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Tough Night for Tim Sauter

Tough Night for Tim Sauter

August 5th, O’Reilly Raceway Park. The Kroger 200 was an up and down  
race for Lester Buildings driver Tim Sauter Saturday evening at the  
O’Reilly Raceway Park just west of Indianapolis. Sauter raced in and  
out of the top-twenty ultimately ending up in 33rd place after  
several on-track incidents moved him back in the running order.

Although Tim qualified 36th with a lap of 22.84 seconds, the McGill  
Motorsports entry was strong once the green flag flew moving up to  
32nd when the second caution flew on lap twelve and continued towards  
the front of the field working his way through traffic up to 28th on  
lap 20. When the third caution flew on lap 23, Tim stayed out to gain  
track position, moving his Chevy up to 21st place.

Tim had a long battle for position with Jeff Burton following the  
green on lap 26 with Tim finally getting past the Brickyard 400  
polesitter on lap 30 into the top twenty. Sauter would race Burton  
side by side again from laps 44 to 53 before conceding the spot on  
lap 53.

Tim brought the #36 to the attention of the McGill Motorsports crew  
for four tires on lap 55. Crew chief Ricky Pearson knew that track  
position would play a big part in the outcome, so the strategy was to  
make this a one-stop race. “We were too loose in qualifying, but I  
wasn’t concerned because Ricky and I knew it would tighten up after  
the sun went down,” Tim explained. “The first run the car was pretty  
good. I told Ricky to give me four more of the same when we came in  
for tires.”

Sauter took the green on lap 58 from the 33rd spot and it appeared  
that he was headed forward again as he moved up to the 28th position  
on lap 75 when the caution came out for a spinning Burney Lamar.  
Several of the leaders came in for tires and fuel, which moved Tim  
back into the top twenty and it looked as if the team’s strategy  
would pay off.

However right after the green on lap 81, Sauter’s car got very tight  
and he started to loose positions to the cars with fresh tires behind  
him. “We were so good the first set of tires. The second set started  
out fine and after about fifteen laps it was like someone flipped a  
switch. I don’t understand how the car could get so tight that we  
would burn the right front off of the car,” Sauter commented. By lap  
131 the tire had completely worn out causing Sauter to spin coming  
off of turn two bringing out the races seventh caution.

Tim would restart on lap 136 with four fresh tires in 35th and soon  
after the green Aric Amirola would get into the back of Jason Keller.  
Ron Hornaday cut low to miss the spinning Keller machine and got into  
the right front of Sauter’s Chevy causing considerable damage to the  
nose and fender of Sauter’s car. "It happens so often when you’re in  
the back of the pack on a short track, it was just a matter of time  
before we got caught up,” he added. “It’s typical of the luck we’re  
having this season.”

Sauter went on to finish a disappointing 33rd behind winner Kevin  
Harvick in what looked to be a very promising finish. “We should be  
able to run with these guys here. I’m really disappointed that we  
could not get Lester Buildings and the McGill team a better finish."  
Sauter said after the race.

The next race for McGill Motorsports is Saturday, August 12th at  
Watkins Glen International in upstate New York. Road racing  
specialist Max Papis will pilot the #36 with sponsorship from Sport  
Clips. The Zippo 200 will be broadcast live on NBC at 2:00ET.

Affordable primary sponsorship is available on the McGill Motorsports  
Chevy Monte Carlo SS for five of the remaining races on the 2006 NBS  
schedule. Interested parties should contact John McGill at  
440-914-4206, or visit mcgillmotorsports.com to learn more.



PR contact Perry A. Hintz, 262-763-1672 or phintz36@wi.rr.com