Tag Archives: Ben Rowe

2023 Media Day for the Oxford 250

(Oxford ME) If the weather will only be this nice on Sunday!

Sunny, with a breeze and temperatures in the low 70s.

This afternoon (Wednesday) was Media Day leading up to the 50th running of the Oxford 250 on Sunday.

Track owner Tom Mayberry hosted the event. 

Opportunity was given afterwards to interviews drivers. 

I spent time with eight of them and appreciated their cooperation.

Instead of trying to summarize what they said, I have chosen to quote them verbatim as closely as I can off my digital recorder. 

This approach does leave you, the reader, unaware of the exact question I asked to get the response I’ve posted. I’m guessing, however, that OPS fans will figure that part out without any help from me.

Johnny Clark – “Hindsight is 20-20. At the time the place was really a one-groove track. I committed going down the backstretch to where I was going, and it just didn’t work out.  But, that was a year ago.  We can’t play that anymore in our heads.  We have just moved past it.  There has been no interaction with the winner.  We haven’t spoke, and probably won’t.  Don’t need to.  Trouble won’t happen. I can’t guarantee what could happen on the track.  That’s not going to happen on our end. 

We’ve done so bad over here lately. I think we’ve exhausted all the things we wanted to try and have gone back to the basics here for the weekend.  We’ve been so good at White Mountain this year.  Oxford alone hasn’t changed that much.  The same people that typically have been running good, are running good.  We’re going to flip back the notebook a few years.  We’re going back to the 250 notebook continuously to find more speed and comfort.  Boy, I’ve failed at that recently here in the four times I’ve raced here.  Last year we were in contention, obviously won it in 2020.  We’ve been competitive the last eight years.  We’ve either led laps or been in the top five.  We just want to give ourselves a legitimate shot. 

I shouldn’t have lifted behind the lap car.  I thought that the lap car was going in a different direction.  He surprised me.  We were fortunate to spin it out and keep moving.  The caution flew and the field was frozen, and we were moving forward and that’s why we restarted where we did.  We came home fourth and were lucky it was a DNF. 

Hopefully, with the weather the owner can salvage Saturday and Sunday.”

DJ Shaw – “It’s been a lot of years of close and just off on the pit strategy or one wrong move in traffic.  There’s been so many years that I’ve made mistakes behind the wheel.  We’ve had cars to contend and no one ever knew it because of things I did. 

We’re off a little bit in general.  I would say that here (OPS) we’ve been above average for us.  We’re not winning races but we’re in the top six or so every time out.  We have good momentum but not winning momentum. 

Last year we won the race leading up to this one.  We jumped ship on our strategy too soon I think.  We ran near (Cole) Butcher the whole race.  I wasn’t getting the track position I wanted. We took four tires first to get the track position we wanted and then took two at the end when everyone was taking four and hung on for 8th.  We knew that it was a move that would cost us a chance at a win, but it gave us a chance for a good finish.” 

Dave Farrington – “2020 was our closest chance.  We were chasing Johnny (Clark) down with about 25 laps to go.  We caught him in lap traffic and then the caution came out.  We restarted on the outside and lost it pretty much on that restart.  We finished 4th there and 6th in 2012. 

The crew comes together on race day.  Everyone has their assigned task to execute, and they do a heck of a job.  We raced close to 200 at Wiscasset this year.  We were the first ones off pit road.  We beat Mike Hopkins and all those guys.  It’s a group of guys who get together for one day and get the job done.  My crew is experienced.  They make it happen.” 

Gabe Brown – “We were lucky to get where we did.  We had a good car but went down two laps early.  We want to stay on strategy this year and have a chance at the end.  If we can stay on strategy we might have a chance at the end.  It was definitely good for us that this was a long race.  We struggled to qualify and had trouble in the first 20 laps of the race.  We were two laps down.  We had a good enough car to be up front.  We just needed to get there.  We hope to start up front and stay up front.  To go from two laps down to finishing third was something.  It sucked being that close to the win at the end of the race but before that we had never been that close.” 

