Tony Ave en route to a Trans-Am Series TA2 victory at Belle Isle Park. (Al Steinberg photo)

Tony Ave Victorious In 100th Trans-Am Start

BELLE ISLE, Mich. – Saturday’s Trans-Am Series presented by Pirelli Muscle Car Challenge was all about survival, but on Sunday, the TA2 powered by AEM class amped up the aggressiveness for the Motor City Dash.

Celebrating his 100th career Trans-Am start, Tony Ave took the lead in the final laps with his No. 25 BC Race Cars entry to claim both his 19th career Trans-Am victory and his first-ever Trans Am win on the streets of Belle Isle.

Dillon Machavern, in the No. 77 Liquid-Molly Prefix Ford Mustang, dodged traffic and accidents to finish second, while Tony Buffomonte recovered from a spin into the barriers with the No. 34 Mike Cope Racing machine and fought back for a third-place finish.

“I’ve been trying to win this race since 1994!” said Ave. “I’ve led it a bunch of times but haven’t been able to hit that top spot. We didn’t have quite enough speed early so I just stayed close. My car got good toward the end and I was able to run them down but passing was going to be an entirely different issue. Then what usually happens at these places started to happen, with everyone going sideways, grabbing gears and spinning tires.

“I thought ‘this is living!’ We were just scrambling, but we came out with the lead and I couldn’t be happier.”

Misha Goikhberg, in the No. 10 BC Race Cars Chevrolet Camaro, started on pole, but lost the lead to Buffomonte after the green flag dropped.

Buffomonte quickly built a gap from the field, leading the pack of 17 TA2 cars by more than a second before losing it on his own in turn seven. The 2018 Detroit Grand Prix winner spun backwards, making hard contact with the back of the car into the barriers.

Fortunately for the Illinois native, the Ford Mustang continued under its own power, but Buffomonte never regained the lead as Machavern seized first.

“I had that one locked up and threw it away, so sorry to my guys,” said Buffomante. “I was just pacing, minding the gap and then wheel-hopped it in going into Turn 7 again. I lost the back end and stuck it in the fence. I pulled it out of there and took off, doing some really fast laps, just trying to catch up. But that shows just how fast the car was.”

Dropping back to third, Saturday winner Goikhberg weaved back and forth from the inside then to the outside of Machavern.

Hitting the curbing on the Horshoe turn, Goikhberg went spinning around the circuit and collected podium-contenders Rafa Matos and Lawless Alan in the process.

Goikhberg and Alan continued, but the reigning TA2 champion’s charge to the top ended as Matos’ No. 88 Lear 3Dimensional Services Group Ford Mustang was towed back to the pits.

The incident brought out the first of two full course cautions.

Goikhberg worked his way back up through traffic to take second, challenging Machavern for the lead. Following Machavern’s bumper, Goikhberg tapped the back of the No. 77 as Machavern braked for traffic. Goikhberg’s back end got loose, causing him to smash into the tire barrier as turn seven claimed another victim.

Machavern lost momentum clearing the lapped traffic in front of him, opening the door for Ave to take the lead.

Goikhberg’s incident brought out the safety car. With limited time on the clock, the debris was not cleared before the 75-minute clock expired, and the session ended under yellow.

Local drivers Marc Miller and Jordan Dick also had their share of issues on the 14-turn, 2.35-mile course. Dick lined up for the start of the Motor City Dash but scratched with mechanical issues.

Championship leader Miller started the race in fourth, but early contact sent Miller into the turn three wall. The home state favorite charged his way from the back of the field into the top-five but a braking issue sent Miller back on the way to a 13th place finish.