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Surviving Crashes: Bulldozers and Race Cars
By A.J. Foyt
It
was a wild week for me both on and off the track.
It began on Thursday when I was doing a little "yard work" on some
property I had recently bought. I was on my bulldozer working around
a pond when the pond’s edge gave way and down I went, bulldozer and
all.
It rolled over and sank upside down about 15 feet; I couldn’t see a
thing. It was dark and quiet, except for the pounding of my heart. I
grabbed onto the cool exhaust pipe and switched off the engine
before the dozer completely submerged… I have no idea why, reflexes
from cutting off race car engines I guess. When it hit bottom I
began trying to find my way out—the cab was enclosed on three sides
by a wire mesh cage and the ‘open’ end had two rollbars in front of
it.
It
took about a minute to a minute-and-a-half, plus a couple gulps of
water, but I finally made it to the surface. Out of breath, I was
only able to stand on the top of the bulldozer and yell for help. I
knew I couldn’t swim over to the bank and climb up because there
wasn’t anything to grab on to that would support my weight. So I
stood with there with water up to my chin and yelled.
There was a ranch hand working across the field. I knew he wouldn’t
be able to hear me because of his machine but I yelled anyway. When
a water moccasin snake came floating by me, I splashed like hell. As
scared as I was at that point I probably could have pinched his head
off with my bare hands. The guy finally noticed that the dozer had
disappeared and he came over to see why and saw me splashing and
heard me yelling.
I told him to get a rope and he pulled me out. I won’t lie, I was
scared. I had almost drowned when I was a kid when my boat capsized
in a storm in the Galveston bay. The only reason I didn’t was
because I was cold earlier and had put on a life jacket. My other
two friends didn’t. One made it and my other buddy drowned on his
16th birthday. I never forgot it.
When I was down on the bottom of that pond, I really thought that
was the end. And the more I think about it now, the more scared I
get. So many things could have stopped me from getting out…like the
big knot on my head that I don’t remember getting –it happened
either when I hit bottom or was working my way out. My blue jeans
could have hooked onto something in the dozer like the gearshift or
the cage. The thought of what could have happened still sends a
chill down my back.
After
Sunday’s IndyCar race at Michigan International Speedway, I bet
Dario Franchitti, Scott Dixon, my grandson Anthony and my driver
Darren Manning feel the same way. They were all very lucky and I’ll
tell you why.
In Darren’s case, he was coming up through the field (the ABC Supply
car was handling well and handled better on the long runs). He was
making his way towards the front which was rewarding because we were
not happy with the car at all the day before. We talked it over and
made some changes after qualifying and they were the right ones for
the race. Anyway, Darren was happy with the car and he had just said
about 20 laps earlier that his car handled good even when other
cars’ handling fell off.
He came up on Marco Andretti who was running eighth. In turn three,
Andretti slid up in front of Darren who had the wheel cranked and as
he lifted to avoid hitting Andretti, the tires grabbed and the car
did a half spin up the track. It car slid hard into the turn four
SAFER barrier hitting the left rear and then the left front. The
left rear wheel broke away (it was still tethered though) and
bounced into the cockpit as he slid down across the track.
As if that wasn’t bad enough, part of the suspension was still
attached to the wheel. If the wheel had bounced on a different
angle, it could have been disastrous for Darren. That’s the downside
of tethers. They prevent wheels bouncing into the grandstands, the
infield or other cars, but the tethers make it more dangerous for
the drivers because now the wheels bounce around them while they are
trapped in the cockpits. Darren was very lucky to walk away from
that accident with just a headache and a cut on his knee.
His was the fourth crash that day. Jon Herb and Sarah Fisher had
single car crashes and then Vitor Meira and Helio Castroneves also
crashed hard on the front straight. No one got hurt.
Thirty laps after our accident, the leaders’ battle triggered one of
the most spectacular crashes of the season which has already seen
cars flipping through the air twice (Marco at Indy and Mid-Ohio).
The crash at MIS made all the news’ highlight reels.
Franchitti was passing Dan Wheldon for the lead on the outside when
Wheldon touched Franchitti’s left rear wheel, turning Dario sideways
going down the backstretch. The car got airborne and as it landed
upside down on the track Dixon ran into it and so did Anthony, both
of them having nowhere to go.
In Anthony’s case, it looked like he tried to slice his way between
Dario and Dixon on the left and Wheldon (up against the wall)
directly ahead of him. When he swerved to miss Wheldon, Dario had
bounced into his path. Anthony had rubber marks on his helmet. Six
or seven cars were involved. I don’t know how, but everyone escaped
uninjured.
The angels were working overtime.
The Firestone Indy 400 may be the last one at Michigan International
Speedway because the track and IRL can’t agree on a suitable date
for next year. Maybe it will take a year for everyone to collect
their breath after Sunday because this last race was one a lot of
people won’t forget for a very long time.
The good news is that everyone will be around to race this weekend
at Kentucky Speedway. The race will be broadcast Saturday evening on
ESPN2 at 6:30 pm eastern time. I hope you tune in.
As for me, I’m parking the bulldozer--this week anyway—and giving
the angels a well-deserved rest! |