Some of the other competition highlights:
Brian Ciarlei shook down the Sharlay Machine/Pennon Composite Red Devil F440. This car was actually a Solo Nationals F-Mod winner back in '08. In '09 the car got badly wrecked and sat for a few years before getting rebuilt. The car is currently up for sale to fund an engine for his father's '68 Camaro but Brian says he hopes to get back in racing. The car had a few teething issues but did put down FTD
John Breazzano was still in the process of breaking in his '15 Z51. He showed up at the Enduro with only 61 miles on it and was hoping to get past the 500 mile break-in period before this event. The weather didn't cooperate though, so the car was still hobbled by being able to only run to 4500rpm. It still laid down some fast runs and hopefully next year John will get to hit it's true potential.
It wasn't just that the owner of this Challenger SRT 392 hadn't raced this particular car before, he had never raced before in his life. He still hustled the big Mopar to 2nd place in the Novice class and had a grand time doing it. He assured us he'll be back next year.
We had a '66 Corvair running with us. It had a 350 Chevy swap that was based off a Crown kit. It had been converted in 1971 and the owner has been tweaking it ever since. Despite the 50 year old chassis design, it was brutally fast, finishing in the top 3on raw times.
Ted wants me to put sway bars on his Miata this winter, and this shot shows why. Frustratingly for him, the car spent most of the season getting repainted, only making it for the last 3 events, where it showed real potential, despite being largely stock.
Yuriy Yatsishin was all thumbs-up. And with good reason, he did win the hotly-contested H/Street overall and come in 3rd in the points chase. Of course, there were the usual grumblings of an 8th-gen Civic Si really being a G/Street car
The Fiat brigade was down to one car, shared between both Jay Cartini (The owner of the black Abarth) and Scott Newton (owner of a white Abarth that was sidelined with a delaminating tire). Scott ended up running the fastest time in the car and had the most points in G/S, but Jay won G/Street because he actually met minimum attendance, unlike Scott.
The infamous Tom Celica was back doing it's best tricycle impression. Gerrit was shooting for H/Street win but couldn't overcome Yuriy's Si. I went for a ride in this car after timed runs were over and it is a truly terrifying ride.
Simon Robinson's Accord sedan may look crusty and kind of beat on the outside, but it's full of home-brewed tech and it took the STS class by a huge margin. He says it's getting boost over the winter and going into SSM class, which should be interesting
Davey Thai ended up taking the Novice event win and the season win, beating me by 9 points.
Coming into the last event, Chris Gifford and his blisteringly fast S2000 were tied with Karl Hughes for the points lead. Karl skipped this event, meaning Chris won just by showing up. But that fact, and the fact that his S2000's rear differential was making ugly noises, didn't mean that Chris took it easy. He drove like his usual madman self and finished 1st in PAX and won the chapter.