.

SCHEDULERESULTS & PHOTOSDEREKTEAMSPONSORSCHAMPIONNEWSHISTORY

.
2010 Results & Photos - 4/10 to 10/17


Race Results
Directory for

2006, 2007,
200
8, 2009
& 2010

 

 


www.contactibp.com


(508) 347-2700

 

www.charter.com

1-800-Get-Charter

 


MOLD, Inc.
John Walker Jr.
(508) 949-2200
Webster, MA
Designers & Builders
of Blow Molds for
Plastics

 


Truck Service
and Towing

2 Boutelle Road
Sterling, MA  01564

978-422-0079

 

Ed McHugh'ss
West Boylston
Auto Parts


(508) 835-8865
 

 

 


RAMSTROM'S

SERVICE
CENTER

133 W. Boylston St.
Worcester, MA
01606
(508) 853-6606
RamstromsService
Center.com

 

 
.
Derek Finishes 3rd
at Thompson World Series
 
Derek finished third in the 30-lap Super Late Model feature at the World Series of Speedway Racing held at Thompson International Speedway in
Thompson, Conn., on Sunday, October 17. Ramstrom, the 2010 track champion, started fifth in the 16-car field. Earlier in the day, he also collected another piece of hardware after being honored by the track as the 2010 Super Late Model Most Popular Driver -- an award voted on by more than 1,000 of the speedway's fans.

STARTED: 5th - FINISHED: 3rd
World Series of Speedway Racing -30-lap Super Late Model Feature

DEREK, HOW WAS YOUR RACE?

The car was tight all weekend. We just tried throwing new setups at it left and right. (Second-place finisher Larry Gelinas) just has an incredible motor, and it shows. He drives right past me. If I can't get enough of a run on him on the bottom and get right up to his door, then I'm done. I know he's driving right back by me.

All in all, it was a good weekend. The car's in one piece. We tried some new stuff with the car, and we know what we can do next year and what we can get away with.

WITH A BRAND NEW SETUP THIS WEEKEND, DID YOU LEARN ANYTHING FOR NEXT YEAR?

We're just trying new stuff to get off the corners with this crate motor. We need to get through the turns as fast as possible to keep up with these big engines. We've just been testing and testing different things and trying different setups, and the Wrold Series is definitely the race to try it because it's not a points race.

Overall, I'm hapy with everything.

HOW DID IT FEEL TO BE NAMED MOST POPULAR DRIVER?

It's amazing. This track is awesome. It's got a great fan base here. It's just great it to get it two years in a row. That with two championships -- I'm loving this place.
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 26TH - 4:00 PM
"Derek Ramstrom Overcomes
Blown Motor And Rallies Late
To Win Second Thompson
Super Late Model Championship"
See Shaun Courchesne Blog HERE
.
& Motor Passes Thompson Test HERE

Photos by Scot Nickel
.
Derek Wins 2nd Straight Thompson Title
 
Derek finished second in the NASCAR Whelen All-American Series Super Late Model finale at Thompson International Speedway in Thompson, Conn., on Sunday, September 26 -- good enough to earn his second consecutive Super Late Model championship at the track.

Ramstrom and Mike O'Sullivan -- who won the final 30-lap event of the season -- finished the year tied atop the standings with 674 points, and Ramstrom was awarded the championship by virtue of his six wins.

Ramstrom celebrated his title on his 19th birthday and did so only after blowing an engine in practice before borrowing one from fellow competitor George Bessette. The championship wasn't clinched until Ramstrom was able to pass veteran Rick Fuller in the closing laps to move into second place.


NASCAR Whelen All-American Series - STANDINGS: 1st
WHAT: 30-lap Super Late Model Feature - FINISHED: 2nd

DEREK, HOW DOES IT FEEL TO WIN THE CHAMPIONSHIP?

Just to do it two years in a row, that alone means a lot. This year with Thompson it's pretty awesome because we thought we were going to run the whole NASCAR K&N Pro Series schedule, but then when that didn't work out we just decided we were going to focus on Thompson again.

Our stuff wasn't even prepared when the season started -- our engine wasn't freshened, our shocks hadn't been done, none of that stuff. My whole crew, those guys just worked so hard for this. I couldn't have done it without them.

At the beginning of the year, we just wanted to race for wins, and we lost a few races because of that. I smashed up a few cars when I got in over my head on the track -- but all it did was make the points battle that much tighter. And it's a pretty cool feeling to win it.

DOES THIS ONE FEEL DIFFERENT THAN YOUR FIRST TITLE IN 2009?

It really does. It's hard to win one, but it's harder to stay on top. Everyone in this division was on top of their game. Larry Gelinas was a rocket all the time, and (Mike) O'Sullivan was good every week. Even Ricky Fuller and Mike Stefanik -- I mean, it's just so hard to beat these guys.

All of that made it harder to repeat. And, on top of it, nobody wanted to see me win again -- nobody wants to see an 18-year-old kid win two championships in a row.

TALK ABOUT YOUR DAY ON SUNDAY. THIS CHAMPIONSHIP DIDN'T COME EASY -- NOT WITH A BLOWN ENGINE IN PRACTICE.

Honestly, I was worried. The car felt down on power, and I was turning laps trying to run through all the scenarios in my head, trying to figure out what might be wrong so I could give the crew some feedback. Then I went into Turn 3, the car just locked up and spun out, and there was a big cloud of smoke.

My dad goes frantically running through the pits trying to find someone with a spare motor we can borrow. George Bessette takes him back to his shop and they pull his old engine out of the dust pile -- and George basically said, "I'll be surprised if you guys even get this thing going."

But that motor was all right, and it definitely did the job.
Stephanie
Jordan
Photos

NASCAR Whelen All-American Series
Final Points Race Preview
Derek attempts to win his second consecutive Super Late Model championship at Thompson International Speedway in Thompson, Conn., with the final points race of the season at the track on Sunday, September 26.

Qualifying for the 30-lap NASCAR Whelen All-American Series event begins at 4 p.m.

Ramstrom has six feature wins this season at the track and leads both Larry Gelinas and Mike O'Sullivan by two points atop the standings. Last year, Ramstrom won the track championship and became the youngest champion in track history.

POINTS POSITION: 1st

DEREK, HOW ARE YOU APPROACHING THIS FINAL POINTS RACE?


Well, we're coming down to the wire and it's going to be pretty insane. My strategy is just to stay ahead of those guys. If they're ahead of me at any point in the race, I know that I just have to stay very close to both of them, if not ahead of them. That's my strategy.

If I can start ahead of (Gelinas) and just get away from him, that would be big. If I can do that, I can just get out by a couple of car lengths and try to maintain a nice pace.

DO YOU FEEL PRESSURE HEADING INTO THIS AS THE POINTS LEADER?

We're really working on the car a lot before this race. It's important. We really want to nail the setup and see what we can do. This is the biggest race of the year for us.

WHAT WOULD A SECOND STRAIGHT CHAMPIONSHIP MEAN TO YOU?

To win the championship two years in a row would be amazing. We've had a lot of help this year, so I really want to make this work. Hopefully we can get the championship and show my sponsors and everybody else that we're the real deal.
Friday, September 17th
9th in PASS North at WMMP
Derek finished ninth in the PASS North Series PASS 150 at White Mountain Motorsports Park in North Woodstock, N.H., on Friday, September 17. Ramstrom's finish in the season finale was his second straight Top-10 in PASS competition after finishing seventh in the PASS South Series Labor Day Classic 200 at North Wilkesboro on September 5.

FINISHED: 9th - LED: 0 time for 0 laps

HOW WAS THE RACE?

We struggled the whole race. We were pretty fast in practice, and the car felt really good and comfortable. But the weather drastically changed, and it got really cool and overcast and the car was way off.

We were tight right off the bat (in the feature). We made a bunch of adjustments, but the car wasn't reacting to anything we did. I don't know if something was broken or not -- we'll have to go back and go through it and see if anything was wrong that we didnt' find.

THERE DOESN'T SEEM TO BE ANY SOLACE IN THE TOP-10 FINISH.

To be honest, I'm not all that happy about it. I was bombing around in the back for most of the race. A bunch of cars must have been dropping out left and right for us to end up where we did.

As for passing cars, I didn't do much of that at all. I just think there must be something wrong with this car.
White Mountain Motorsports Park Race Preview
Derek Ramstrom of West Boylston, Mass., returns to PASS North Series racing for the PASS 150 at White Mountain Motorsports Park in North Woodstock, N.H., on Friday, September 17. Ramstrom, who has two career PASS North victories, earned one of his best career finishes at White Mountain in 2009 when he finished second at the track. He's coming off a Top-10 finish in a PASS South Series race at North Wilkesboro Speedway on Labor Day weekend. Ramstrom also owns a two-point lead atop the Thompson International Speedway Super Late Model standings, where he competes weekly in the NASCAR Whelen All-American Series. There are just three races remaining in that season.
 
