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Japan
By AJ Foyt
Well
another race in Japan is in the books and this time we came away
with a clean race weekend for the first time since we started going
there in 2003.
Twin Ring Motegi is a beautiful facility but
it’s an odd-shaped track—it looks like an egg—and it is very tricky.
The weather changes constantly (it sits on top of a mountain) and it
can be very challenging for a driver and a team.
Our past few race weekends there haven’t
gone well. Usually we’re coming home with a car in pieces (and we’re
not the only ones, believe me) so I felt pretty good about this trip
overall.
We
didn’t finish as well as we hoped to but we learned a lot and I
think we made a breakthrough on our oval track set-up. Both Darren
Manning and I know we have some work to do in that area but we seem
to be making progress.
We had trouble the first day of practice,
and pretty much had to throw out that whole day. We learned what not
to do to the car for Darren. We went in a different direction on
Friday but Darren had only 45 minutes of practice before we went out
to qualify. We knew the car was better but still had to fine tune
it. There is no final practice on the ovals anymore so if you don’t
have the car figured out by qualifying, you are in trouble because
you are out of time.
Darren started last but he felt pretty
confident about the race. He liked the way the car was driving,
which was not the case on Thursday, our first day of practice. But I
was concerned because when you start that far back on a track where
it’s hard to pass, you can get down a lap pretty quickly—especially
when you have hot dogs like Helio Castroneves and Dan Wheldon
setting the pace.
Darren didn’t waste too much time as he went
from 18 to 13th pretty quickly. However, as the track
changed, so did the handling on the ABC Supply car. We made some
adjustments during the pit stops and by the last stint, Darren was
very happy with the car. He said it was ‘sweet.’ I’ve never
described a car that way but I’m sure he has heard me say things
different too.
I knew he was happy with the car because we
were running laps comparable to the leaders. We were looking at a
top 10 finish until we had to dash in the pits with four laps to go
for a splash of fuel. We finished 12th.
Coming
away from Japan, we feel like we have a good baseline set-up for the
ovals. I think we’ll find out pretty quick at Kansas this week just
how good it is. Qualifying won’t be quite so important there because
the pack runs two and three wide so if you can hang in the draft,
you can contend for the win.
Still Kansas will be tough because it is
just a two-day show—two hours of practice and then qualify on
Saturday and race on Sunday. For the teams that have been together
it’s no big deal but the teams with new drivers, it’s a little bit
tougher because you’re still learning what the driver wants.
But we’ve won at Kansas before (twice in one
day with the IndyCar and Indy Pro Series car) so hopefully we’ll
have a good showing there to lead into my 50th straight
Indy 500. The Kansas race will be broadcast live this Sunday on
ESPN2 starting at 3:30pm eastern time. Tune in! |