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Season Finale
By
A.J. Foyt
It is none too soon to put the 2009 IndyCar season behind us as
far as I’m concerned. I guess everyone was in a hurry to get
this season over with because the Homestead-Miami Indy 300 went
nonstop! It was green flag racing all the way for the first time
in the history of the IndyCar Series.
For the fans at Homestead-Miami Speedway, it was an exciting
race because the IndyCar championship was going to the guy who
won the race—only eight points separated the top three drivers.
Al though Dario Franchitti won the pole, he didn’t stay in the
lead very long and it appeared either his teammate Scott Dixon
or Ganassi-turned-Penske-driver Ryan Briscoe would win the
finale Saturday evening.
Wrong! Franchitti, who almost went a lap down as the other two
drivers were battling at speeds over 210mph, took the lead on
lap 195 when Briscoe and Dixon had to pit for fuel. I guess
those two guys couldn’t believe it went non-stop either because
they must have been counting on a caution period to help them
with their fuel mileage. When that yellow didn’t come, the
tortoise outran the two rabbits to win the race and the title.
Congratulations to Dario Franchitti and Chip Ganassi’s team –
that was a great way to end the season.
We ended ours with Ryan Hunter-Reay finishing the race without a
scratch on the ABC Supply Dallara/Honda. That felt good too. The
No. 14 car wasn’t the best it’s been there (started 21st) but we
worked on it during the pit stops to get it better so Ryan moved
up to finish 13th. The important thing going into the off season
is that we finished the race and were able to roll the race car
onto the transporter.
That doesn’t sound like much but up to last weekend, we’d run 16
races and crashed in 11 of them, (although the pit road accident
at Kentucky didn’t stop us from racing, it just cost us two
laps). So that is why I am so happy to get this season over with
because it’s been one of the worst for A.J. Foyt Racing.
Considering that I’ve had seasons where we’ve crashed three cars
in one race, that’s saying something.
Ryan did give our ABC Supply team some bright spots with his
seventh place finish in Toronto and his really strong fourth
place run in Mid-Ohio. Looking back over 2009, I’m pretty sure
that he’s glad this season is over because it’s been a tough
year for him too--getting his ride with Vision a week before the
season started and then having to switch teams after six races.
He adapted pretty good but I know it was hard on him.
And to be truthful, it was hard on us to lose Vitor Meira to
injury at Indy because we’d figured out what he liked in a race
car. But those Indy 500 accidents—either the pit fire or the
crash--could have been so much worse so I’m not going to
complain too much.
We have been plagued with bad luck but a lot of it was
self-inflicted. I always say you make your own luck so there
were times we were in the wrong place at the wrong time but
mistakes on our part put us there in the first place. Sometimes
the drivers made bad decisions too, so all in all, it made for a
bad year. You’re going to have that in racing when you’ve been
in it as long as I have.
All you can do is figure out what went wrong where, work to
improve in those areas over the winter and come out fighting in
2010. We intend to do just that. I hope you have a good
off-season—for us there is no off-season because we’ll be
working hard to make 2010 our best season of the decade! |