Kate Re – “I would love to have this weather on Sunday, not too hot, not too cold.  The rain can really change the track.  I’m just here to put my helmet on like everyone else.  When it comes to the Oxford 250, I want to be known as just another driver.  I don’t want to be singled out because I’m a female up there.  We’ll start by trying to race our way in and go from there.  This track is greasy with not a lot of grip.  You’re constantly turning so it’s not like your normal Thompson with a long straightaway and tight corners.  You’re constantly turning.  Passing is hard with the lack of grip.  I would not be tempted to ride up on the high side.  I like the fourth groove out there.” 

Mike Rowe – “I think I’ve missed two or three of them out of the fifty.  We hope to draw a good number and start up front this Sunday.  We won here two or three weeks ago.  The cars are so close.  It’s hard to move up.  It’s no cakewalk.  You have to have everything going good for you.  You have to have a good pit crew and sponsors to make this thing happen.  The memory that sticks out is winning here for the first time.  To be the first Mainer to win this was awesome.  Tom Mayberry and his crew have done a tremendous job on the track.  They’ve done pit row over.  The place looks awesome. 

It’s great to have Ben in the race.  You look out for each other.  He won’t be getting by me if I can help it, however.” 

Joe Pastore – “I was racing for a different team last year.  We put 80 or so laps and yellow came out with 160 laps down.  I said, ‘Why don’t we come in and pit for fuel,’ and they said ‘no, we’ve got to make it to 180 and then come in and put 4 tires on.’  We were the 180 yellow.  We never made it.  We had a great car too all day.  I think we had a chance to win it if we’d pitted and got fuel.  You never know.  There were a bunch of yellows and all that running around on yellow led to our running out of fuel.  That was a bad way to give up a chance to win.  I wish there had been a dial to signal empty but there wasn’t.  We won’t do that this year.  Maybe we’ll have full tank at the end!

It should be a great race.  I’m racing for a new team.  This year we were second here in points for a while and have fallen back to fifth.  We ended up winning the big 100-lap race here.” 

Ben Rowe – “We’ve raced each other for years.  He’s not going to let me by very easily.  The other drivers here will tell you, he’s probably the hardest one to get around.  I don’t expect him to give me a break.  He’s got a separate car, crew, and sponsors.  He’s got his own deal and I’ve got mine.  We race each other clean.  We never rough each other up.  The first year I won, we both started on the pole.  That’s something you don’t even dream of.  I grew up in these stands him bringing me since I was a little kid.  This is all we know.  Other than work, this is what we do. 

The car this year has been good.  It’s a matter of starting up front.  Last time up we started up front, paced ourselves, and were able to go at the end and stay ahead of Max (Cookson). 

You can’t win this thing in the first fifty laps, but you can lose it.  You don’t want to get tore up.  You want to stay out of trouble.  You want to have a boring race until halfway and then start positioning yourself and get yourself right for the end.  They say there will be 62 drivers and I say that at least 35 of them have a chance to win.”

Well, there you have it.  Interesting things in there.

I can’t resist trying to predict the outcome. 

Last year I guessed that it would be one of the Clark’s and that looked like an awfully good choice until things unraveled with eight laps left.

This year I’m going with DJ Shaw.  He’s been close and he seems, to me, to be extremely well prepared.  He knows what to do, but can he manage the variables that are bound to come on a small track, with so many cars, for a long distance?  I say he gets it done on Sunday.

See you at the race.

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Oxford Plains Speedway Media Day

Curt Geary, Mike Rowe, Derek Griffith, DJ Shaw, and Garrett Hall

(Oxford ME) Optimism and uncertainty abounded.

Today was Media Day for Sunday’s 46th running of the Oxford 250.

The Honey Badger Bar & Grill setting had five drivers; Curt Geary, Mike Rowe, Derek Griffith, DJ Shaw, and Garrett Hall on hand.  Ben Rowe arrived later.

