ROANOKE TIMES 
                      Copyright (c) 1997, Roanoke Times

DATE: Sunday, February 23, 1997              TAG: 9702250066
SECTION: SPORTS                   PAGE: C-10 EDITION: METRO 
COLUMN: AUTO RACING NOTES
DATELINE: ROCKINGHAM, N.C.
SOURCE: BOB ZELLER STAFF WRITER 


MARTIN DOESN'T TIRE OUT ON LAST LAP OF GOODWRENCH 200

Mark Martin continued his domination of Saturday racing at North Carolina Motor Speedway in the Goodwrench 200, but it took a spectacular last-lap pass to do it.

Racing with the advantage of fresher tires, Martin blew past Dale Jarrett on the outside with one lap to go and won by sixteen-hundredths of a second. Grand National champion Randy LaJoie was third, followed by Phil Parsons and Elliott Sadler.

``Wooo!'' Martin said on his radio after crossing the finish line. ``Ah, man. I'm glad we came on.''

``That's the way to win races there, standing up in your seat and getting all you can get,'' said team manager Steve Hmiel.

Martin, who has won six of the past 10 Grand National races here, including the past three, dominated this event after starting from the pole.

He had led 131 of 169 laps when Jarrett muscled past him on the backstretch on lap 170. ``Jarrett was faster than we were,'' he said.

But when the fifth and final caution flag flew on lap 173 for Tracy Leslie's spin in turn 2, Martin made a last-second decision to dive into the pits for four fresh tires. When the race restarted on lap 173, he was sixth.

``Dale jumped way out ahead and I didn't think I was going to catch him at all,'' Martin said. ``With about 12 laps to go, I thought it was way too much and that I would never make it.''

But with two laps to go, Martin pulled up on Jarrett's bumper.

``I knew I wasn't going to get under him, so there wasn't any doubt in my mind what I was going to have to do,'' Martin said of his pass to the outside of Jarrett. ``But we didn't have much time to think about it. We had to do it.''

Said Jarrett: ``I thought I could get far enough ahead. He just ran me down. I made him try to go to the outside, and he beat me to the outside, so you've got to give the man that.''

In other auto racing news:

WALLACE OUT: For the second consecutive week, Mike Wallace came up short in qualifying driving Chesapeake auto dealer Joe Falk's Chevrolet and earned an early trip home.

The team suffered a major setback Friday when NASCAR inspectors ordered crewmen to strengthen several side-door roll bars before qualifying.

``It hurt us big-time because we didn't get to practice at all prior to qualifying,'' crew chief Vic Kangas said. ``NASCAR was kind enough to let us qualify without practice.''

Kangas said the team bought the car from another team and no one had any idea the bars were too thin. He said the problem was with the vertical door bars. NASCAR spokesman Kevin Triplett said he had no immediate information on what, if any, fines would be levied.

Along with Wallace, Chad Little, Billy Standridge and Gary Bradberry also failed to make the race during second round qualifying. Eight drivers made qualifying attempts Saturday, but most were slower than they had been Friday and none of them was able to crack the 38-car regular starting field.

The regular provisional starting spots went to Michael Waltrip, Jimmy Spencer, Robby Gordon and Loy Allen, and a champion's provisional went to Bill Elliott to create a 43-car field for today's race, which starts at 12:30 p.m.


LENGTH: Medium:   67 lines
ILLUSTRATION: PHOTO:  AP. Mark Martin is all smiles at North Carolina Motor 

Speedway, where earlier this week he won the pole for today's

Goodwrench 400 and won Saturday's Grand National race. color. Type first letter of feature OR type help for list of commands FIND S-DB DB OPT SS WRD QUIT QUIT Save options? YES NO GROUP YOU'VE SELECTED: QUIT YES  login: c

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