BEST CAREER WHITE MOUNTAIN MOTORSPORTS PARK FINISH:

2nd (May 2009)
LAST RACE AT WHITE MOUNTAIN MOTORSPORTS PARK: 19th (May 2010)

 
WHAT:
Season Finale -- PASS North Series PASS 150
WHERE: White Mountain Motorsports Park, North Woodstock, N.H.
(.25-mile oval)

WHEN: 6 p.m., Friday, September 17

PASS NORTH SERIES - POINTS POSITION: 17th
LAST RACE:
Sunday, September 12, PASS 300, Beech Ridge Motor Speedway, Scarborough, Maine
 
DEREK, WHAT IS IT YOU LIKE ABOUT WHITE MOUNTAIN MOTORSPORTS PARK?
 
Honestly, it's probably because it's a small, short-track with a good amount of banking. I really don't like the smaller flat tracks all that much, but I always tend to run good at the short tracks with banking like White Mountain has.
 
It's a really racy track. The bottom is definitely the preferred way around there, but you can also work on the outside if you have to to get around people. It's a pretty fun place to race.
 
WHAT ARE YOUR GOALS FOR THE WEEKEND?
 
We've been really working hard on the PASS car trying to get it ready. I'm pretty confident going into this race. It should be pretty interesting.
 
We're looking forward to this. It's the last race of the year for PASS North, and we'd like to go up and get a Top-3 and really finish off the year on a high note.
THURSDAY NIGHT THUNDER on SEPTEMBER 9TH
Derek Scores a 4th, Takes Points Lead
Derek finished fourth in the NASCAR Whelen All-American Series Super Late Model feature at Thompson International Speedway in Thompson, Conn., on Thursday night. With the Top-5 run in the 30-lap main event, Ramstrom assumed the division point lead by two points with three races remaining as he tried to win a second consecutive track championship. Ramstrom battled a tight track under cool conditions and managed to avoid an oil spill on the track that collected a number of cars in an incident early in the race.

NASCAR Whelen All-American Series -
STANDINGS: 1st
WHAT: 30-lap Super Late Model Feature - FINISHED: 4th

DEREK, IT MUST FEEL GOOD TO BE BACK ATOP THE SUPER LATE MODEL STANDINGS AT THOMPSON.

The points race is pretty tight. We took the lead, but Larry (Gelinas) and Mike O'Sullivan are right there behind us. It should be interesting the next couple of races.

HOW DID THE FEATURE PLAY OUT FOR YOU?

Everyone strung right out at the front. When the caution came out because there was oil spilled on the track, a bunch of cars started spinning everywhere. I almost spun out myself. It was pretty scary, actually.

Then after that happened, the rest of the race went green. Everyone just followed each other. The track cooled off and it really tightened up. You could really tell that the track changed.

DID IT SURPRISE YOU THAT THE TRACK TIGHTENED UP THE WAY IT DID?

It did. Five uf us just strung out. We were just staying in line, and everybody just cruised along because nobody could pass. Nobody could do anything.

Everyone missed the setup so much, nobody could pass at all.

TRACK RACE REPORT - In Super Late Model action, Larry Gelinas made the winning move on the opening lap and never looked back en route to his fourth victory of the season. Gelinas took over the lead from George Bessette on lap one to set the pace early in the Super Late Model feature event. With Gelinas moving away from Bessette, the battle for third was heating up between Jim Banfield and Derek Ramstrom. Mike Stefanik ran in fifth followed by Rick Fuller. After a quick battle, Ramstrom was able to grab third from Banfield on lap five.

A lap later Banfield went spinning into the infield. He was able to refire and the race remained under green. The caution did fly on lap seven for an incident involving point leader Mike O’Sullivan. After service from his crew, O’Sullivan was able to rejoin the field.

Gelinas continued to show the way with the race back under green. Bessette had to defend second as Stefanik pressed. Ramstrom was being challenged by Fuller for fourth. O’Sullivan ran a distance back in sixth. At halfway, Gelinas held a two car length advantage over Bessette, with a brewing battle between Stefanik, Ramstrom, and Fuller.

Over the long green flag run, Gelinas was able to stretch his advantage slightly. The remainder of the top-five ran bumper-to-bumper in a tight pack. Ramstrom was the first to step out of line; peeking low on Stefanik. With two laps remaining, Gelinas had walked out to a sizeable lead. Bessette ran alone in second ahead of Stefanik, Ramstrom, and Fuller.

Both Ramstrom and Fuller jumped out of line on the final lap but neither could muster up a real challenge for position. Gelinas scored the victory over Bessette, Stefanik, Ramstrom, and Fuller.

With O’Sullivan’s bad luck the point lead went back to Ramstrom by two points with two point races remaining.
 
7th Place at No. Wilkesboro
Derek finished seventh in the PASS South Series Labor Day Classic 200 at North Wilkesboro Speedway in North Wilkesboro, N.C. After starting 18th, Ramstrom made several changes to his race car before rallying to finish inside the Top-10 in the first race held at the historic speedway since 1996. He was one of only eight cars to finish on the lead lap. In the 25-car starting field, Ramstrom advanced the most positions from his starting spot of any driver in the field and was the highest finishing PASS North Series driver in the event.

WHAT: PASS South Series Labor Day Classic 200
WHERE: North Wilkesboro Speedway, North Wilkesboro, N.C. (.625-mile oval)

STARTED: 18th - FINISHED: 7th

NEXT RACE: Thursday, September 9, NASCAR Whelen All-American Series, Thompson International Speedway, Thompson, Conn.

DEREK, TALK ABOUT YOUR DAY.

I didn't time trial well at all, and that really hurt us. We couldn't get any forward bite (during qualifying); I just couldn't get any traction. I pitted early to make a couple of adjustments and free the car up. It was pretty tight.

We ran probably 70 laps all green, and the car still wasn['t working all that well. We pitted again, threw a couple spring rubbers on it, but by then the tires were really hurting. I was beating the car up trying not to lose too much ground to the leaders.

On Lap 135, we pitted with the field for tires and pulled one of the rubbers out. We were pretty damn fast. We were still down a lap, but I passed a bunch of cars -- and we got a caution with 20 to go and that's when I got the Lucky Dog and got back on the lead lap.

At that point, I was pretty much just hanging on. I was trying hard not to get lapped. I couldn't have gained any ground (on the leaders). I just couldn't get there.

Overall, I'm glad we came down here. It was a pretty good race. I just needed to be faster in the beginning so we didn't get lapped. But we ended up pretty good, so I'm happy.
 
WHAT WERE YOUR IMPRESSIONS OF NORTH WILKESBORO?

It was awesome. Fast. Big, sweeping turns. It's faster than Thompson, and a really cool place.

Andy Loden's (qualifying time) was faster than when the Cup cars used to run here. These guys down here, they time trial fast. They're really good at that. I need to work on that. I'm a little rusty with that.
 
DID YOU LEARN ANYTHING IN PREPARATION FOR NEXT SPRING'S 300-LAP PASS RACE AT THE TRACK?

We did learn some things. Whether we work with (crew chief Dale Quarterley) again at North Wilkesboro or even somewhere else, now we know each other a little better. I know how Dale operates, and he knows how I drive.

The crew worked extremely hard on the live pit stops, and I'd never ridden on Hoosier rubber before. So, like I said, we definitely learned a lot.
Open Practice at North Wilkesboro
on Friday, September 3rd
North Wilkesboro Speedway Race Preview
Derek Ramstrom of West Boylston, Mass., heads south this weekend for the PASS South Series Labor Day Classic 200 at North Wilkesboro Speedway in North Wilkesboro, N.C., on Saturday, September 4. The race marks not only the first PASS-sanctioned Super Late Model event at a track that held NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races from 1949-1996 -- but it is also the first time the track has opened since being closed more than a decade ago.

Ramstrom has run a part-time PASS North Series schedule in 2010 with a season-best finish of third at Seekonk Speedway in Seekonk, Mass., on Aug. 14. He has two career PASS North victories and has two poles and two Top-10s in six starts this year. Currently, Ramstrom sits second in the NASCAR Whelen All-American Series Super Late Model standings at his home track of Thompson (Conn.) International Speedway, where he is the defending division champion.


WHAT: PASS South Series Labor Day Classic 200
WHERE: North Wilkesboro Speedway, No. Wilkesboro, N.C. (.400-mile oval)
WHEN: 12 noon, Saturday, Sept. 4

DEREK, ARE YOU LOOKING FORWARD TO MAKING THE TRIP TO NORTH CAROLINA THIS WEEKEND?

We're all looking forward to it. I've got four of my own guys going down with us, and we've got Dale Quarterly coming down to crew chief the car for us. We've also got a guy from one of Kyle Busch's pit crews coming down, and he'll probably help us out with tires.

We're going to give it a shot and see if we can get prepared for the ($75,000-to-win PASS 300) at the track next season. There will be a lot of fast runners down there this weekend, so we'll just see what we can do with Dale crew chiefing the car.

WHAT HAVE YOU HEARD ABOUT THE TRACK?

We've got the 9-to-1 (built) motor in the car, but we thought about taking our Thompson car with the crate engine. I've heard there's not going to be a lot of grip there, but the deal just came together at the last-minute for us and we really didn't have enough time to change over everything.

