Carson Short celebrates victory at Triple-State Speedway. (Brad Plant photo)
Carson Short celebrates victory at Triple-State Speedway. (Brad Plant photo)

Carson Short Steals The Show At Tri-State

HAUBSTADT, Ind. — Carson Short held off Sheldon Haudenschild to earn his first World of Outlaws NOS Energy Drink Sprint Car Series victory Friday night at Tri-State Speedway.

“It feels great,” Short said. “Especially here. It’s where I won my first USAC race, too. It’s a great track. Everyone says it’s a different track. It’s technical. I felt like tonight was up top, running the cushion. It just feels great.”

Short led all 30 laps to win in his 11th World of Outlaws start, driving for his grandfather, Richard Short’s small underfunded team. He also became the first first-time winner in more than a year for the series.

Before the night, Short had two top-10 finishes with the series — the first coming at Tri-State Speedway. While he only has a handful of starts in a winged sprint car, Short has many laps around the quarter-mile track. With it being about an hour and a half from his Illinois home, Tri-State became a home track for Short. And the fans treated him as a hometown driver all night long.

“You don’t get any better than the fans here at Haubstadt,” Short said. “They’re just down home ready to watch some sprint car racing. They love it. It’s just the atmosphere. Winning at Haubstadt, I feel like it’s the small track of the Knoxville Nationals, if you will, with the fans. Those guys are crazy.”

Short earned the pole position for the 30-lap feature with his win in the DIRTVision Fast Pass Dash. He took the lead from Haudenschild on the first lap and never looked back.

The same happened at the start of the Feature. However, Haudenschild didn’t let Short get away.

On lap seven, Short got sideways off turn two, allowing Haudenschild to plan an attack to pass for the next turn. Before he could, Jeff Swindell flipped in turn two, bringing out the red flag.

When the race resumed, Short maintained about a two-car length distance on the NOS Energy Drink No. 17 car. Even when he had to wrangle his way through lap traffic, Short looked like a veteran slicing through traffic with ease.

With five laps to go, Haudenschild threw a slide job underneath Short’s No. 21 car going into turn three. He took the lead, but Short was able to cross underneath him and bolt back ahead of him down the straightaway. From then on, Haudenschild couldn’t get close enough again to attempt another slider. He had to settle for the runner-up finish.

“Hats off to Carson, he did a phenomenal job,” said Haudenschild. “I was waiting on him to make a mistake and he didn’t do it. Then, I was waiting on traffic and he got through there really well. Congrats to him. I love seeing first time winners. Congrats to him. I’m happy with a second.

“We’ve been really good here. Just keep this momentum rolling. I keep telling my guys, if we keep being in this top-five we’re going to win races. We’re just working for that.”

His second-place finish was his second in a row at the track and his sixth top-five finish in the last seven races, which helped move him up to fourth in the championship standings – 124 points behind leader Brad Sweet.

David Gravel rounded out the podium. His third-place finish is a welcomed rebound from his 19th-place finish at Knoxville Raceway last weekend.

Behind him in fourth was Carson Macedo — his third fourth-place finish in a row.

Sweet was fifth and extended his points lead over 10-time Series champion Donny Schatz – who finished 11th for the second race in a row – to 38 points.

To see full results, turn to the next page.