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COOK, POWER STROKEŽ
DIESEL FORD
FINISH SIXTH AT KENTUCKY
SPARTA, KY (July 14, 2002) - Terry Cook
piloted his No. 29 Power Stroke
Diesel Ford to a solid sixth-place finish in the Kroger 225 NASCAR
Craftsman Truck
Series race under the lights Saturday at Kentucky Speedway.
"We had a Top-5 truck all race
long," said Cook. "We were trying to get through the
pack and we had cycled through on the final pit stop. We got
pinned on the
outside of the No. 20 (Coy Gibbs) truck waiting for the tires
to come in and
the No. 14 (Rick Crawford) truck got in the back of us in the
middle of Turns
1 and 2. I'm sure he didn't mean to. It was just a racing deal.
That slid us up the track and we almost had a big wreck.
Fortunately, we
gathered it back up to come home and finish sixth."
Cook started fourth
in the 36-truck field and ran in the Top-3 for the first
third of the 150-lap race on the 1.5-mile Kentucky oval. A round
of pit stops
kept Cook in striking distance of the leaders and the Power Stroke
Diesel driver
climbed to the top of the leader board on Lap 110 before heading
to his pit for
service one lap later. There, crew chief Bob Keselowski elected to
take just two right-side tires instead of all four in an effort to
maintain track position over the final 39 circuits.
The strategy worked to perfection as Cook
returned to action well ahead
of several of his competitors. Unfortunately, the contact with
Crawford slowed
Cook's momentum allowing a number of trucks by. Undaunted, Cook
righted his
Power Stroke Diesel mount with a solid save and raced back to the
front finally
taking the checkered flag in the sixth position.
"We thought our pit strategy would
pay off for us," said Cook. "We got out
of the pits ahead of several trucks. The tires were just starting
to come in
and I then I don't know what happened. When Crawford got into the
back of us,
I thought we were going to have a wreck. We were able to hang onto
it and ended
up getting a Top-10 finish out of it. It was still a solid day for
the Power
Stroke Diesel Ford."
Cook earned $19,300 in prize money for
the effort and maintained sixth position
in the 2002 NCTS point standings, just 122 markers out of first.
Cook's focus now
turns to New Hampshire, where he earned a sixth-place finish in the
New England 200 NCTS event a year ago.
"We're excited to get back to New
Hampshire because it's a track that reminds
me of Milwaukee," said Cook, who dominated and won the NCTS
clash at Milwaukee
three weeks ago. "We were able to gain some points on the on
leader this
weekend. If we keep plugging along and stay consistent we will be
there in
the end."
The New England 200 at New Hampshire
International Speedway will take the
green flag Saturday, July 20, at 1 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time. The
event will
be telecast by ESPN and broadcast live on MRN Radio.
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