So, we're taking our PASS car, and we'll see what happens.

WHAT DO YOU HAVE TO DO IN TERMS OF PREPARATION FOR A 200-LAP
RACE THERE?


Pit stops are going to be the biggest thing for us. It's a live pit-stop race. The guys have been practicing their pit stops all this week, because we are a little rusty on pit stops.

That's what we're working on now, because we don't want to be losing laps in the race because of something like that.
THURSDAY NIGHT THUNDER on AUGUST 26th
Derek Keeps Podium Streak Alive
Derek Ramstrom of West Boylston, Mass., finished second in the NASCAR Whelen All-American Series Super Late Model feature at Thompson International Speedway in Thompson, Conn., on Thursday night. The finish marked the fifth consecutive finish of third or better for Ramstrom, who has six wins on the season. Ramstrom started eighth, battled to crack the top-5 through the first half of the 30-lap event and eventually moved into second behind eventual winner Mike O'Sullivan. As he chases a second consecutive division championship, Ramstrom unofficially trails O'Sullivan by two points with three races remaining.

STARTED: 8th - FINISHED: 2nd - STANDINGS: 2nd

DEREK, TALK ABOUT YOUR RUN.


It was pretty interesting. I got stuck in the back for first 15 laps or so but was able to work up to sixth place (by halfway). After that, the slower cars started to fan out and I could start moving forward.

It was (Mike) O'Sullivan, Larry (Gelinas) and me. It took me a while to get past Larry. He was tight, and I was tight, too -- and with that motor of his, it's just really hard to get by him. It took me five or six laps to pass him, and then I just started following O'Sullivan until the race ended.

COULD YOU HAVE WON THE RACE IF YOU HAD MORE LAPS TO WORK WITH AT THE END?

Honestly, I was just too tight. There was no way I was going to pass (O'Sullivan). We were on old rubber from last week, and he was really rolling through the corners.

I kept getting tigher and tighter. I really had to work the car trying to get up through the pack early in the race. I really had to beat the crap out of the car trying to get up through there because I knew O'Sullivan was going to take off.

ALL IN ALL, THOUGH, IT WAS A PRETTY GOOD POINTS NIGHT.

It was. That's what we're trying to do, because it's going to be right down to the wire. We've got to just stay right with or right ahead of O'Sullivan as much as we can. It's just points racing now coming down to the end with a few races to go. We really have to be in the top three every single race to have a shot.
THURSDAY NIGHT THUNDER on AUGUST 19th
6th WIN of 2010 for Derek!
TRACK RACE REPORT: It took until halfway for Derek Ramstrom of Worcester, MA, to grab the lead in the Super Late Model main event but once out front the youngster would never be headed. The opening laps of the Super Late Model race featured a tight race between leader Jim Banfield and Derek Ramstrom. The remainder of the top-five of Mike Stefanik, Mike O’ Sullivan and Larry Gelinas were strung out a behind the lead duo. Lap-after-lap, Ramstrom stayed glued to the back bumper of Banfield.

Ramstrom started to get racy on lap 10; peeking on the low side of Banfield. The battle allowed Stefanik to gain some ground on the leaders. Gelinas looked to be running down O’Sullivan for fifth. On lap 13, Ramstrom got alongside Banfield. He gained ground in each turn until grabbing the stop spot in turn one of lap 14.

Once out front, Ramstrom was able to run out to a 10-car length advantage. While Ramstrom’s lead grew, things closed up from second on back. Stefanik had reeled in Banfield while O’Sullivan caught the back bumper of Stefanik.

With five laps remaining and Ramstrom handily out front, the three-car battle tightened further. O’Sullivan looked low on Stefanik for third. A lapped car slowed O’Sullivan’s advances on Stefanik. Banfield was able to get some breathing room as O’Sullivan continued to dog Stefanik. With two laps remaining, O’Sullivan began to look for running room below Stefanik. Banfield appeared to slow up making it a freight train to the finish. Ramstrom streaked to the checkers to score his sixth win of the season. Banfield held on for second while Stefanik held back O’Sullivan. Larry Gelinas rounded out the top five.
SATURDAY, AUGUST 14TH
3RD at SEEKONK PASS 150
Heat
Win >
On the pole
for the feature
PASS Seekonk Speedway Race Preview
 
Derek returns to the PASS North Series this Saturday, August 14, in the PASS 150 at Seekonk Speedway in Seekonk, Mass. Ramstrom scored one of his best finishes of 2009 when the series made its inaugural visit to the tight .333-mile oval with a fourth-place run, and after testing there last weekend with the track's Pro Stock division, Ramstrom is eager to return. The reigning Thompson International Speedway Super Late Model champion will bring his Thompson car to Seekonk this weekend. He has five wins this season at Thompson in NASCAR Whelen All-American Series action and is just 10 points out of the lead in the Super Late Model standings with six races remaining

BEST CAREER SEEKONK SPEEDWAY FINISH: 4th (August 2009)
LAST RACE AT SEEKONK SPEEDWAY: 4th (August 2009)

WHAT: PASS North Series PASS 150
WHERE: Seekonk Speedway, Seekonk, Mass. (.333-mile oval)
WHEN: 6 p.m., Saturday, August 14

PASS NORTH SERIES - POINTS POSITION: 17th
LAST RACE: July 31, Riverside Speedway, Groveton, N.H. (n/a)
NEXT RACE: Saturday, August 21, Spud Speedway, Caribou, Maine
(.333-mile oval)

DEREK, DO YOU LIKE RACING AT SEEKONK SPEEDWAY?

Yeah, I do. It's a difficult track, but it's a lot of fun once you figure it out. We went there last week and practiced with their weekly (Pro Stock) guys, and that was good that we went. We had to switch up some setup stuff on the car, because we decided to use our (weekly) Thompson car with the crate engine in it.

It's really good that we went and did that. The more seat time you can get at Seekonk is always a good thing.

NOW THAT YOU'RE RUNNING A PARTIAL PASS SCHEDULE AND PICKING AND CHOOSING YOUR RACES, DO YOU FEEL LIKE THE TEAM IS MORE PREPARED AT THE TRACK ON RACE DAY?

I think we are. You've got to test. You just have to. We weren't able to get there and rent the track, but what we did still worked out by going there last Saturday.

We were fast -- faster than we expected, to be honest. But I'll be able to tell you after this weekend if we're doing the right things.

AS THE THOMPSON POINTS BATTLE COMES DOWN TO THE WIRE, ARE YOU CHANGING THE WAY YOU RACE?

I'm going to start points racing, for sure. I mean, it's not that I want to, but (Larry Gelinas) has been so fast, so dominating, that I can't go out and just try and nail out wins like I want to. I 'll push for that, but won't do anything drastic.

If I'm really trying to win this championship, I can't afford any DNFs. I could go out before and take some chances like I have, but I can't be overly aggressive here at the end of the year. It's tough at Thompson to be really aggressive at those high speeds you're running there.
THURSDAY NIGHT THUNDER on AUGUST 13th
Ramstrom Finishes 3rd in
Strong Thompson Effort
Derek Ramstrom of West Boylston, Mass., finished third in a caution-free Super Late Model feature at Thompson International Speedway in Thompson, Conn., on Thursday night. Ramstrom, the defending Super Late Model champion at the track, started sixth in the 30-lap NASCAR Whelen All-American Series Super Late Model event and climbed to third just past the halfway mark. He battled Rick Fuller for several laps over the final 10 laps of the race, but he never got a late-race restart that would have gained him valuable track position on eventual winner Mike Stefanik. Ramstrom, who has five wins on the season, closed to within six points of Mike O'Sullivan for the division lead.
 
NASCAR Whelen All-American Series - STANDINGS: 3rd
WHAT:
30-lap Super Late Model Feature
STARTED: 6th - FINISHED: 3rd
 
DEREK, TALK ABOUT YOUR RUN.
 
I'm pretty happy with third. A top-five's always good here at Thompson. We're trying to win the points now, so we've just got to stay consistent.
 
The car was a little too tight tonight. We just missed the setup. The weather was pretty crazy today, and we just missed the setup a little bit. But congratulations to Mike Stefanik. They were dominant tonight.
 
WOULD A LATE-RACE CAUTION AND RESTART HAVE GIVEN YOU A SHOT AT THE WIN?
 
It's tough to say. The car didn't really rotate that well on the bottom. It was good up on the high line, but once you start trying to go underneath people and pass them, it just slows the momentum down so much.
 
I think it might have changed the outcome of the race -- I might have been able to get by Ricky there, but it was still pretty tight.
 
YOU HAD A GREAT BATTLE WITH RICK. YOUR THOUGHTS ON THAT?
 
We were battling there for a while. He'd get me coming off the turn, and then I'd get him going in. It was just never-ending. I tried to get him the center of the turn and just hammer the throttle, but he had that 'just enough.' I needed a little more (horsepower). But it was a good battle, and it was fun racing with him like that.
THURSDAY NIGHT THUNDER on JULY 29th
Ramstrom Wins Again At Thompson
Derek Ramstrom of West Boylston, Mass., led every lap en route to his fifth feature win of the season at Thompson International Speedway in Thompson, Conn., on Thursday night. Ramstrom, the defending Super Late Model champion at the track, now has five victories in just 10 starts this year. He started third in the caution-free 30-lap NASCAR Whelen All-American Series event and had the lead by the time the field completed the first lap around the high-banked, .625-mile oval. From there, Ramstrom went unchallenged to the victory and gained ground of division points leaders Mike O'Sullivan and Larry Gelinas.

