Illinois
Illinois driver leads from start to finish in winning WoO Late Model Series race
GRAND FORKS — It hasn’t been the easiest season for World of Outlaws Late Model Series driver Brian Shirley.
But a win and a $12,000 check late Sunday night will make things a little easier as the Illinois driver moves forward with the WoO LMS season.
Shirley started on the pole and led all 40 laps in winning his first WoO LMS win of the season at River Cities Speedway, It was a rare Sunday night of racing at The Bullring as Friday’s original WoO LMS race was postponed due to wet grounds.
The wait was worth it to Shirley, who held a comfortable lead much of the race until Devin Moran staged a late challenge with 10 laps to go.
“It’s been a roller coaster year,” said Shirley. “We’ve had a lot of downs. It’s a little emotional because we’ve put in so much work.”
“Obviously, starting up front was the key, getting the lead and controlling where I was going. I was a little nervous (in the closing laps) but I knew clean air was going to be huge so I could make own lines.”
Shirley hit lapped traffic with 32 laps to go but he smoothly maneuvered through it. With just under 10 laps to go, Moran made a surge closing to within a couple of car lengths. But Shirley had his own little spurt and held a comfortable lead with five laps to go.
However, with two laps to go, the second caution flag of the race was waved, wiping out Shirley’s 1.8-second lead. But Moran couldn’t make a push in the final two laps.
“I was watching the scoreboard and with 10 laps to go I tried to run the top in (Turns) 3 and 4 but there was nothing there,” said Moran. “With all the rain they’ve had here, they had the bottom pretty saturated so we kind of got stuck around the bottom. But that’s part of it. Can’t complain about a second-place finish.
“I’m just glad we got the show in on a Sunday evening. It looked like an all-right crowd.”
Shirley beat Moran to the flagstand by 0.905 seconds. Max McLaughlin was third followed by Brandon Sheppard and Ryan Gustin.
Overall, it was Shirley’s eighth WoO LMS win. He was been racing late models for roughly 20 years.
Jason Strand was the top local finisher in the field of 34 cars. He finished 11th.
Two other classes raced Sunday, with Trey Hess winning the streets feature and Austin Hunter taking the 20-lap Midwest modifieds main event.
Hess took the lead with 10 laps to go and he edged Cole Greseth by 1.579 seconds. John Halvorson was third, followed by Seth Klostreich and Rodney Hulst.
Hunter survived a wild Midwest modified feature, which was marred by an eight-car pileup five laps into the race.
Hunter grabbed the top spot with 10 laps to go and won by 0.671 seconds over Jory Berg. Cylen Vargason, Joseph Thomas and Connor Drewry rounded out the top five.
Racing resumes at RCS on Tuesday night. Double sprint features are scheduled. There will be no races Friday, July 5.
River Cities Speedway
Sunday’s results
Streets
First heat — 1. Greg Jose, 2. Wes Ramsrud, 3. Royce Jawaski
Second heat — 1 Cole Greseth, 2. Trey Hess, 3. Bryce Reimer
Feature — 1. Trey Hess, 2. Greseth, 3. John Halvorson, 4. Seth Klostreich, 5. Rodney Hulst
Midwest modifieds
First heat — 1. Chris Edmonds, 2. Lance Schill, 3. Ryan Schow
Second heat — 1. Jory Berg, 2. Makenna Romuld, 3. Aaron Blacklance
Third heat — 1. Cylen Vargason, 2. Austin Hunter, 3. Matt Schow
Feature — 1. Hunter, 2. Berg, 3. Vargason, 4. Joseph Thomas, 5. Connor Drewry
WoO LMS
First heat — 1. Devin Moran, 2. Cody Overton, 3. Brandon Sheppard, 4. Brent Larson
Second heat — 1. Ryan Gustin, 2. Bobby Pierce, 3. Nick Hoffman, 4. Dennis Erb Jr.
Third heat — 1. Max McLaughlin, 2, Dustin Sorenson, 3. Jason Strand, 4. Dustin Strand
Fourth heat — 1. Brian Shirley, 2. Tyler Bruening, 3. Sam Mars, 4. Chad Mahder
B main 1 — 1. Kyle Bronson, 2. Cade Dillard, 3. Tristan Chamberlin
B main 2 — 1. Tyler Peterson, 2. Brad Seng, 3. Cole Schill
Feature — 1. Shirley, 2. Moran, 3. McLaughlin, 4. Sheppard, 5. Gustin
Wayne Nelson / Grand Forks Herald
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Illinois
Bears release statement as Illinois legislators take major step toward stadium bill
The Chicago Bears released a statement on Wednesday after Illinois legislators took a step forward with keeping the team in the state.
Shortly after the bill passed out of a House committee 15-5 and then was passed again by the full House, the Bears said the bill is not enough for them.
“We welcome the progress made on the House’s version of the mega project bill; however, additional amendments are necessary to make the Arlington Heights site feasible for our stadium project. We support Illinois leaders as they determine the path forward to making the essential changes to the mega project bill and aligning on infrastructure funding,” the team said in a statement.
The vote on Wednesday came after lawmakers spent weeks working to address concerns and criticism that the bill provided incentives to the team to leave Chicago and surrounding potential revenue shortfalls to area schools if the stadium is built in Arlington Heights.
Despite the team’s dissatisfaction, the megaprojects bill, which would allow the Bears to negotiate property tax payments directly with the Village of Arlington Heights, is headed now to the Senate.
A key piece of legislation designed to keep the Chicago Bears’ stadium project in Illinois is being weighed, and Rose Schmidt has details on what’s in it.
That said, the bill’s lead Senate sponsor State Sen. Bill Cunningham told NBC Chicago’s Mary Ann Ahern that legislators “feel no pressure to take a vote next week” when the Senate returns on Tuesday.
“We will work this bill like any other bill,” Cunningham said.
Though the team is not satisfied with the deal, it seems Illinois Governor Pritzker is.
“Governor Pritzker has been clear and consistent for years that the Bears should remain in Illinois, and that any legislation needs to protect taxpayers. Throughout the past few months, the Governor’s Office brought team leadership, local officials, and legislative partners to the table to craft a deal around public infrastructure improvements, property tax fairness, and affordability measures. Today is an important step, and the Governor’s Office looks forward to working with the Illinois General Assembly to advance a bill that reflects our shared priorities,” Pritzker’s office said in a statement on Wednesday.
Illinois
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Illinois
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