ricochet
04-26-2007, 12:49 PM
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Oregon Trail Rally
By Jeff Zurschmeide, Subiesport Magazine (http://www.subiesport.com)
The Oregon Trail Rally takes its name from the historic route that pioneers traveled to reach the west coast in the 1840s. Hundreds of wagon trains set out to travel the Oregon Trail over the years, but many of them never made it to the end.
That's a fitting legacy for this year's Oregon Trail Rally, because basic survival was the name of the game at the third round of the 2007 Rally America National Championship series. Victory went to those who made it to the end of the trail - of the 45 cars lined up for the start of the National rally, only 22 made it to the finish. Including the regional-only competitors, a total of 76 cars entered the rally, and just 44 made it to the end.
Entrants at this year's Oregon Trail were racing not only for Rally America series points, but also for a coveted grid position at this Summer's X Games. Additionally, Oregon Trail was round 1 of the new Max Attack Triple Crown Rally Series, offering 2WD competitors a chance to win substantial cash purses. (www.max-attack.com)
The action and the buzz started before the rally even began. Series contender Andrew Comrie-Picard suffered an engine failure in his Mitsubishi Evo on the practice stage, and then lost his backup engine on the Thursday press stage while giving demonstration rides. Unable to secure another engine, the young Canadian had no choice but to withdraw from the event, although he did push his car across the starting line of Stage 1 to be counted as a starter.
The Oregon Trail Rally begins each year with special spectator stages held at Portland International Raceway, near the city center. These short stages are mixed tarmac, gravel, and sod and so they pose a special challenge to the teams. Combined times for the 6 stages held at the race track are under 15 minutes, so there's not much that can be won there, but the entire rally may be lost to a single mistake. The rally was thrown wide open when series leader and defending champions Travis Pastrana & Christian Edstrom suffered a catastrophic engine failure in their Subaru WRX STI as they won the very first stage. Leading teams Lauchlin O'Sullivan & Scott Putnam (Mitsubishi) and George Plsek & Jeffrey Burmeister (Mitsubishi) were also taken out with mechanical trouble on the first stages.
With Pastrana and Comrie-Picard sidelined, the event was thrown wide open. Of the five remaining stages on the first evening, three went to Subaru Rally Team USA partners Ken Block & Alex Gelsomino, with WRC veteran Ramana Lagemann & Mark Williams (Mitsubishi) and the privateer team of Matt Iorio & Ole Holter (Subaru) winning one stage each. Interestingly, privateers Tanner Foust & Christine Beavis (Subaru) were a close second on each of the first four stages, then third and fourth place on the final two stages of the evening. 2006 Oregon Trail winners Andrew Pinker & Patrick Walsh (Subaru), WRC veteran and past Oregon Trail winner Patrick Richard & Martin Headland (Subaru) and veteran rallyists Paul Choiniere & Jeffrey Becker (Hyundai) were also close to the top of the standings. From the start, it was clear that the Oregon Trail Rally would be hard-fought and anyone might win.
On Saturday, the rally moved into the mountains of the Oregon Coast Range. While Friday had been uncharacteristically clear and dry, the forecast called for rain all day Saturday and for once the weatherman was exactly right. Saturday's stages were a mix of familiar and new roads, and with two of the toughest contenders out of the picture, every team stepped up their effort and raced for the win. The consequences were hard.
Block/Gelsomino started Saturday leading the event, but Pinker/Walsh came on strong, winning Stage 7 and whittling Block's lead to just 0.9 seconds. "Cowboy" Kenny Bartram and Dennis Hotson (Subaru) crashed on Stage 7 and were done for the weekend. Foust/Beavis won Stage 8, followed by Pinker/Walsh, with Block/Gelsomino in third.
Pinker/Walsh were back on top for the treacherous Stage 9, followed by Lagemann/Williams and Block/Gelsomino, but the stage was marred by a series of four rollovers down the field. A red cross ended the stage when the father and son team of Joshua Milos & Michael Milos rolled their Group 5 GMC Sonoma pickup. Fortunately, injuries were minor and the event safety program worked perfectly. Also out by the end of Stage 9 were the teams of Richard/Headland (Subaru), defending PGT champion Matt Johnson & Jeremy Wimpey (Subaru), Ralph Kosmides/John Dillon (Subaru), Mike Goodwin/Debbie Wenzara (Subaru), Lagemann/Williams (Mitsubishi), Dimiters/Ockwell (Subaru), and several others.