NASCAR Whelen All-American Series - STANDINGS: 3rd
WHAT: 30-lap Super Late Model Feature
STARTED: 3rd - FINISHED: 1st (fifth win of season)

DEREK, TALK ABOUT YOUR WIN TONIGHT.
 
The car was on rails tonight. It was amazing. I’ve got to thank the crew, they all worked extremely hard and I’ve got to thank the fans for coming out tonight. The car count’s a little small (in the Super Late Model division) but we all still try to put on a good show for you guys.

WERE YOU WORRIED AT ALL ABOUT LARRY GELINAS CHASING YOU DOWN IN THE CLOSING LAPS?

I was really trying to run away from Larry, he’s been real fast the last three weeks. I just knew if I got out ahead of him and maintained a fast pace, I was hoping that he wasn’t going to catch me. It worked out good and there were no cautions, so it helped out.
17th in PASS and 2nd in NWAAS
Derek finished 17th in the PASS North Series PASS 75 at Thompson International Speedway in Thompson, Conn., on Thursday, July 22. Ramstrom was running in second place on lap 31 of the event when his brakes let go heading into the first turn on the fast, .625-mile, high-banked oval. Ramstrom, who'd struggled with brake issues all day during practice, barely made it to the starting grid in time for his heat race as the team attempted to make repairs to the No. 35 Chevrolet's brake system. Prior to the PASS 75, Ramstrom finished second in the track's NASCAR Whelen All-American Series 30-lap Super Late Model feature.

STARTED: 4th - FINISHED: 17th - LED: 0 time for 0 laps

NEXT  PASS RACE: Sat., August 14, Seekonk Speedway, Seekonk, MA

DEREK, WHAT HAPPENED TO THE CAR IN THE PASS 75?

I was just following (leader) Preston Peltier for 10 or 15 laps, just saving the car because I felt like we had the car to beat. The brakes started getting spongy. I tried putting some rear brake into it, and it didn't work. It just kept getting worse.

After that, I just lost the pedal completely, and there was nothing I could do. I had no way to slow the car down.

DID THE BRAKE ISSUES TAKE YOU BY SURPRISE?

We struggled with that all day. We barely made the heat race and had to start at the rear, because we were working on it. We borrowed some calipers from DJ Shaw's team and put those on and went out, and we were pretty good in the heat race.

STILL, YOU HAD A NICE RUN IN THE WEEKLY SUPER LATE MODEL FEATURE.

Our regular Thompson car went really good. We had no problems with that all day.

It took me a few laps to get by (Mike) O'Sullivan for second, and then I started chasing down (winner) Larry Gelinas. I just didn't have enough time, but to get second was a good day.
Thompson International Speedway
PASS 75 Race Preview
Derek holds home track advantage when the PASS North Series heads to Thompson International Speedway in Thompson, Conn., for the PASS 75 on Thursday, July 22. Ramstrom, the reigning NASCAR Whelen All-American Series Super Late Model champion at Thompson, is the defending champion of the PASS 75 and a four-time feature winner at the track this season alone. The 18-year-old driver will pull double duty on Thursday, competing in both the PASS 75 -- a PASS North Series points race, as well as the third of five races in the PASS National Championship series -- and the 30-lap Super Late Model feature for the track's regular competitors.

BEST CAREER THOMPSON SPEEDWAY FINISH: 1st (July 2009)
LAST RACE AT THOMPSON SPEEDWAY: 1st (July 2009)

PASS North Series
LAST RACE: July 17, Beech Ridge, Scarborough, Maine (.333-mile oval)
NEXT RACE: July 31, PASS 150, Riverside, Groveton, N.H. (.25-mile oval)
POINTS POSITION: 17th

DEREK, HOW NICE IS IT TO RUN A PASS RACE AT YOUR HOME TRACK?

It means a lot. It's a big boost of confidence, and I come at it with a different approach.

I really feel like I have the upper hand racing there every single week. My whole team knows it, and I think they act in a completely different manner -- because we're going there to run top-3 or win and that's it. It changes the whole mentallity for the whole day.

WHAT WILL YOU DO IN TERMS OF PREPARATION TO BE READY TO RACE IN TWO DIFFERENT EVENTS ON THE SAME NIGHT?

We've got all the help we need because it's nice and close to our house, so we've got the teams split up in two. We've got two different people leading the two teams, and we've got different people working on the two cars.

It's something I learned to do last year -- running both a (K&N Pro Series car) and a PASS car on the same night -- and that was harder, with two separate teams, two separate everything. With all the guys that help us out on a weekly basis, we just split them up now and go for it.

HOW DIFFERENT ARE THE TWO CARS TO DRIVE?

They're a lot different. One has a lot more horsepower than the other.

You can drive the PASS car a lot harder. The Thompson car, you've got to be a lot smoother, a lot easier on it. But the PASS car, that's the car with big steam. Jumping back and forth, it might take me a lap or two to get back into the rhythm with each car, but I've been in both of them enough now that it's not that big of a deal.
THURSDAY NIGHT THUNDER on JULY 15th
BAD LUCK PLAGUES RAMSTROM AT THOMPSON
THOMPSON, Conn. -- Derek Ramstrom's bad luck compounded itself on Thursday night.

After a flat tire stopped his bid in a race for second place in the early going, Ramstrom was involved in two more incidents and was forced to settle for a 12th-place finish in the NASCAR Whelen All-American Series 30-lap Super Late Model feature at Thompson International Speedway.

Ramstrom pulled his No. 35 Charter Communications/Matthews Truck Service and Towing Chevrolet behind the wall on lap 18 and did not return to competition.

"I was going to pass (George Bessette) and I cut down a right front," Ramstrom said. "We had to pit for that, obviously, and then more stuff just happened after that. It was a mess."

Ramstrom headed into the night as the division points leader with four feature wins to his credit this season.

He returns to action next weekend for a shot at two wins in one night. Ramstrom will compete in the reguarly scheduled 30-lap Super Late Model feature, as well as the PASS National Series 75-lap event at Thompson on the same night.

Ramstrom recorded his first top-10 finish of the season in PASS competition on Tuesday night in the Bastille 200 at Lee USA Speedway.

10th at PASS NORTH LEE USA BASTILLE 200
Derek Ramstrom of West Boylston, Mass., finished 10th in the PASS North Series Bastille 200 at Lee USA Speedway in Lee, N.H., on Tuesday, July 13. Ramstrom started on the pole for the first time this season, and the part-time PASS competitor and reigning Super Late Model champion at Thompson (Conn.) International Speedway led the first five circuits before settling into the top-3 and riding out the early portion of the event. Ramstrom lost valuable track position on a pit stop -- when lug nuts were left off his right rear tire -- leaving him to scramble for his first top-10 finish of the season in four starts.
 
WHAT:
PASS North Series Bastille 200
WHERE: Lee USA Speedway, Lee, N.H. (.333-mile oval)
 
STARTED:
1st - FINISHED: 10th - LED: 1 time for 5 laps

NEXT RACE: Saturday, July 22nd, Thompson International Speedway, Thompson, Conn.
 
DEREK, TALK ABOUT YOUR NIGHT.
 
I started on the pin and Scott Chubbuck got by me and then Kelly Moore passed me. I just followed Kelly for a while. I tried to save the car, but it just got too loose. I'd go to turn the wheel and the car would just snap around on me. I struggled with that all night.
 
Next time we come, I just need to tell the crew to make some different adjustments because we're trying a different setup now in the car. It's a different feel, and I've just got to get used to it and adapt to it.
 
WHAT CAN YOU TELL US ABOUT THE PIT STOP?
 
We pitted about lap (100), and we only got one lug nut on the right rear. We dropped the car (off the jack), but I had to come back in and we had to fix it. We lost a ton of ground, and that's where I made the wrong adjustment on that pit stop right there.
 
DO YOU TAKE SOME SOLACE IN THE FACT YOU GOT YOUR FIRST TOP-10 OF THE SEASON?
 
Yeah, but I'm a little frustrated.
 
It's something we've got to get used to. We've just got to keep testing this setup and hopefully get an idea of how it's supposed to feel and the way that I like it.
 
THURSDAY NIGHT THUNDER on JULY 8th
Derek Survives Long Day
to Finish 2nd at Thompson
THOMPSON, Conn. -- Derek finished second in the 30-lap Super Late Model feature at Thompson International Speedway on Thursday night, July 8. Ramstrom battled a myriad of problems in practice and a tight race car in the feature to post his fifth top-2 finish in seven starts at Thompson this season. Unofficially, Ramstrom took the division's points lead, breaking a three-way tie with Mike O'Sullivan and Dennis Maxfield as he tries to win a second consecutive Super Late Model championship. Ramstrom started third in the field and battled eventual winner Larry Gelinas for the lead throughout the caution-free feature event as part of Thompson's NASCAR Whelen All-American Series program.

