Employing the car normally reserved for Eldora Speedway, Jonathan Davenport dominated at PPMS for a $50,000 Pittsburgh victory on the Lucas Oil Series.
IMPERIAL, Pa. â Jonathan Davenport had pledged that he wouldnât do it. No way was he ever again going to take his Double L Motorsports Longhorn Chassis he affectionately calls Eldora anywhere but the famed half-mile oval in Rossburg, Ohio, the only place heâs raced the machine since the fall of 2021.
But there he was on Saturday night, standing on his most cherished carâs roof in his trademark triumphant pose after dominating from flag-to-flag to capture the 75-lap finale of the 36th Pittsburgher 100 weekend â and a race-record $50,000 top prize â at Pittsburghâs Pennsylvania Motor Speedway.
What made the 40-year-old superstar from Blairsville, Ga., change his mind about entering the car in an event somewhere other than Eldora Speedway for the first time since August 2021 at Port Royal (Pa.) Speedway? Some deep thoughts about the Lucas Oil Late Model Dirt Seriesâs five-race Big River Steel Chase for the Championship as he was outside on his ranch in Pelzer, S.C.
With Davenport facing a Big Four battle for the national tourâs title with Devin Moran of Dresden, Ohio, Ricky Thornton Jr. of Chandler, Ariz., and Tim McCreadie of Watertown, N.Y., over a short stretch, he wanted to make sure he brought his best bullet to the opening doubleheader.
âWhile I was cleaning up the mess at my house from that storm (last weekâs Hurricane Helene), Iâm weed-eating or mowing or blowing the driveway off or picking up sticks ⊠I had a lot of time by myself, AirPods in and just thinking,â Davenport said after climbing out of his car during postrace inspection area in the temporary pit area outside PPMSâs backstretch. âIâm like, âIf you leave here and not have a good weekend, youâre done basically.â Thereâs no time to catch upâ with only three more points races.
Davenport certainly didnât relish the prospect of running his 2021-vintage car away from Eldora â especially with the track hosting the Lucas Oil Seriesâs Chase-ending $100,000-to-win Dirt Track World Championship Oct. 18-19 â but he felt the sprawling, half-mile PPMS was a track worth the risk.
âSo I just know this place, you got to be able to steer really well,â Davenport said. âThatâs the biggest thing â if you canât steer here, then you keep freeing your car up and can never get off the corner. Itâs just a bad deal. Iâve been here like that before.
âThis car just steers so good. Iâm very confident in this car. I know the changes it needs. And weâre put 120 percent effort into winning this championship, so I thought, Why not bring our best piece here? Iâm always nervous about tearing it up, because I love Eldora and thatâs the place I can make money, but I feel like this 200-grand for this championship will mean a lot also.
âAnd normally you donât get tore up here unless something crazy happens,â he added. âI mean, if you wreck here, you destroy a car, not just bend a fender, but itâs wide enough you can get out of trouble most of the time. It ainât gonna be really rough, the racetrack ainât gonna tear the car up. Itâs really big and itâs fast, but itâs still so technical here.â
Davenport had this revelation Monday. He immediately called his car owner Lance Landers and crew chief Cory Fostvedt to discuss the possibility.
âCoryâs like, âWell, I kind of thought about it, but I didnât even think that was an option,â â Davenport said with a laugh.
Fosvedt confirmed his initial reaction to Davenportâs idea.
âHe said, âHey, what do you think about racing the Eldora car?ââ Fosvedt recalled. âI said, âWell hell yeah, but I didnât think that car was on the table so I didnât even bring it up.â Iâm like, âYou ainât gotta talk me into it.â
âSo we started making phone calls and getting it all lined up.â
The Eldora car was already âprobably 90 percent ready,â Fosvedt said, because heâd been working on it whenever he had a spare moment since last month when Davenport drove it to a pair of semifeature wins and a third-place finish in the World 100 at Eldora. But it was sitting in the teamâs shop in Batesville, Ark., while Fosvedt and his two Double L crewmen, Zach Houston and Tyler Phelps, were far away â Fosvedt at Longhorn Chassis headquarters in China Grove, N.C., and Houston and Phelps with the hauler at fellow racer Mason Zeiglerâs shop in Uniontown, Pa.
