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RACE REPORT: IOWA CORN INDY 250 PRESENTED
BY ETHANOL
NEWTON,
Iowa June 24, 2007 - Darren Manning used his experience
and a little bit of luck to notch his first top-five finish
in A.J. Foyt’s ABC Supply Dallara/Honda Indy car at Iowa
Speedway Sunday afternoon. The inaugural Iowa Corn Indy 250
presented by ethanol marked the debut of the IndyCar Series
in Iowa. Manning, who had strong practice
runs the day before with fourth and 11th place showings, did
not have as strong a qualifying run on Friday evening -- he
qualified 15th. However, the team felt they had a good car
for the race around the ultra-smooth 7/8 mile banked oval
where speeds topped 182 mph in the 250-lapper IndyCar Series
event.
In
the race, it became a survival of the fittest as several
cars spun by themselves initially but then collected
innocent bystanders. Such was the case with Dan Wheldon’s
spin claiming Tomas Scheckter on the opening lap and much
later Tony Kanaan’s spin taking out hapless Jeff Simmons on
lap 86. On the lap 100 restart, Danica Patrick also
triggered a multi-car pile-up which claimed Patrick plus A.J.
Foyt IV, Sam Hornish, Ed Carpenter (who restarted), Kosuke
Matsuura and Helio Castroneves (who had done a solo spin
exiting the pits earlier and managed to restart after this
accident as well). Eight of the top ten drivers in points
were involved in mishaps, either mechanical or accidental.
All of the accidents happened in front of Manning who did an
excellent job avoiding the crashing cars and flying debris.
“There
were a lot of close calls out there for me,” said Manning.
“You just have to choose your line and anticipate. That’s
where experience helps, and a little luck helps too. We had
a little luck today but I feel our team earned it because
there were a lot of races this year where we ran well but
didn’t have any luck.” Manning had advanced
to tenth by his first pitstop on lap 73 when the yellow came
out for Castroneves’ spin as Manning was getting serviced.
The untimely caution cost him track position, putting him
behind the top six cars who had pitted plus all of the cars
who hadn’t but were able to pit under yellow.
However, he said afterwards, he had to be cautious on the
restarts because his tires didn’t start working until about
20 laps into the run, a problem others seemed to have as
well but didn’t heed.
In the final pitstop on lap 116, the ABC
Supply team planned to do fuel only but they changed tires
when the Firestone engineer strongly advised them to do so,
a decision they later regretted. “On our
final stop we changed tires on Firestone’s advice and we
shouldn’t have because the tires were so good. My car didn’t
work well on new tires and I didn’t have the 20 laps I
needed to work them in before that last yellow came out. [A
debris caution came out on lap 227.] On that final restart;
I knew it was going to be tough. I couldn’t hold the car
down where I needed to and Buddy [Rice] got under me with
five to go. I could have chopped down on him but I knew we
were both going to get a good result if I didn’t. At least
we were fast at the end of the stints so we’ll take the info
for the next time.”
Indy 500 winner Dario Franchitti won the
race, his second of the season. Marco Andretti finished a
close second while Scott Sharp placed third. Rice, who
finished fourth, tied Manning in the points standings; they
each have 150 points but because Rice has a higher finishing
position for the season (fourth), he is in 12th and Manning
is 13th. This week the series moves to
Richmond International Raceway, a three-quarter-mile banked
tri-oval which is the shortest track on the IndyCar circuit.
It will be televised live June 30th, Saturday night on ESPN
starting at 7:30 pm eastern time.
Notes & Quotes: Iowa Corn Indy 250
presented by Ethanol at Iowa Speedway
• Darren Manning on Iowa Speedway: “I’ve never been
to Iowa and I never knew where it was until now. I’ve heard
that Iowa Speedway is a real nice track and that it’s like
Richmond with nicer banking. By that I mean the transitions
off the banking to the flats are better. Richmond is a bit
tight coming off of turn 2. The overall feeling is that the
racing will be quite good at Iowa.”
• A.J. Foyt will serve as grand marshal of the event
in honor of his 50th anniversary in Indy car racing. Foyt
never raced an Indy car in Iowa but he did race a stock car
at Knoxville Raceway in Iowa in 1969. He drove Jack
Bowsher’s car, winning the pole and finishing second in the
100 lap USAC event on the half-mile dirt oval.
• Manning on his approach to Iowa:“Normally when I go
to a new track, I go around in a regular car to get a feel
for the track. We’re fortunate to have an Open Test for half
a day before the weekend. Usually it’s tough going to a new
track because you’re limited on your tire allocation so you
don’t want to waste your tires pounding around lap after
lap. But everyone will get some extra sets of tires for
Friday. The open test will allow us to get a baseline set-up
on the car which we can then fine-tune for qualifying and
the race.”
• Manning on adding new tracks to the IndyCar schedule:
“I like to see new tracks added--it makes for a more level
playing field because no team has a lot of data on the
track. Many of the teams we’re competing against have worked
together for years so they have the advantage on us now.
However, when we go to a new track like Iowa, their
advantage is diminished a bit so it plays into our hands. I
know how much of an advantage it will be for us when we come
back to all of these tracks next year because we’ll have a
good starting point.”
• Manning took last weekend off…After testing last
Wednesday at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course (where he ran in the
top 7 to 10 in the open test), Manning headed to Las Vegas
with fellow IndyCar driver Buddy Rice for a long weekend.
The two drivers did a little gambling (“Buddy taught me a
few tricks so it wasn’t too painful.”) and took the
opportunity to relax on their first weekend off since
leaving for Japan in mid-April. Team owner A.J. Foyt headed
west to his ranch in Del Rio where he relaxed by getting on
his tractor and mowing acres of grass fields.
• ATB Construction Company of Port Byron, IL is this
weekend’s winner of the ABC Supply Your Name Here Promotion
for its customers. The company name will be put on the top
of the sidepods of the No. 14 ABC Supply Dallara/Honda.
Marty Hurry and Bev Wiley will receive selected merchandise,
race tickets, hospitality and garage passes, plus a Meet and
Greet and photo op with A.J. Foyt and Darren Manning. The
“Your Name Here” promotion selected winners by random
drawing from a pool of entries sent in by ABC Supply
customers earlier this year.
• The Iowa Corn Indy 250 presented by Ethanol will be
shown live at 1:00 p.m. eastern time Sunday, June 24 on
ABC-TV.
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