STARTED: 3rd - FINISHED: 2nd

NEXT: July 13, PASS North Series Bastille 200, Lee USA Speedway, Lee, N.H. (.333-mile oval)

DEREK, IT WAS A LONG DAY. TALK ABOUT ALL THE PROBLEMS YOU ENCOUNTERED.

We definitely had a pretty crazy day. We got there, and we had trouble with the shocks right off. We couldn't get gas in them, so we were running around like animals trying to get that figured out. Then in the second practice we went out and the rear end of the car caught fire. It was the fuel cell, so I pulled into the pits and they told me it was the fuel pickup line that was loose, and we fixed that.

Doing all of that, we missed one of the practices, so (Thompson Speedway official Ben Dodge) gave us some extra practice time. As soon as I went out on the track, I could tell it was down a little on power. I called my crew, and the pickup line was all burnt. I guess it was crushed on the inside, so we had to change that.

It was definitely chaos. We had no crew chief and he's also our spotter, so my dad had to spot for the first time. But I'm really impressed with the whole crew and the way they kept working so we could get out of there with a second-place finish.

SO, YOU HAD NO HEAT RACES TONIGHT AND YOU WENT OUT WITHOUT GETTING BACK ON THE TRACK?

Yeah, and we didn't have our crew chief tonight, so I was calling the shots. I over-tightened the car a little bit. We were pretty tight right from the beginning, and it was tough to pass Larry. He was really quick. With our crate engines, when the car gets really tight, it becomes really hard to pass.

DID YOU THINK YOU HAD A SHOT TO CATCH LARRY GELINAS FOR THE WIN?

We were right there, side-by-side right up until the final lap. I was working him and working him, and I really thought I could get him. I thought his car would slow up more than it did. I was right there though, and it was a thriller right to the checkered flag.

With all the power Larry has under that hood, though, it was going to be really tough to get by him.
17th at Canaan Fair Speedway - 7/3/10
 
Derek finished 17th in the PASS North Series Firecracker 150 at Canaan Fair Speedway in Canaan, N.H., on Saturday, July 3. Ramstrom had a right front tire go flat early in the race, sending his car into the backstretch wall on the .333-mile oval -- the site of his first career Super Late Model victory in the now defunct PASS Outlaw Late Model series. It was Ramstrom's second flat tire in three PASS starts this season and came after the 18-year-old driver had worked his way inside the top-10 in the running order.

DEREK, YOU HAD A ROUGH NIGHT.

I was just following Richie Dearborn up through the pack. The car was going really good and we got up to sixth or seventh place. Then for about 10 laps after that it really started going away on me.

All of a sudden, we popped the bead on the right front tire, and it went straight into the wall. There was nothing I could do.

HOW FRUSTRATING IS IT WHEN THINGS LIKE THAT HAPPEN?

We just can't catch a break with these tires in the PASS races. At Beech Ridge (in May) we were going good, and then we had a flat tire. Then we had the same thing again tonight.

It's too bad, because we had a really good car.
PASS North Series
Canaan Fair Speedway
Race Preview
Derek returns to a track with some sentimental value this weekend for the PASS North Series Firecracker 150 at Canaan Fair Speedway in Canaan, N.H., on Saturday, July 3. Though Ramstrom has never competed in a PASS North Series event at Canaan, he does have a Super Late Model win at the track. He earned his first career PASS Outlaw Late Model victory at Canaan in 2006 en route to the championship that season. Ramstrom ran the first two events of 2010 before returning to weekly competition at Thompson International Speedway in Thompson, Conn., where he's posted four wins in six races.
DEREK, HOW EXCITED ARE YOU TO GET BACK TO PASS NORTH SERIES RACING?

I'm excited. I like traveling around for races, and the PASS series is always a lot of fun. Like anywhere, I guess you can have your share of 'controversy,' but the atmosphere there is always fun to be a part of.

There's a lot of good guys in that series, a lot of good competition, and it's always a challenge for us. I can't wait.

YOU TESTED AT CANAAN LAST WEEKEND. HOW DID THAT GO?

We were quick, which was good. One of the local guys there said we were as fast as they usually run for lap times, so we know we were right there. It went pretty good for us, but we'll obviously be able to tell when we get there with other PASS cars on the track with us.

It takes a little bit to adjust to getting back in the PASS car. It's got a little more horsepower, a little more throttle response than (the weekly car). So it took me about 20 or 30 laps to get back into with swing of it. But you know what? That's why we go test.

NOW THAT YOU'RE A 'PART-TIME' TEAM WITH PASS, DO YOUR GOALS CHANGE?

No, I don't think so. I want to get a top-3 finish out of there. I miss being on the podium in PASS at the end of races. This is a chance to show that we belong there, back at the place where I got my first (PASS Outlaw Late Model) win.
THURSDAY NIGHT THUNDER on JUNE 24th
Ramstrom Grabs Fourth Win
Of The Season At Thompson
Derek Ramstrom of West Boylston, Mass., won his fourth feature event of the season at Thompson International Speedway in Thompson, Conn., on Thursday night. Ramstrom, the defending Super Late Model champion at the track, has four victories this season in just six starts. He started fourth in the 30-lap NASCAR Whelen All-American Series event and sprinted to the lead before the field completed the first lap. From there, Ramstrom went unchallenged to the victory and moved into a 3-way tie atop the division's point standings with Mike O'Sullivan and Dennis Maxfield.

WHAT: 30-lap Super Late Model Feature
STARTED: 4th - FINISHED: 1st (fourth win of season) - STANDINGS: 1st

DEREK, HOW DID IT FEEL TO GET BACK TO VICTORY LANE AFTER A COUPLE OF RACES WHERE LUCK DIDN'T GO YOUR WAY?

It was pretty awesome, for sure. The car was great, and it just seemed like the rest of the guys weren't going to have a chance. I'm glad for all our guys after the bad luck we've been having.

It was probably pretty boring for the fans, but we started fourth and the car just took right off. For us, it was an excellent race. It really was.

Thompson Track Race Report - After a run of three-straight victories to open the 2010 season, Derek Ramstrom of Worcester, MA, returned to his winning ways posting his fourth Super Late Model feature win in six starts. It took Ramstrom only a single lap to move from the fourth starting position to the head of the class. Ramstrom made quick work of Larry Gelinas, Dave Silvia, and George Bessette to take the lead.

Mike O’Sullivan moved passed Dennis Maxfield to move into the fourth position. The battle was far from over as contact between O’Sullivan and Maxfield, allowed Maxfield to get up along side O’Sullivan once again. The top-three were meanwhile able to pull away. Ramstrom held a five-car length advantage over Bessette, who enjoyed an equal margin over Gelinas.

At halfway, the balance of the field was strung out over the length of the speedway. The only thing that changed over the second half of the event was the distance between the top three. Ramstrom extended his margin over Bessette while Gelinas had reeled in Bessette. O’Sullivan cut into the advantage that Gelinas had previously held in third.

With three laps remaining, O’Sullivan dove low underneath Gelinas in an attempt to steal third. O’Sullivan could get alongside Gelinas exiting the corners but could not muster up a pass on the straightaway. In the end, the recent High School graduate scored his fourth victory of the season. Bessette came home second over Gelinas, O’Sullivan, and Maxfield.
THURSDAY NIGHT THUNDER on JUNE 17th
NEW ATTITUDE: Ramstrom Vows
To Learn From Experience
WEST BOYLSTON, Mass. -- Derek Ramstrom doesn't want to play the nice guy anymore.

After his No. 35 Charter Communications/Matthews Truck Service and Towing Chevrolet spun while racing for the lead off the final corner of Thursday night's 30-lap Super Late Model feature at Thompson International Speedway, Ramstrom said he's finally reached his breaking point. He was credited with a 10th-place finish and was more upset by the loss of a possible victory than the loss of points toward a potential championship.

"I'm kind of fed up with it all, to be honst," said Ramstrom, 18. "I'm sick of being the nice guy. We're trying to go out and win races, but I don't think these other guys have any respect for me."

Ramstrom started 8th in the 15-car field as part of the track's NASCAR Whelen All-American Series program, and he quickly worked his way onto the rear bumper of former track champion Mike O'Sullivan. Ramstrom tried several different moves to get past O'Sullivan -- but never could pull off the pass for the lead.

Finally, entering the final two turns, Ramstrom tried to get under O'Sullivan -- first getting picked by a lapped car on the bottom of the track and then getting pinched down to the apron by the leader. Ramstrom's left side tires caught the infield dirt, and he spun out as O'Sullivan went on to win.

"After all these incidents, it's just ridiculous," said Ramstrom, who also was involved in an accident two weeks earlier while racing with the leaders. "Hopefully, it will be different this week. I know that I can't let this stuff keep happening, and I know what I have to do about it."

Ramstrom said that learning the ins and outs of close-quarters racing comes with experience.

"Look at O'Sullivan and all the championships he's won at Thompson. He has a ton of experience at racing like this -- and so he should be good at it. It's just a learning curve for me.