Mike Rowe

“At my age (69) I’m still excited about the 250,” said 3-time winner Mike Rowe.  “A lot of drivers have a chance to win it.  You can’t make any mistakes.”

“If I wasn’t the winner, I’d want my old man to win,” said Ben (2-time winner) with a smile.

Ben took a second at Oxford in July and he was quoted as saying that “it felt like a win.”  Makes sense when you realize that in Ben’s previous twelve starts at Oxford Plains Speedway his best showing was one fourth.

“It eats at you when you haven’t won a race in a while,” recalled Ben.  “You ask yourself, ‘Did I forget how to do this?’, and ‘Did I forget all I know?”

Ben won the Oxford 250 in 2003-04.  “I got stagnant because we were ahead of everyone else, but they caught up.  It has taken us this long to get back on top.”

Derek Griffith

Young Derek Griffith (22) watched the race the first time he saw it.  “We came over (from New Hampshire) and didn’t make it in.  I was real young.  It broke us down a bit.  We ended up sitting in the backstretch stands.  It was a cool show.”

Derek sounded like an OPS 250 promoter as he discussed the event: “There is nothing like this race.  It’s crazy watching 41 cars drive around the OPS.  Anyone can win.  The amount of talent and good cars that are here for this weekend is amazing.  People that come for the first time will come back for the rest of their lives.”

Derek has won races this year in Maine, Vermont, and New Hampshire.

Last year was Garrett Hall’s first try at the Oxford 250. He finished fourth.

Garrett Hall

Despite Garrett’s success in 2017 his lack of experience in the big race is causing him some anxious moments: “I’m losing sleep.  There are so many different factors that run through your mind.  It’s stressful.  It’s not a race that is easy to get ready for.”

One of the biggest struggles includes the length of the race and the infield pit stop that is required.  None of the other races that these drivers run in have the length and that pit-stop requirement.  Not only does the driver have to be on his game but his crew needs to as well.

One driver, however, who is familiar with all this is last year’s winner, Bubba Pollard.  “Bubba is used to running and winning long races (All-American 400, Rattler 250) and has a crew in place that knows what to do,” added Ben Rowe.

Even though Bubba could handle the quirks of a long race, he came in (from Georgia) last year totally unfamiliar with Oxford Plains Speedway.  “What Bubba did last year was impressive.  Some good drivers have raced here for years and never won.  He comes in for the week and wins it!”

Bubba will be in the field on Sunday.  He would seem to be the driver to beat.  “I liked Bubba to win it last year,” said Ben, “even though he had never seen Oxford.  We tested Beech Ridge with him and then we came over to Oxford.  I knew right off the bat that he’s that good.”

Curt Geary

Based on this season’s results at OPS, the 250 favorites would be Curt Geary and Nick Sweet.  Nick has been very good lately at the track while Curt had been good all year.  Curt won the 250 in 2017.

“The race is unique,” added Derek Griffith.  “At times it’s four and five wide.  You get guys that can start dead last in the consolations and win this thing.  That’s what Mike Rowe did in 2005.”

Derek wanted the race to start right away.  “I’m ready to go.  The campers are rolling in and the parking lot is filling up.  I wish we were here with a truck and trailer today!”

I asked Derek if he had any superstitions: “I got a new race suit the end of 2017 and every time I wore it, I got wrecked.  I’ve been wearing my old suit for the majority of this year and we’ve had a good year.”

Garrett Hall gave even more detail to his race-day superstitions.  “I am very superstitious: the racing suit, socks, even underwear.  Can’t bring a grill to the track.  No hamburgers or cheeseburgers….and there’s even more!”

The race should certainly be an exciting one with so many intangibles and so many terrific drivers/cars on the track.

Who will be standing near the $25,000 check on Sunday night?

 

 

 

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Filed under Oxford, Oxford 250, Oxford Plains Speedway