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Things seem to be in order for Nokie Fornoro –
all the things necessary to capture the Northeastern Midget
Association championship for himself and owner Mike Jarret.
“I’m going after it,” declares Fornoro, about to start his 34th
season. “I have no other commitment. I don’t have to worry about
missing races. It’s about time. I haven’t had a championships in
over 10 years and that sort of bothers me.”
NEMA opens its 19-race schedule April 4-5-6 at Thompson
International Speedway. A spot on Waterford Speedbowl’s Budweiser
Modified Nationals follows a week later (April 12-13). A large and
impressive entry list compliments the agenda.
He expects a “quick” start to his quest. The cooler temperatures
mean faster speeds at Thompson he says. Motors will run better and
the banking will have more affect. “Thompson is always faster when
you can use the banking. I love the speed you get there.”
He and Bobby Santos III were “down in the seventeen seconds” at last
year’s. World Series. “The Midgets,” he declares, “are “scary fast”
at Thompson.
Fornoro’s last championship was the 1995 ARDC title, one of several
he owns including the 1981 NEMA crown. His last Midget victory, the
105th of his career, came last August at the Waterford Speedbowl.
With his father Nick and his brother Drew, Nokie is part of one of
Midget racing’s most successful families.
“Considering the caliber of cars we have now – 12-to-15 cars can win
any given night – you have to have one heck of a maintenance program
to win a championship,” says Fornoro. “I believe money can’t buy you
wins. Yea, it can help you get the best stuff but if you don’t have
a maintenance program, you’re in trouble.”
He gives owner Peter Valeri, the champ three of the past four years
(driver Ben Seitz won four in a row) “all the credit in the world.
Every race, no matter what happened, they went through the car and
that’s what you have to do.”
Fornoro has always “been blessed with good owners” and Jarret is one
of them. “Whenever Mike gets involved he does it wholeheartedly,”
says Fornoro. “There is nothing this team should lack; there is no
reason why we shouldn’t do well. I feel we’ve got the best stuff.”
The present operation, including Mike Scrivani Jr., is a carry over
from the glory days of early 1980s when Fornoro dominated in cars
owned by Hall of Famer Mike Scrivani Sr., the larger than life
character known as ‘Iron Mike.’ Both Jarret and Mike Jr. were key
parts of an operation that produced the NEMA title and a couple of
his five ARDC crowns.
Fornoro vividly recalls his first Thompson run way back in 1976, a
sixth place finish after a confrontation with Joey Coy. Since then
he has “hundreds and hundreds of laps” around the historic oval in
both Midgets and SuperModifieds. He was an ISMA winner there is
2006.
Source: Pete Zanardi, NEMA PR |