"It's only going to make me better as a driver and get me prepared for whatever other series I race with in the future."

Thompson's Super Late Model division returns to action on Thursday night, June 24, with a 30-lap feature. Racing begins at 5:45 p.m.
10th for Derek after Last Lap Spin
Thompson Track Race Report - The Super Late Model main event found Mike O’Sullivan of Springfield, MA, coming out on top of a three-car battle to score the victory. George Bessette, O’Sullivan and Larry Gelinas made easy work of the front row starters to run in the top-three positions early. On lap three, O’Sullivan took over the top spot from Bessette. As Gelinas pressured Bessette for second, Derek Ramstrom joined the battle at the head of the field.

O’Sullivan was able to gain a sizable advantage as Bessette, Gelinas, and Ramstrom continued to battle for second. On lap 7, Ramstrom stormed by Gelinas. Less than a lap later he took over second from Bessette and began to hunt down O’Sullivan.

Ricky Fuller, Jim Banfield and Mike Stefanik caught Gelinas. Contact between Fuller and Banfield ended Fuller’s night as he headed to pit road on lap 13.

At halfway, Ramstrom was glued to the back bumper of O’Sullivan. Gelinas got along side Bessette for third. Stefanik joined the battle. Gelinas was able to move into third opening the door for Stefanik as well. The action slowed when Jeramee Lillie and Dave Silvia made hard contact on the front stretch.

O’Sullivan was up for the challenge on the restart to retain his lead. Gelinas was looking racy on the restart giving Ramstrom a run. When things shook out, O’Sullivan continued to lead Ramstrom, Gelinas, and Stefanik. Bessette ran in a distant fifth.

With less than 10 laps to go, O’Sullivan had to go on the defensive as Ramstrom began to apply serious pressure. Ramstrom could get along side O’Sullivan lap-after-lap. Gelinas stuck the nose of his #48 in to make it a three-car race for the lead. Stefanik was in striking distance in fourth.

Coming out of four to take the checkers, O’Sullivan, Ramstrom and Gelinas came out of the corner three-wide. Giving it everything he had on the bottom groove, Ramstrom lost the handle on his car; spinning to the infield leaving O’Sullivan and Gelinas to duke it out for the win. O’Sullivan crossed the stripe with the victory followed by Gelinas and Mike Stefanik. Banfield and Bessette rounded out the top five.

RAIN OUT
THURSDAY NIGHT THUNDER on JUNE 10th
Ramstrom Ready To Get
Back On Track This Week
WEST BOYLSTON, Mass. -- Derek Ramstrom doesn't care much for points racing, particularly in New England's weekly short-track ranks.

In fact, the recent high school graduate and reigning Thompson International Speedway track champion is very clear about what he wants to get out of the rest of 2010, which already includes three feature wins in four starts at Thompson.

"We've got to go out and get some wins," Ramstrom said. "That's really what has to matter most to us right now."

Ramstrom stormed out of the gates by winning the first three NASCAR Whelen All-American Series Super Late Model events of the season at his home track, and he seemed on his way to a fourth consecutive victory on May 27. That's when a rear brake vibration, however, caused his car to snap loose as he battled Rick Fuller for second place in the late going of the event and ended up hitting the turn one wall to end his night with a rare DNF.

"I was just fighting for that fourth win, and I really shouldn't have been pushing that hard," Ramstrom admitted. "I probably only had a second-place car, but I was really trying to push Rick Fuller. I had a really bad vibration in the rear brake -- so bad it was making the car hop, and it got me extremely loose. I got crossed up going into (turn) one and it unloaded the car on me and went straight into the wall."

Following an off weekend, Ramstrom trails Dennis Maxfield by two points atop the Super Late Model standings as teams return to Thompson for a 30-lap feature event this Thursday night -- the unofficial beginning of the summer stretch.

Ramstrom said his team will be ready for the changes summer heat brings to the high-banked 5/8-mile oval.

"The track does change a ton when it does get heat in it," he said. "Just like last year, it seems we started the season with a dominant setup in the car and we could go out and just dominate. But once the track starts changing, we've got to change the setup a little bit so that we can continue to go after those wins.

"The track usually gets loose when it gets a lot of heat in it. I like to run a tight car at that track, so we've just got to switch up the setups a little bit when it starts getting hot."

While he's focused on repeating as Thompson's Super Late Model champion, Ramstrom will continue to run a partial PASS North Series schedule. In years past he's run the entire PASS schedule in his No. 35 Charter Communications/Matthew's Truck Service and Towing Chevrolet, but Ramstrom believes scaling back the touring efforts will serve the team better over the long haul.

"We were always going week to week to week and trying to keep up with that," said Ramstrom, who has two career PASS North victories, including one at Thompson last summer. "We tried to figure out the tracks during practice. That approach works sometimes -- you get lucky and nail the setup when you unload the car and everything's perfect. But there are also times when you're scrambling just to keep up.

"This summer we're going to step back and do some testing and really figure out the car before we go places, so we can try and nail the setup and really nail down some wins. It's something we couldn't ever fit into our schedule before, but now we're going to really look at the schedule and evaluate things and pick the tracks we're strong at."

Because, Ramstrom said, they've got to keep the big picture in mind.

"We need to get some wins -- that's really what we're trying to get. We've been at this series for a while now, and we need to nab some wins."
THURSDAY NIGHT THUNDER on JUNE 3rd
RAIN OUT
THURSDAY NIGHT THUNDER on MAY 27th
Derek's Strong-Hold Ends
Thompson Track Race Report - Jim Banfield of S. Glastonbury, CT, won a classic battle in the Super Late Models on Thursday night. The victory by Banfield ended Derek Ramstrom’s strong-hold on the SLM winner’s circle. For the opening two laps, the entire field went door-to-door behind the leaders Banfield and Steve Desmarais. Banfield finally freed himself of traffic to take sole possession of the lead. Desmarais was shuffled back as Rick Fuller and Dennis Maxfield moved into the top three. Ramstrom joined the fray laps later.

Banfield continued to lead with Fuller in tow while the battle for the third spot began to heat between Maxfield, Ramstrom and Larry Gelinas. After several laps, Ramstrom was able to make the pass on Maxfield. He immediately ran down the lead duo of Banfield and Fuller.

The top three cars had broken away from Maxfield and the remainder of the field. Lap-after-lap, Ramstrom could get alongside Fuller in the low groove. Despite the battled for second, Banfield could not distance himself from Fuller and Ramstrom. With five laps remaining, Fuller and Ramstrom went side-by-side glued to the back bumper of Banfield. Maxfield ran a half-straightaway behind in third.

Ramstrom, looking for the edge on Fuller, lost control of his mount, spinning and making hard contact with the outside wall in turn one. The caution set-up a single-file restart with three-laps remaining that pitted Banfield against Fuller.

Banfield rocketed out to the lead with Maxfield grabbing second from Fuller. Banfield enjoyed a few car-length advantage while Fuller and Maxfield battle for second. Mike Stefanik made a late race surge. At the checkers, it was Banfield scoring a hard-fought victory. Maxfield crossed the stripe second ahead of Fuller but was relegated to the third spot after making an illegal pass before the start/finish line on the final restart. Stefanik and Gelinas rounded out the top-five.

Derek stands second in points with 182, 2 behind Dennis Maxfield.
150 Laps for the Super Late Models
Saturday, MAY 22nd - 4 PM
No. Woodstock, NH
 
 
RACE REPORT - Started 19th - Finished 20th
NORTH WOODSTOCK, N.H. -- Derek Ramstrom finished 20th in the PASS 150 at White Mountain Motorsports Park on Saturday. Ramstrom was trying to move from the middle of the pack when he was spun off of the track's fourth turn following contact with Joey Doiron's No. 73 car on lap 110.

DEREK, WHAT HAPPENED WITH THE NO. 73 CAR?

I had to slow down a ton to try and get it down to the bottom (of the racetrack), and he rear-ended me.

DID IT TAKE YOU BY SURPRISE?

Yeah, it did. He came over and apologized. It's one of those racing deals. Next time, he's just got to try and be a little more patient, I guess.

HOW WAS THE CAR PRIOR TO THE INCIDENT?

We were pretty fast all day, but we changed up the setup a little bit. We thought we were going to get tight -- as the night moved on, the track gets a little bit cooler and we thought we were going to get tight. We made a little bit too many adjustments and (I was) just struggling to pass people back in the pack. I couldn't work the outside groove at all. It was a tough night.


NEXT RACE: Thursday, May 27, NASCAR Whelen All-American Series Super Late Model 30-lap feature, Thompson Int'l Speedway, Thompson, Conn.
Photos by Norm Marx


White Mountain Motorsports Park Race Preview

Derek heads back to the type of track where he's encountered a great deal of success early in his PASS North Series career, entering the PASS 150 at White Mountain Motorsports Park in North Woodstock, N.H., on Saturday, May 22. The 18-year-old driver earned his first career PASS victory on a similar quarter-mile at All-Star Speedway in Epping, N.H., in 2008 and last year finished second in this event on the high banks at White Mountain. Ramstrom aims to turn his luck around after a tire issue in the season-opener at Beech Ridge Motor Speedway earlier this month forced him to lose valuable positions while pitting under the green flag.

