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2002 |
Sisters
racers run at Portland track Central Oregon's
own Bech's Big Bore Bad Boys, raced through the weekend at the Portland
International Speedway.
The race on Sunday was hard
fought between Bill Cotter of Seattle and Art Brumton of Clovedale, British
Columbia, each driving Corvettes with 427 cubic inch engines in a field
of 26 race cars.
Brumton held the lead at the
first lap, but Cotter got by him going into the turn one, a tight right
hand at the end of the main straight.
The two exchanged the lead
several times, but Brumton locked up his brakes going into turn one about
10 minutes into the main event, then cooked his tires trying to catch
up.
Brumton eventually took fifth,
behind the '64 Corvette of Bruce Leven of Hobart, Washington, Jim Hague
of Santa Clara, California driving a Shelby GT and Steve MacDonald of
Woodinville, Washington in a '67 Chevy Camaro.
Jerry Taylor of Sisters fought
off Jim Santimaw of Sunriver for 12th place. Taylor drove what he later
described as his best race ever in a '67 Camaro that ran in Trans Am races
in the early 1970s.
Curt Kallberg and Eric Dolson
were unable to complete the weekend races due to mechanical problems.
It would have been Kallberg's
first official race in his 1971 Can-Am McLaren. The wheels on the McLaren
fractured in Friday's warm-ups. Kallberg's 1967 Corvette had undetermined
engine problems.
Dolson pulled his 1969 Corvette
after incurring the same oil pressure problem that plagued him last weekend
in Seattle. |
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