As a result, âit was a lot of logistics and stuffâ to make the arrangements necessary for Davenport to race the car at PPMS.
âAfter Wednesday (Sept. 25) when we raced at Brownstown (the Indiana trackâs Castrol FloRacing Night in America event) and then they canceled (the weekendâs Jackson 100), I drove all this stuff up here to Mason Zeiglerâs,â Fosvedt said, noting that Zeigler is a close friend of Davenport (and Zeiglerâs crew chief, Bryan Liverman, is a former Davenport crewman) and opens his shop to Davenportâs team when theyâre in the area. âOn the way up here, I was like, âIâm not gonna sit at Masonâs for a week when all I have to do is two days worth of work.â Iâm like, âMan, I got that (new) car down there (at Longhorn) I really need to get working on (to assemble).â
âSo I left the truck and Tyler and Zach here (in Pennsylvania) just so they could maintenance the car from Brownstown, work on tires and get ahead, and I flew back to Batesville, got a pickup truck and trailer, loaded up all the parts that I needed to put that car together, drove from Batesville to Longhorn and got there Saturday night.â
Fosvedtâs roughly 11-hour trek from Batesville to Longhorn was made a bit longer because he had to take a southern route through Atlanta with I-40 closed in western North Carolina because of damage from Hurricane Helene. At one point he found himself stuck in accident-related traffic, which prompted him to back up his truck and open trailer about a quarter-mile so he could exit the highway for an alternate route.
After arriving at Longhorn, Fosvedt unsuccessfully attempted to find a hotel room somewhere in North Carolina â vacancies were almost impossible to come by because so many people had evacuated during the storm â so he ended up sleeping in Longhorn co-owner Steve Arpinâs hauler parked outside the shop.
Fosvedt completed the new car by Tuesday. He proceeded to load it on the teamâs open trailer and drive to Elizabethtown, Ky., where on Wednesday afternoon he met Landersâs son Gavin, who was scheduled to bring the Eldora car to the DTWC on another open trailer (the team wasnât planning to return to their shop until after the Eldora weekend). After swapping the new car for the Eldora mount, Fosvedt headed off for Zeiglerâs shop to reunite with his crew and make final preparations for PPMS.
Leaving one of the two cars already in their trailer at Zeiglerâs garage, Fosvedt and Co. unloaded an unexpected entry in PPMSâs pit area on Friday. It put Davenport in the right frame of mind.
âIt ainât like this carâs any better my other cars,â Davenport said. âI just really trust this car. Itâs like putting on a favorite pair of shoes.â
The car nearly carried Davenport to victory in Fridayâs $10,000-to-win program, but he settled for a runner-up finish to Moran in the 30-lap feature. He wasnât able to overcome a fourth-place starting spot â where he was relegated after being nipped in qualifying by Thornton â as the polesitter led the entire distance.
âThree-hundredths (of a second), thatâs what Ricky beat me by,â Davenport said. âI feel like if we couldâve got that one other row (farther forward in the feature) it couldâve worked out, but Devin did a really good job. We always like to say what-ifs, but it definitely wouldâve been a lot easier anyway.â
Davenportâs trajectory in Saturdayâs finale was more to his liking. He timed second-fastest in his group again, but it was to Zeigler, not a Big Four rival, and he made the right move to at the start of his heat to win it and earn the pole position for the headliner.
Then Davenport controlled the 70-lapper from start-to-finish, never facing a serious challenge. But while he built as much as a seven-second edge during the A-mainâs first half, he wasnât quite as superior following the lone caution flag on lap 42 and he was actually just holding on over the final circuits.
âThat restart really made me nervous because I didnât know where to go,â Davenport said. âWeâd really just been pacing around the bottom there. I felt like I was making good ground through the lapped cars, but thatâs not the car behind you, you know what I mean? Thatâs not a front-running car, so I thought after our tires would cool down, I thought (the optimal lane) would be more the middle to the top, so I kind of floated into turn one kind of high-middle and turned back across to try and block some air. Cory showed me I pulled away a little bit so I just kind of kept migrating back to the bottom a little bit.