BEST CAREER WMMP FINISH: 2nd (May 2009)
LAST RACE AT WMMP: 2nd (May 2009)

PASS NORTH SERIES
LAST RACE: Saturday, May 1, PASS 150, Beech Ridge Motor Speedway, Scarborough, Maine (26th-place finish)
NEXT RACE: Saturday, June 12, Speedway 660, Fredericton, Nb
POINTS POSITION: 21st


DEREK, WE'LL PUT YOU IN THE CATEGORY OF DRIVERS WHO LIKE WHITE MOUNTAIN, OK?

Yeah, definitely. I love White Mountain. We always seem to run really strong there. I like the high banks, and like I said, we always seem to run well on those kind of tracks.


DESPITE THE FACT THAT YOU CALL ONE OF NEW ENGLAND'S BIGGEST TRACKS -- THE 5/8-MILE THOMPSON (CONN.) SPEEDWAY -- YOUR HOME, QUARTER-MILE TRACKS ARE WHERE YOU'VE SEEMINGLY BEEN AT YOUR BEST.

I just seem to have taken to those tracks. I really have a good feel in the car on high-banked tracks, whether it's Thompson or White Mountain.

White Mountain kind of resembles All-Star a little bit, in that they have some banking and they have that frontstretch wall that comes out at you off the corner.


ARE YOU LOOKING FOR A TURNAROUND AFTER A COUPLE WEEKS OFF FOLLOWING THE TOUGH DAY AT BEECH RIDGE?

Definitely. I'm pumped to get back behind the wheel, and I can't wait. I'm looking forward to running at White Mountain. It's always run to run up north against some of the good competition up there.

FIRST THURSDAY NIGHT THUNDER on MAY 20th
Scott and Trevor Nickel Photos, Official Photographers for Thompson Speedway
No Slowing Ramstrom at Thompson
THOMPSON, Conn. -- Derek Ramstrom is batting 3-for-3 on the young season.

The reigning Thompson International Speedway track champion won his third feature event of the season in as many starts on Thursday night, driving away late to win the 30-lap Super Late Model event on the opening night of the track's NASCAR Whelen All-American Series schedule.

Ramstrom, 18, of West Boylston, Mass., said it was almost as easy as it looked in his No. 35 Charter Communications/Matthews Truck Service and Towing Chevrolet.

"The car was just phenomenal," he said in victory lane. "The car was just so good, it wasn't that hard to race."

Ramstrom battled his way to the front of the 13-car field prior to the halfway mark, taking the lead from Larry Gelinas and checked out to a nearly half-straightaway advantage he never relinquished.

After winning four events during the 2009 season, Ramstrom has won all three of his Super Late Model starts thus far in 2010 -- including a doubleheader sweep of 25-lap features for the division during Thompson's annual "Icebreaker" back in April.

Next up for Ramstrom is the PASS North Series 150 at White Mountain Motorsports Park in North Woodstock, N.H., on Saturday, May 22.
Derek Goes 3 for 3 in 2010
TRACK RACE REPORT: Hot off two wins on Icebreaker weekend, Derek Ramstrom of Worcester, MA, came into Thursday night as the man to beat in the Super Late Models. Following the first TNTT event, Ramstrom remains undefeated. Larry Gelinas rocketed out to a comfortable lead right from the drop of the green flag. Dennis Maxfield ran in the second spot as Derek Ramstrom had quickly worked his way into the third position. After an early restart, Ramstrom was able to take over the second position from Maxfield.

Two of the division’s heavy hitters Mike Stefanik and Mike O’Sullivan were involved in a tandem spin on the front stretch. Both were able to continue and the race remained green. Ramstrom immediately caught Gelinas. After a pair of laps, Ramstrom was the new leader.

At halfway, Ramstrom had gained a sizable advantage over Gelinas. The battled was brewing between Maxfield, Fuller and Bessette. Bessette began looking low on Fuller. The two made some slight contact as Bessette made the pass exiting turn four. Fuller hooked Bessette on the front stretch sending Bessette head on into the outside wall entering turn one. Fuller was sent pit side for his actions.

On the restart, Ramstrom was pitted against Gelinas. Ramstrom was easily able to regain his lead. Gelinas fell into the grasp of Maxfield. Once things sorted out Ramstrom led by a half-straightaway over Gelinas, who had a comfortable margin over Maxfield. Marc Curtis began to run down Maxfield as Mike Stefanik was picking his way through the field.

In the end, Ramstrom went unchallenged to the checkers followed by Gelinas. Maxfield finished third. Curtis held off a late race bid by Stefanik. The running order was shuffled following post race tech when both Curtis and Stefanik were disqualified. Jeramee Lillie and Steve Desmarias were the remainder of the official top-five.
Ramstrom Geared Up For
Thompson Title Defense
WEST BOYLSTON, Mass. -- The youngest track champion in Thompson International Speedway history will attempt to become the youngest back-to-back champion in the track's history, as Derek Ramstrom begins the weekly grind of his Super Late Model title defense at the facility this week.

Thompson's weekly program kicks off this Thursday night, May 20, with a NASCAR Whelen All-American Series 30-lap feature for the Super Late Models.

The 18-year-old Ramstrom, who won four times en route to the division title in 2009, won Super Late Model features on consecutive days at the track early last month as part of the season-opening "Icebreaker" weekend. Ramstrom has a 4-point lead atop the standings over Mike O'Sullivan as the season begins in earnest Thursday.

"It's a good opportunity for me to go out and try and repeat," said Ramstrom, driver of the No. 35 Charter Communications/Matthew's Truck Service and Towing Chevrolet. "I have a lot of track time there now, and every week I seem to run better and better. I'm just more on top of my game when I race there, and I know I can win the championship again."

His start to the 2010 campaign provided proof that he's more than capable of repeating. Ramstrom started on the outside pole in the first 25-lap feature of the year and rolled to victory lane, and less than 24 hours later he waged a side-by-side battle with the former division champion O'Sullivan -- which he won on the final corner of the final lap. A few more performances like the ones on opening weekend, and Ramstrom will be well on his way to title No. 2.

"I have a lot of confidence coming into this season, and we're already off to the best (two-race) start we've ever had," Ramstrom said. "And, as a team, we know we're going to be really good at Thompson. I'm excited to get going there every week."

Thompson's NASCAR Whelen All-American Series season runs weekly, every Thursday night through Sept. 16.
Saturday, May 1st - PASS 100 - 26th Place
 
Fast Car, Bad Luck For Ramstrom
By Travis Barrett SCARBOROUGH, Maine -- From the qualifying rounds right through the feature last weekend, Derek Ramstrom hopes he got all of his bad luck for the 2010 PASS North Series season right out of the way.

Ramstrom was forced to settle for a 26th-place finish in the season-opening PASS 150 at Beech Ridge Motor Speedway on Saturday. Ramstrom started just 28th in the 31-car field after he was wrecked by another car during qualifying, and his charge through the field in the main event was thwarted by a ill-tempered tire.

"We had a really fast car," Ramstrom said. "Then the right front (tire) started going bad, and it just wouldn't turn anymore. Eventually it go so bad we had to pit under green -- and it was pretty much over from there."

Ramstrom's Charter Communications/Matthew's Truck Service and Towing No. 35 Chevrolet was, indeed, fast in the early going of the PASS 150. The 18-year-old driver need just 65 laps to pick up 15 positions on the track -- with the benefit of just one caution flag to bunch the field together.

Less than 10 laps later, Ramstrom was running 10th.

His forward progress soon slowed, though he was able to maintain a top-10 run with just 20 laps to go. Eventually, the car's handling worsened to the point where the only logical move was to pit for a new tire.

Ramstrom next races on May 20 on the opening night of NASCAR Whelen All-American Series action in the Super Late Model division at Thompson International Speedway. Two nights later, he'll join the PASS North Series for round two of the 2010 season at White Mountain Motorsports Park in North Woodstock, N.H.

"We'll go see what we can do there," said Ramstrom, who opened his year with back-to-back Super Late Model wins during the Icebreaker at Thompson last month.
       
       
 
Ramstrom Eyes More
Super Late Model Starts
By Travis Barrett - WEST BOYLSTON, Mass. -- Hoping to capitalize on the momentum created earlier this month at the season-opening Icebreaker event at his home track, Derek Ramstrom has altered his 2010 racing plans.

The youngest track champion in Thompson (Conn.) International Speedway history, Ramstrom will attempt to win a second consecutive title in the track's Super Late Model division. After winning both ends of an Icebreaker doubleheader for the Super Late Models, Ramstrom took a hard look at returning to weekly competition full-time.

"It's a good opportunity and to go out and try and repeat," said Ramstrom, 18, who originally planned to race only a partial schedule at Thompson. "I have a lot of track time there now, and every week I seem to run better and better. I'm just more on top of my game when I race there and know I can win the championship again.

"I have a lot of confidence coming into this season."

