beginning technical inspection at 6:30 a.m. and practice
starting at 1 p.m. Race-day action will begin at noon on Sunday.
The race pays $25,000 to
win and has attracted the top drivers from Virginia and the Carolinas, as well
as from a dozen other states, including Montana and Oklahoma. This year’s award
for greatest distance traveled goes to Brodie Kostecki from Perth, Australia.
Several former
winners are entered in the field including three-time winner Philip Morris, who
won last year, two-time defending national champion Lee Pulliam, who captured
the event in 2012, Timothy Peters, Dennis Setzer and Alex Yontz.
Danville, Va. Native Peyton
Sellers appears to be in the driver’s seat for the 2013 Virginia Late Model
Triple Crown championship, a season-long battle for bragging rights in the
Commonwealth that pays $5,000 to the winner. The second-place finisher will
claim $3,000 and third place will pay $1,500. Three races make up the Triple
Crown: the Fourth of July race at South Boston Speedway, the Hampton Heat 200
at Langley Speedway in mid-summer and this weekend’s Virginia is for Racing
Lovers 300. Points are awarded to drivers in each event based on their finish.
Sellers comes into this
weekend’s Triple Crown finale with a 25-point lead over Peters and a 34-point
lead over Pulliam. Sellers won the Langley event, while Pulliam won at South
Boston.
The $25,000 first-place
money for Sunday’s race is the biggest in NASCAR Late Model racing. That payoff
could grow substantially, however, if the race winner captures the Triple
Crown, wins the Sparks Sunoco Qualifying Award (which pays $1,000) and the
$2,000 Clarence’s Steakhouse Half-Way Award. That would mean a whopping $33,000
payday, the biggest ever for a Late Model winner at Martinsville.
That record is currently
held by David Hyder, who pocketed $27,000 in 1997 when he won the race and the
pole.
Action kicks off for the
Virginia is for Racing Lovers 300 on Saturday with inspection beginning at 6:30
a.m. Cars will begin practice at 1 p.m. Speeds from the final hour of practice,
4 p.m. to 5 p.m., will be used to set the fields for Sunday’s heat races. There
will be an autograph session on the front stretch at 10 a.m. Sunday.
The first of the four
20-lap heat races begin at noon Sunday, followed by the 20-lap Last Chance Race.
The 200-lap feature should begin around 3:30 p.m. Tickets are only $25 with
youth 12 and under admitted free.
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