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Kody Swanson makes more history with USAC Silver Crown Dairyland win

Not that you’ll hear Kody Swanson brag but he has every reason to after Friday night’s USAC Silver Crown victory in the Dairyland 100 at Madison International Speedway.

Swanson won his 23rd career race and tied Jack Hewitt atop the all-time Silver Crown victory list.  Meanwhile, it was also the California native’s fourth-consecutive victory this season, becoming just the third driver to accomplish the feat and first since Hewitt in 1986.

Of course, true to form, Swanson isn’t going to brag about it. He’d rather evenly credit everyone he has ever raced with, including Six-R Racing and the DePalma Motorsports teams he has represented in Silver Crown competition.

“I’m just extremely grateful,” Swanson said.  “There’s 23, but I’ve done zero of them alone.  That’s how I feel about it.  It takes a team, it takes a family and it takes support from people no one will ever see.  I’ve been fortunate that 23 times those great people have carried me to victory lane.  Racing’s as big of a team sport as any.  It’s like a relay race and I get the baton last.  This team puts in the work and deserves to win races.  I take pride in being a part of that.”

Though USAC’s National Sprint and Midget divisions had made a smattering of visits over the years to the track, this was the first visit for the Silver Crown cars, putting everyone on mostly equal footing entering the gates of the half-mile paved oval.

“I put more into coming to Madison because it’s such an opportunity to have a clean slate,” Swanson explained.  “No one’s got any more laps than me.  No one’s got any more notes than me.  You get a chance to go out and be the first one to get it done.  But I was not getting it done early on.  I didn’t have the car handling very good.  That’s on me.  These guys never quit on me.  They jumped through hoops for me.  We changed four springs during practice and changed another one before qualifying.  We changed the left rear tire because I didn’t think we were going to be good enough.”

Despite the slight pessimism early on, Swanson sped to the lead from his outside front row starting spot, securing the lead from pole sitter Justin Grant by the time the two hit turn three on the opening lap.

Grant wasn’t content to play it conservatively and let Kody ride into the Badger State sunset.  Grant remained within arm’s reach of Swanson, and on lap six, used an inside move to snare the lead away from Swanson at the stripe where he would remain for the ensuing 41 circuits.

Swanson had remained within five car lengths of Grant as the front runners began to encounter lapped traffic just prior to midway.  Grant encountered the lapped car of leading series Rookie contender Travis Welpott and tried to race past him using the lower groove, but no room was vacant, and Grant’s ride got squirrelly off turn two.  All the while, Swanson was steadfast up top and smoothly drove by both to capture the lead.

“When racecars that are equal are battling up front, you have to look for opportunities.  Lapped cars are opportunities,” Swanson added. “Lapped cars are opportunities.  As a driver, where I can help this team is being the best prepared I can be ahead of time to capitalize on those opportunities.  I saw he was going to choose low, so we chose high.  It’s hard to know exactly where they’re going to go, but it’s your job to know the drivers you’re racing against.  You got to have that feeling, that instinct, that it was time to sail it around the top.”

“I got lucky (Justin) got pinned in and I was close enough to capitalize and get alongside of him so that he couldn’t change lanes and occupy the space,” Swanson continued.  “He’s someone I love racing against because he races me clean every time. At that point, you’re committed and it’s your job to see it to the end.  I was fortunate to have a good handling car through the middle to keep it going on a long run.”

Once Swanson was clear of Grant, the space between grew incrementally to 1 second, to 1.5, to 2 and ultimately more than 2.5 seconds with 30 laps remaining following a lengthy 60-lap green-flag stint.  The construction of the lead would meet the wrecking ball when Toni Breidinger’s machine went up in smoke with 14 laps remaining.

That put second-running Santos right on the tail tank of Swanson for the lap 92 restart.  Santos was able to mount a furious challenge as he pulled alongside Swanson to the inside on the front straightaway.  Swanson was able to flex enough muscle to ward off the challenge into turn one.

With four to go, Kyle Hamilton slowed to bring out the yellow and set up one last restart for a green-white-checkered finish.  This time, Swanson never allowed Santos an opportunity to make a move, jetting away to lock up the lead as Santos followed single-file into one.

“I didn’t do a good enough job on the first restart,” Swanson admitted.  “You’re not going to beat Bobby Santos very many times.  If you give him an opportunity with five to go, you know he’s going to be there.  I didn’t do a great job on that first restart.  I maybe brought the pace down too slow and I spun the tires.  When it stood up, I slid out, and I drove it all the way down there into turn one and plumb missed the corner.  I just got lucky that he couldn’t carve it good enough to get by me, just back to me, and I had another opportunity to do a better job in turn three than I did in turn one.  I surely wouldn’t make the same mistake twice, so I got in hard to make sure he couldn’t get a run, got on the brakes well to hit the bottom and do it like I was supposed to.  On the second restart, I didn’t do it perfect, but I got it a little better and was able to bring it home.”

It was game, set, match as Swanson went on to stamp his place alongside and atop the USAC record books with a victory margin of seven tenths over Santos, Grant, a career-best finish for Jim Anderson in fourth and Chris Windom rounding out the top-five.

The complete results of the Dairyland 100 can be found below.

FEATURE: (100 laps, starting position in parentheses) 1. Kody Swanson (2), 2. Bobby Santos (6), 3. Justin Grant (1), 4. Jim Anderson (8), 5. Chris Windom (5), 6. Jerry Coons, Jr. (7), 7. David Byrne (19), 8. Travis Welpott (9), 9. Matt Goodnight (11), 10. Kyle Robbins (14), 11. Kyle Hamilton (4), 12. Toni Breidinger (15), 13. Aaron Pierce (18), 14. Patrick Lawson (13), 15. Mike Haggenbottom (17), 16. Dave Darland (10), 17. Austin Blair (16), 18. Derek Bischak (12), 19. Eric Gordon (3). 36:49.04

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Matt Weaver is the owner and founder of Short Track Scene. Weaver grew up in the sport, having raced himself before becoming a reporter in college at the University of South Alabama. He also has extensive experience covering NASCAR, IndyCar and Dirt Sprint Cars.

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