|
Mid-Ohio
By A.J. Foyt
Returning
to Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course for the first time in 12 years, the
track seemed the same but there was a lot more asphalt in the
paddock area and more classes of cars. The atmosphere seemed the
same—the fans are very enthusiastic about racing. From what I could
tell, there were a lot more people there this year than I remember.
The track is a twisty road course that has one or
two passing zones. I’ve raced on it but the best finish we had was
with Robby Gordon when he finished second in 1993. One time I tried
to run it on slicks in the rain. I thought I could make it around
one more lap but it came in a downpour on the backstretch and I had
all I could do to make it back to the pits. I think I was going
about 20 mph. Big mistake.
Darren
Manning drove at Mid-Ohio in 2003 so he was familiar with the track.
Plus we tested there with the No.14 ABC Supply car in June so we got
a baseline set-up.
We were in the top 10 in practice on Friday but we
had a fluke thing happen in Saturday morning’s practice: the shifter
cable broke on the first lap. There was no more practice before
qualifying. He was pretty comfortable with the car but we hadn’t run
it in qualifying trim. I think if we had, Darren could have made it
into the top six. As it was, he still did a good job to qualify
eighth.
It turned out to be a pretty good starting spot.
Because of the track’s configuration, the race was
started on the long Backstraight before turn three. Darren passed
Sam Hornish for seventh when the Andretti-Green cars up front made
contact. Danica Patrick went off course and Tony Kanaan and Marco
Andretti tangled resulting in Marco flipping over. He wasn’t hurt.
Darren made some great moves to slip by it all; at the end of the
first lap he was in third place.
He stayed there fighting with Scott Dixon for second
a couple times until the first pit stop which went smoothly but just
was not fast enough. He lost two positions on the track. Actually,
he was sixth--we lost three because Tony Kanaan was out of sequence
on pit stops. We were back to fifth when Kanaan pitted a couple laps
later.
Darren was running fifth when Hornish spun which
brought out the yellow and a bunch of pit stops, including us. We
didn’t lose any spots in the pits but on the restart, Darren let the
leaders get the jump on him--that almost never happens to him. He
was adjusting the fuel mixture and the leaders were flat out before
the restart cone. He tried to make it up but clipped a curb which
allowed Patrick to get by him. He lost some track position trying to
get by Scott Sharp (who hadn’t pitted) but he finally did pass him
on the track.
He moved up to fifth as different fuel strategies
played out but when he had to duck into the pits for a splash of
fuel at the end, he finished sixth. It was his best finish on a road
course this year—the other finishes being 12th at St. Pete and 9th
at Watkins Glen. Judging by that pattern we should be third at
Infineon and win at Detroit!
Dixon won the race for his third straight win this
season. Kenny Brack was the first driver to turn the hat trick when
he drove for me in 1998. He ended up winning the championship that
year. Since then only Dan Wheldon did it -- in 2005 and he won the
title that year.
Overall, I was happy with the weekend. We are
catching them every race and it’s just a matter of working together.
With each race we learn a little more so I believe by the end of the
year we should be right there.
We have this coming weekend off which I’m sure my
ABC Supply crew will appreciate. They are all coming home to Texas
for a few days before heading back out for the Firestone Indy 400 at
Michigan. That race will be televised live Sunday, August 5th at 12
noon on ESPN2. |