âI never did really feel into the racetrack like I needed to run a big momentum line. When your tires die you pretty much just slow up and you go to a small circle, and thatâs pretty much the way the track raced tonight. Thatâs not usually the way it races here.â
Davenport experienced some anxious moments as the checkered flag neared. His car was lagging and Moran was making a late bid after starting 12th, reaching second by lap 37, falling to fifth on the lap-42 restart and then returning to the runner-up spot with a pass of McCreadie on lap 56.
âI donât know, but I was struggling the last 10 laps really, really bad,â Davenport said. âI caught them lapped cars ⊠like, I passed Garrett Alberson, and then I caught Cody Overton, and then Cody changed his line and messed me up a little bit and Garrett got by. Iâm like, âDang,â so I tried to calm down and get my tires back under me, and then I got back by Garrett and got back to Cody and then Cody just drove off. He moved up above Drake Troutman and drove away from him and I couldnât go anywhere.
âI was chattering the right-front tire if I drove really straight, or if I got a little crooked I would just hang, so I was just praying for the laps to run out. When I seen (the flagger) give two to go, I was like, âHoly cow!â I kept looking at Cory to see if I still had a good enough lead (on Moran). He went to a half a straightaway where I had a straightway lead, so that means he was closing. I was just hoping he wasnât closing fast enough.â
Davenport held on to beat Moran by 1.864 seconds, clinching his first-ever victory not only at PPMS but also in the long-running Pittsburgher. He had entered the Pittsburgher seven previous times since 2015 and came close to winning three times.
âI ran out of gas once,â Davenport said, recalling the 2019 event when his fuel tank ran dry after he led the first 93 circuits of the 100-lap feature and Hudson OâNeal of Martinsville, Ind., emerged triumphant. âI got passed once or twice (by the late Scott Bloomquist late in the 2015 race and Thornton with four laps to go last year). Just never could finish it off. Thatâs what I was thinking those last 10 laps when I got behind Cody and them. Iâm like, âMan, donât lose like this,â but we pulled it off.â
âOl Eldora helped him snap his PPMS jinx. It also positioned him well in the Big Four championship battle, though he ended the weekend 10 points behind Moran in the standings even though they both recorded a win and a runner-up finish.
The difference? Moranâs 10-point bonus for earning a group fast-time honor on Friday â a fact that wasnât lost on Davenport. (Thornton trails Moran by 60 points and McCreadie is fourth 80 points in arrears.) Heâs well aware that the title will be determined by tiny margins, which is why heâs turning up his level of aggressiveness to grab every position he can (as evidenced by his power move inside Zeigler through turns three and four to seize the lead in his heat).
âLast night I qualified second and finished second and I was 30 points behind Devin and I was tied with Ricky (who also earned a 10-point fast-time bonus), and McCreadie finished eighth and he wasnât but 40 behind me, so that fast time means a lot,â Davenport said. âIt was kind of disheartening tonight with the number we drawed â a â1â and you never wanna do that â but Mason set fast time and he went out right behind me. I just missed on the set up or that wouldâve been 10 more points there. That could be really crucial when thereâs only four or five races.â
Brownstownâs Jackson 100
doubleheader Friday and Saturday is next on Davenportâs agenda with $10,000- and $50,000-to-win points races. The event was rescheduled in place of the $50,000-to-win Grand Finale at East Bay Raceway Park in Gibsonton, Fla., which had its weekend nixed because of saturated grounds from Hurricane Helene and more forecast rain.
Calling Brownstown âa crapshoot for meâ â and noting there âainât no way in hellâ heâll run his Eldora car there â Davenport said he wouldâve preferred to race at East Bay. But the quarter-mile bullring in the Hoosier State is where the tour is headed so he must gear up for it if he expects to claim his fourth career Lucas Oil Series title after the checkered flag falls on Eldoraâs DTWC.
âWeâve been really good at Brownstown and weâve been really bad,â said Davenport, whose lone Jackson 100 victory came in 2015. âHeck, we was leading last week at Brownstown (in the Castrol event before fading to an eighth-place finish). We feel like we know why we backed up so much. That gives us a little bit of confidence because we did start out the night good there.
âBut hell, we might do that again. And the time before that (March 23âs Lucas Oil event) we finished 15th and that was really our worst finish all year, and thatâs the best we could do. There wasnât really nothing wrong. Hopefully we donât do that again.â
The bottom line on the playoffs according to Davenport: âWe just gotta be perfect every night.â