Part of Ramstrom's confidence comes in having started this season with a ride on the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East. He said that while he's stepping back from that opportunity for the time being, it was a tremendous learning experience.

He hopes to translate what he learned in the K&N Pro Series toward his Super Late Model efforts, which includes an ambitious schedule of PASS North Series events in addition to Thompson's NASCAR Whelen All-American Series weekly program.

"The K&N Pro Series was a great opportunity -- it really was -- but it just didn't work out the way I hoped," said Ramstrom, who posted a career-best finish of 6th in the K&N Pro Series season opener at Greenville Pickens Speedway in March. "If anything, I just feel like I need to be a little prepared going forward, maybe. There's just so much competition on that series that you've got to be ready mentally more than anything.

"I know that I have the talent to be there under the right circumstances, just like everybody else."

For a young driver looking for exposure, Ramstrom feels that PASS -- which sanctions races from as far north as Canada and as far south as Georgia and includes a national championship series -- rivals NASCAR's regional tours in terms of recognition. NASCAR Sprint Cup Series drivers Kyle Busch, David Ragan, Regan Smith and others have all competed in PASS events.

"There's just a phenomenal amount of competition in PASS," he said. "Every week, there are at least a dozen guys at every race that can win. That's big for me, where you know that coming down to the end of close races, you really have to have a lot of confidence to get the job done.

"PASS is a great series with really good exposure. They race all around the East Coast, with a ton of different drivers and driving styles. A lot of people don't know how good a series it really is, and I'm looking forward to running there some more."

Ramstrom said that when he's back with his family-operated Super Late Model team, he'll be better prepared from having competed in NASCAR's feeder division.

"We're going to be really good, which is great," said Ramstrom, who won four NASCAR Whelen All-American Series events at Thompson last season, as well as a PASS North Series race. "Just running those couple of K&N Pro Series races with the team I was working with, it definitely helped me out mentally. I'll definitely be more prepared for PASS racing, and hopefully the things I picked up from the K&N Series will help me there."

The NASCAR Whelen All-American Series schedule at Thompson International Speedway begins May 20 with a 30-lap Super Late Model feature.

In the meantime, Ramstrom will join the PASS North Series when it opens its 2010 season this Saturday, May 1, with the PASS 150 at Beech Ridge Motor Speedway in Scarborough, Maine.
Derek Ramstrom: PASS North Series
Beech Ridge Motor Speedway Race Preview
Reigning Thompson (Conn.) International Speedway track champion Derek Ramstrom makes his 2010 PASS North Series debut in the seaon opener at the PASS 150 at Beech Ridge Motor Speedway in Scarborough, Maine, on Saturday, May 1. A two-time winner on the PASS North Series in his career, Ramstrom finished 10th in the final PASS standings a year ago, despite not competing in the full schedule. He posted four top-5 and seven top-10 finishes in 10 starts, while also winning four Super Late Model features at Thompson over the course of the season there. Ramstrom made two NASCAR K&N Pro Series East starts this season with a career-best finish of 6th at Greenville (S.C.) Pickens Speedway in March, and he also won a pair of Super Late Model features during Icebreaker weekend at Thompson earlier this month.

WHO: Derek Ramstrom, West Boylston, Mass.
TEAM: Charter Communications/Matthew's Truck Service & Towing
No. 35 Chevrolet

BEST CAREER BEECH RIDGE MOTOR SPEEDWAY FINISH: 3rd
(September 2007)

LAST RACE AT BEECH RIDGE MOTOR SPEEDWAY: 31st (September 2009)

WHAT: PASS North Series PASS 150
WHERE: Beech Ridge Motor Speedway, Scarborough, Maine
 (.333-mile oval)
WHEN: 3 p.m., Saturday, May 1

PASS NORTH SERIES
LAST RACE:
N/A
NEXT RACE: Saturday, May 22, White Mountain Motorsports Park, North Woodstock, N.H.


DEREK, HOW MUCH ARE YOU LOOKING FORWARD TO GETTING BACK INTO A SUPER LATE MODEL THIS WEEKEND?

It's going to feel really good. Just running those couple of K&N Pro Series races with the team I was working with, it definitely helped me out mentally. I'll definitely be more prepared for PASS racing, and hopefully the things I picked up from the K&N Series will help me there.

PASS is a great series with really good exposure. They race all around the East Coast, with a ton of different drivers and driving styles. A lot of people don't know how good a series it really is, and I'm looking forward to running there some more.


WHAT'S THE KEY TO HAVING SUCCESS AT BEECH RIDGE MOTOR SPEEDWAY? YOU HAD TWO REALLY GOOD RUNS THERE LAST YEAR.

You mean other than just staying in the top-5 all weekend? (laughs).

No the biggest thing is that you want to be able to use the outside groove. If you're able to pass guys on the outside, you'll be good to go. It always seems there that halfway through the race, all the good cars move up to the high line to pass. When you go to Beech Ridge, you've got to have the mindset of running in that top line right from the beginning -- I just do concentrate too much on the bottom anymore.

I like Beech Ridge. It's a nice facility, and it's always competitive.


IS YOUR TEAM A BETTER RACE TEAM NOW THAN IT WAS AT THIS TIME A YEAR AGO?

Yeah, we are. Definitely. We've really come a long way over the past year. We've got a lot of new guys on the crew, and we really seem to have come together.

I think one of the biggest things I learned (in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series) was about driver-crew chief communication. That's one thing where we've gotten a lot better with our Super Late Model, too.

THE ICEBREAKER - APRIL 10-11
  
Ramstrom Breaks The Ice
With Pair Of Wins
SCOTT & TREVOR NICKEL PHOTOS
By Travis Barrett - THOMPSON, Conn. -- Derek Ramstrom got his Super Late Model season off to a fine start at Thompson International Speedway.

The reigning track champion swept a pair of 25-lap features for the division as part of the track's annual Icebreaker event over the weekend.

"It was great to come right out and win two races like that," Ramstrom said. "It was a big boost of confidence -- just huge for the whole team. I needed that."

The 18-year-old driver from West Boylston, Mass., became the youngest champion in Thompson history last year after winning four Super Late Model races on the season. In just two days, he's already halfway to that total this year.

Ramstrom won't defend his track championship in 2010, instead opting for a full schedule of NASCAR K&N Pro Series East races complemented by partial PASS North Series and Thompson weekly schedules. The lightened workload at Thompson has changed his motivation, he said.

"We're going out to race for the win every time," Ramstrom said. "We'll go out and do whatever it takes to get to the checkered flag first. It's wreckers or win for us."

On Saturday, Ramstrom started on the outside pole in the 16-car field and waited until leader Louie Mechalides encountered a transmission problem on an early restart. He took the lead and never looked back en route to winning.

Less than 24 hours later, Ramstrom started from the pole but conceded the lead to Mike O'Sullivan. The two cars spent the final 10 laps racing door-to-door, with O'Sullivan holding the high line and Ramstrom occupying the low side of the high-banked race track.


As the two cars rolled through the final corner with the checkered flag in sight, Ramstrom got a run under O'Sullivan and won the drag race to the start-finish line by half a car length.

"It wasn't easy at all," Ramstrom said.

"I could tell his car was tight in the center of the corner, and I did a little high-low move and moved him up the track. I gave him a little bump and run, and it worked."

Ramstrom's family-owned No. 35 Chevrolet won't be back in action until May, with an eye on being back on track for either the PASS 150 at Beech Ridge Motor Speedway (Scarborough, Maine) on May 1 or the beginning of Thompson's weekly Thursday Night Thunder series on May 20.

"This is the best we've ever started out for a season," Ramstrom said. "We've had a couple tough weeks in the K&N Pro Series and this is how you rebound."
SUNDAY APRIL 11TH
POS. CAR # FIRST NAME LAST NAME

1 35 DEREK RAMSTROM
2 08 MIKE O'SULLIVAN
3 1 NORMAN WRENN
4 0 DENNIS MAXFIELD
5 52 DAVID DARLING
6 48 LARRY GELINAS
7 13 JAMES BANFIELD
8 6 STEVE DESMARAIS
9 15 GEORGE BESSETTE
10 11 DARYL STAMPFL
11 96 MATTHEW ZENISKY
12 10 HENRY STAMPFL
13 14 REY LOVELACE
14 50 JERAMEE LILLIE
15 27 MIKE BRIGHTMAN
16 59 MICHAEL RIVARD
SATURDAY APRIL 10TH
POS. CAR # FIRST NAME LAST NAME

1 35 DEREK RAMSTROM
2 08 MIKE O'SULLIVAN
3 0 DENNIS MAXFIELD
4 1 NORMAN WRENN
5 6 STEVE DESMARAIS
6 13 JAMES BANFIELD
7 52 DAVID DARLING
8 27 MIKE BRIGHTMAN
9 15 GEORGE BESSETTE
10 50 JERAMEE LILLIE
11 11 DARYL STAMPFL
12 96 MATTHEW ZENISKY
13 10 HENRY STAMPFL
14 14 REY LOVELACE
15 59 MICHAEL RIVARD
16 48 LARRY GELINAS
Previous Race Results, Stories & Photos HERE