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Lanier National Speedway
Friday, April 8, 2005
Mud Drag Racer Tyler Williams set
to hit the circle track

by Jeremy Troiano
SUWANEE, Ga. -- Like most racers,
Tyler Williams has grown up watching his favorite sport on
television, just hoping that one day he would be able to
be just like them. But unlike a lot of today's aspiring
NASCAR stars, Williams didn't get started in go-karts
or Legends cars at an early age. In fact, Tyler didn't
start his
racing career until the age of 17. And that racing
experience was highly unlike anything that any of his
other peers were competing in. Instead of driving circles
around the short tracks of America, he was a mud drag
racer.
Now, at age 21, Williams is ready to make the jump from
mud to asphalt on a full-time basis. To do so, he'll
compete weekly at Lanier National
Speedway in Brasleton, GA, in the Pro Late Model
class, in hopes of capturing both the Track Championship
and Rookie of the Year title. When not at Lanier, Williams
also hopes to run with the Georgia Asphalt Series, a
touring Pro Late Model series around the Peach State.
"I'm really looking forward to trying to run the whole
season at Lanier National Speedway this year," said
Williams. "It will be my first time running the whole
season, so I'm looking forward to it, but I know it will
be a big learning experience for me. We've been running
part-time during the last two years, so this will be a new
experience in racing for points.
"I think we can be the Rookie of the Year and I think we
can be competitive in the point's race. We are looking for
a top-10 in the points, possibly even a top-five,
depending on how well we can adapt to these cars. We've
really been working hard on the chassis and we have about
a 40-50 horsepower increase on our engines from last year,
so my hopes are really high. Plus we've got the help of
Jimmy Garmon."
Garmon is a well-known Georgia hotshot in the Pro Late
Models, a regular at several tracks and with the traveling
GAS Series. Garmon will house Williams' car during the
2005 season and will offer as much help as he can,
considering the car Williams will pilot is an old car
driven by Garmon himself.
"I was just racing mud dragsters for fun for several years
and I always knew I really wanted to race on asphalt,"
said Williams, talking of how he met up with Garmon for
the first time. "I started making some phone calls and
trying to get in touch with the right people. Somehow, I
came across Jimmy's number. So I called him and he told me
that he had a car for sale. I bought his car and from
there, he's taken me under his wing.
"Everything I've done so far, I wouldn't have been able to
do without him, as far as setup info and weekly
maintenance stuff. He's been at the track with us and
helped me work on my line in the car. I had no asphalt
experience before coming into this. I didn't start off in
a Legends car or Sportsman car or anything. So it is a big
adjustment from a mud
dragster."
With several years of making five- and six-second passes
in a high-powered mud dragster, Williams knows that
switching over to asphalt racing will mean a big
adjustment in everything he's known.
"You just get used to a couple seconds worth of passes and
you are done. Here, you are running 50-and 100-lap races.
Your concentration level is completely different. You have
to be on top of it every single minute. You've got a lot
more people around you, but this is what I've really
wanted to do, so I'm looking forward to it."
Williams has made a handful of starts at Lanier and Peach
State Speedway in the past, but 2005 will be a totally new
ballgame for him. He will open his Rookie of the Year
hopes this weekend at Lanier, competing in the track's
premier division.
"It will be a good weekend to give us an idea of what the
year will hold for us. We'll be able to size up some of
the competition. I know Jimmy would be pretty upset if we
didn't win Rookie of the Year. With the experience Jimmy
has and my driving ability, I think we can do it."
Adding to the pressures of opening weekend, Williams'
primary sponsor, Suwanee Dental Care, is also the
presenting sponsor at the track on Saturday.
"I just want to have a good showing for Suwanee Dental
Care. They have stepped up their sponsorship this year to
where we can run the full year, so this is a big weekend.
It just happens to be opening weekend as well."
If you would like more information on Tyler Williams,
contact Jeremy Troiano at (704) 726-6849 and stayed tuned
for the launch of TylerWilliamsRacing.com. |