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Tupling
proves to be a natural on the track HS junior has two INSCA wins |
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Doug
Pace Reigning
Inland Northwest Sprint Car Association (INSCA) Rookie of the Year Cole
Tupling is a rare breed in MotorSports. Having never raced competitively
until last year, the Okanogan native promptly went out and showed
his skills in a tough class en route to the top honor for first-time
drivers. This
year Tupling has two wins, including last Saturday at Stateline Speedway,
and trails Kevin Burke by a handful of points in the chase for the 2008
INSCA championship – not bad for a high school junior from a small Inland
Northwest town. While Burke has plenty of trophies for his efforts over a
stellar career, Tupling's two wins this season were his first in just 18
months of racing. "I've
been around this (sprint car racing) since I was 5 years old watching my dad
race," Tupling said. "I had never driven anything until I decided
to jump into the car. After winning the rookie deal, my goal this year was
to win two or three races and try to get the championship." With two
checkered flags thus far, Tupling is well on his way to achieving his goal
in the victory column.
Burck,
Ron Turner and Tony Berry are just a few of the elite drivers that run
INSCA, with Berry holding the 2007 championship. All of the series drivers
can be tough to beat, Tupling said, but it's the race within one's self that
is the biggest test. "The biggest challenge in racing I face each week
is inside me," Tupling said. "I want to meet my own expectations
and go out to run a clean race all while trying to stay out of
trouble." The 17-year old has no plans to let up, he added. "I am
out there to finish the schedule (as the champion)." With
Mike Tupling, Cole's father and crew chief, along with mother, Linda,
younger brother, Connor, and cousin Henry behind him, the Okanogan sensation
knows his future is in racing: He's just not sure which direction that will
take. "I can't say where I'll be in the next three to five years,"
he said. "It'd be nice to get as far as I can in this, but I'm happy so
far with what we're doing. We can probably put another car together to run
some dirt races (in Western Washington) because we know we can't do them
with this car. We'll just have to see where things go." Burke
was the 2006 series champion and just missed a chance at repeating when
Berry picked up last year's hardware. The series is strong in part due to a
strong mix of veterans and young guns like Tupling, according to the 2007
Rookie of the Year. For a series that enters its fifth year of competition,
car count is consistent and gaining each week. To have a chance to win the
2008 championship, the Tupling family gets tremendous support from their
hometown including sponsorship from Lloyd's Logging of Twisp, Wash. Not
being close to major motor builders hasn't slowed the team down as Mike and
Cole have built all of the engines for the team over the last two seasons.
Even
Cole's classmates have gotten behind his racing endeavors. "They've
always supported me and word gets around (on Tupling's accomplishments)
pretty quick," he said. Suffering through several early season
rainouts, the INSCA series headlines the Fourth of July celebration at
Mission Valley Speedway in Polson, Mont. Tupling will be out for a third
consecutive victory on July 5 at the tight 3/8th-mile. The
series returns to Stateline on July 19 as part of a doubleheader with the
Northwest Modified Series. To
learn more about INSCA and Tupling's chase for the championship log onto the
series' Web site at www.insca.us
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