Cavalieri is ROAR Buggy Champion
Team Associated completed the double today at the 2011 ROAR 1:8 Offroad Nationals with Ryan Cavalieri winning the Buggy main ahead of team-mate Ryan Maifield who earlier in the day lifted the Truggy crown at Thunder Alley. What started out as a thrilling battle which produced many lead changes, in the end Cavalieri took any easy win as Top Qualifier Jared Tebo hit trouble and Maifield suffered a flame out. With the champion elect in cruise mode the excitement for the latter part of the race was the battle for third between current World Champion Cody King and potential future World Champion Dakotah Phend, the young Losi ace winning out to claim his first major nitro podium finish.
Cavalieri, who last won the title back in 2005, said after the race that there was little separating himself, Maifield and Tebo in terms of pace and mistakes being made and so he just kept plugging away trying to run his own race. Despite cruising to a 2 lap winning margin the former electric World Champion felt his choice of tyre, the new Proline Blockade in M2 compound, would have given him an edge if the intense three way battle had went down to the wire.
Despite his LRP engine flaming out when he hit a rock, Maifield who lead the race a number of times said he was pleased with second on what had been a very successful campaign for his Associated team. Having clocked up over three hours of track time today the Arizona racer said after the days hectic schedule on the difficult edgy track conditions he was now ‘mentally dead’.
Getting one of the biggest cheers after the race from the large crowd of onlookers, Phend was clearly delighted with third. The 14-year-old was the best placed TLR driver in both Truggy, where he finished 6th, and Buggy. Aware that he had the World Champion chasing him down he said he just tried to stay calm and focus on doing his own thing. Guided through the 1-hour main from the pits by his crew of Mike Truhe and Dustin Evans, who regularly told him not to ‘try anything stupid’, Phend thanked the pair for their help throughout what he has been a great week the promising youngster.
Having to settle for fourth King said his Kyosho MP9 was difficult to drive. Making a mistake at the start which dropped him down to 8th he said he just focused on working his way back through the field but in the end he ‘came up a little short’ after swapping position with Phend.
Seeing his title defence end when the steering servo horn came undone just before halfway distance while leading, Tebo said afterwards he felt he had control of the race. Happy to be able to match Cavalieri’s pace from the start, he knew he was running one less fuel stop than his fellow Orion Engines backed driver and this was going to give him a buffer at the last round of stops. The Top Qualifier of both classes, Tebo left the rostrum to return to his pit table to get a tool to fix his buggy and despite having no chance of success rejoined the race working his way back from last to 7th, two laps down on sixth placed JR Mitch.
Canadian Ty Tessmann was another to hit steering problems when the servo saver broke on his D8 as he held third position. The 18-year-old was one of three retirements with Mugen’s Taylor Peterson retiring with a dead receiver battery and Hobao’s Jeremy Kortz pulling up after problems with his transponder.
We would like to thank Team Durango for the support of our first ever ROAR Nationals coverage, which in a year when there is no World Championship is the next best thing. A very well presented event we must give a special word of gratitude to Pro-Line for unofficially acting as the media centre and providing refreshments. Finally congratulations to Thunder Alley track owner Rob Jackson whose hard work throughout the week is a credit to the sport.
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