Rivalry with ‘Pennsylvania Posse’ Resumes for Tony Stewart Racing

Donny Schatz last won at Williams Grove in July 2008. (George Levy Photo)

INDIANAPOLIS (May 8, 2012) – There is nothing like a good rivalry to get fans on their feet. Every team has some sort of rival and competing against them annually simply fuels the fire. It’s that type of animosity the makes life on the World of Outlaws (WoO) Sprint Car Series tour so much fun. Each and every driver wants to win, but doing better than a rival sometimes even makes not winning tolerable. Since the series began back in 1978, the Outlaws have always enjoyed the rivalry they have with the Pennsylvania Posse, a regional group of drivers who annually present the biggest challenge to the traveling Sprint car racers.

With the Outlaws making their first of three stops in central Pennsylvania this weekend, it’s time for the rivalry to heat up again. For the first time in 14 years, the series will return Wednesday to Lincoln Speedway in Abbottstown, Pa. Not since May 1998 have the Outlaws taken on the Pennsylvania Posse at the 4/10-mile, dirt oval. The annual May show at Williams Grove Speedway in Mechanicsburg is scheduled for Friday and Saturday night.

Tony Stewart Racing (TSR) drivers Steve Kinser and Donny Schatz know all about rivalries. Kinser, one of Ted Johnson’s original Outlaws, has been battling fellow 50-something racer Sammy Swindell since the 1970s when they both were the young guns in dirt-track racing. Kinser has taken on all comers through the years, both Outlaws and members of the Posse. Doug Wolfgang, Bobby Allen, Steve Smith, Keith Kauffman, and so many more did their best to beat Kinser and the Outlaws through the 1980s. Later it was the talented Fred Rahmer, Lance Dewease, and Stevie Smith who led the Posse contingent. Schatz joined the Outlaws in 1997, and he and Kinser battled one another through the 2000s, after which they were named the top two drivers of the decade. Schatz found his groove in central Pennsylvania after a few tough years and went from barely making the show to being almost unbeatable.

Both TSR drivers are looking to return to their glorious past when the Outlaws visit the Keystone State Wednesday. Kinser will pilot the TSR No. 11 Bass Pro Shops/J.D. Byrider/Chevrolet Maxim in “The Gettysburg Clash” at Lincoln Speedway. He’ll lead the Outlaws into Pennsylvania with 54 of 570 career WoO A-Feature triumphs coming at Williams Grove (38) and Lincoln (16). Schatz, driver of the TSR No. 15 STP/Armor All/Chevrolet J&J, has won 15 races at Williams Grove, with 11 of those being A-Features among his 116 career WoO A-Feature victories.

On that May night in 1998, not many of those in attendance knew much about “The Kid” from North Dakota. Schatz was in his second season with the Outlaws and making only his second career start at the track. During his rookie season, he finished 19th in the A-Feature. In the 1998 race, he came up one spot short of making the race. He finished fifth in the B-Feature.

The B-Feature was a common race to find Schatz in at Williams Grove during his first couple of seasons on the Outlaw tour. That changed after a monumental win, a victory that seemed to turn his fortunes around. After scoring the prestigious National Open in the fall of 2000, Schatz found the winning formula at the track with regularity, winning multiple races annually throughout the decade, including five of seven races in 2007. His last win came in July 2008, when he was victorious in the Cleveland Brothers Summer Nationals. This weekend, Schatz hopes to break a 15-race win draught at the track. His best finish at the track last season was third in the Summer Nationals finale.

Schatz heads east following a pair of charges last weekend at Eldora Speedway. Friday, he raced from 12th to second and, the following night, he drove from 24th to sixth in the 30-lap A-Feature. The runner-up finish Friday pushed him back on top of the WoO standings by one point, but Sammy Swindell’s regained the lead with a victory Saturday night. The two have swapped the top spot in the standings each of the last five races. Through 15 of 78 scheduled events, Swindell has an 11-point advantage over Schatz.

Wednesday at Lincoln Speedway, the pit gates will open at 1 p.m. EDT and the grandstands open at 4 p.m. Qualifying is scheduled to begin at 7 p.m. For tickets and more information on the event, contact the track by calling (717) 624-2755, or visit www.LincolnSpeedway.com.

Friday and Saturday at Williams Grove, the pit gates will open at 3:30 p.m. EDT with the grandstands opening at 5:45 p.m. Qualifying is scheduled to begin at 7:45 p.m. For more details and ticket information, call the track at (717) 679-5000 or visit www.williamsgrove.com.

Race fans unable to attend this week’s races can catch all of the action on DIRTVision.com. Fans can listen live as Johnny Gibson, “Voice of the Outlaws,” calls the action as he does at all WoO Sprint Series events on the DIRTVision.com cybercast, as well as on the DIRT Radio Network. Go to www.DIRTVision.com for more information on all the site features, including updated results from each night of racing, as well as a chat room to interact with other race fans.

Donny Schatz, Driver of the No. 15 TSR/STP/Armor All/Chevrolet J&J:

Thinking back to your first couple of years with the Outlaws, do you remember anything in particular about Lincoln Speedway?

“I don’t remember being very good there. I think I made one feature and missed the other. We haven’t raced there since, but I did watch a race there a few years ago. It’s going to be tough, but that’s what makes it fun. You are going to have to get your car right and make the right decisions both in the pits and in the race. Those guys who race there all the time will be tough to beat, but we love the challenge. I know my STP guys will be ready. Rick (Warner) is my crew chief and grew up in the area, so he’s got plenty of experience there. Bob Curtis is one of the guys on the team and he spent a year working with Fred Rahmer, who is about as good as there is there. We’ll all put our heads together and see if we can do a little better than I did the last time.”

After dominating Williams Grove in 2007, you have just one victory in the last 19 races there. How frustrating is that?

“I’d say it’s really frustrating, but we’ve got to keep working on it and get back to winning there. I know we’ve had quite a few good runs in that span, but we’ve come up a spot or two short. Your entire program has to be really running smoothly to win races at Williams Grove. We’re getting there, but we’ve still got a ways to go. I think that is the exciting thing for us. We know we haven’t reached our potential, yet, early this season, but we’re winning a few races and running near the front every night. If things go right for us and we can break that win drought at Williams Grove, I’d say that would be a really big deal for us. That’s the kind of thing that would really give us a lot of momentum.”

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