By the end of Stage 10, Pinker/Walsh had taken the lead and opened up a prodigious 38 second gap on Block/Gelsomino. "These roads ... are similar to the roads in New Zealand. I think we will run strong here," Pinker said. Block/Gelsomino came roaring back to win Stage 11 by 6.4 seconds over Pinker/Walsh, and then Foust/Beavis claimed the last stage of the day by 9 seconds over Pinker/Walsh.
Rain persisted throughout the day Saturday, causing a run on anti-fog solution at the local auto parts store at the service area in tiny Vernonia, Oregon. The roads were a mixture of newer gravel and the renowned Oregon clay, making for a slick surface over most stage miles.
At the end of the soggy second day of competition, Pinker/Walsh held the lead by almost 40 seconds over Block/Gelsomino and 75 seconds over the third place team of Foust/Beavis. With Johnson/Wimpey out of the pictures, Stephan Verdier & Scott Crouch (Subaru) led the Production GT class over competitors Norm LeBlanc & Keith Morison (Subaru), Patrick Moro & Mike Rossey (Subaru), and local favorites Jamie Thomas & Matt Gauger (Subaru).
Sunday dawned a bit brighter, but with rain squalls still passing through. The teams faced a dash to the finish line with just four stages totaling 30 miles on the last day of competition. The first and third stages were a 5 mile stretch of road covered in fresh gravel, and the second and fourth stages comprised a 10 mile climb-and-drop over a ridge. Only one service interval was allowed for teams on this day - there was no room for mistakes.
Block/Gelsomino came out swinging, winning the first stage on Sunday, but Pinker/Walsh were just 1.9 seconds behind, and Foust/Beavis just 8 seconds out in third. Stage 14 showed just how tight the competition could be, with Foust/Beavis and Pinker/Walsh tied for the top stage score, and Block Gelsomino 13 seconds off the fast time. Stage 15 had Foust/Beavis in first, followed by Block/Gelsomino 3 seconds later, and then Pinker/Walsh a scant 1.6 seconds out in third. Foust/Beavis continued their surge to the end, winning the final stage of the rally by 9 seconds over Block/Gelsomino and 2 more seconds over Pinker/Walsh, but it wasn't enough to overcome Saturday's lead.
When the scores were totaled, it was Pinker/Walsh in first, Block/Gelsomino in second place at +0.46.1, and Foust/Beavis at +01.04.5. Verdier/Crouch won PGT honors, and Group N went to Wyeth Gubelman and Nathalie Richard (Subaru). In 12th position overall, Group 5 was won by Andrew Havas and Francois Morin, driving a 1988 Honda Civic, and the Group 2 victory went to Michel Hoche-Mong and Sameer Parekh in a 1985 VW GTI.
As he walked to the stage to claim his Oregon-shaped trophies at the celebratory banquet, Pinker exclaimed "I'm thinking of moving here!" The crowd, mostly composed of local rallyists and rally workers, cheered the idea.
At the top of the results Subaru was the dominant marque. Only the Hyundai Tiburon of Choiniere/Becker in the fourth position kept the top 10 from being a Subaru sweep. But in the 2WD classes, it was a different story. $8,000 in prize money was awarded to 2WD competitors registered for the Max Attack series, with checks handed out to 6 different marques. Prize money went to Havas/Morin (Honda), Sarasin/Johansson (Ford), Burmeister/Shindle (Mazda), Hoche-Mong/Parekh (VW), Buren/Buren (Subaru), and Thompson/Secor (Dodge).
After all the cars have been repaired, the Rally America series will return to the Pacific Northwest on May 19-20 at the Olympus Rally in Washington State. TV coverage of the Oregon Trail Rally will appear on ESPN2 on May 31 at 6 PM and on Driving Sports TV (http://www.drivingsports.com) in the Portland Area in late May as well (see local listing for more info).
Oregon Trail Rally
By Jeff Zurschmeide, Subiesport Magazine (http://www.subiesport.com)
The Oregon Trail Rally takes its name from the historic route that pioneers traveled to reach the west coast in the 1840s. Hundreds of wagon trains set out to travel the Oregon Trail over the years, but many of them never made it to the end.
That's a fitting legacy for this year's Oregon Trail Rally, because basic survival was the name of the game at the third round of the 2007 Rally America National Championship series. Victory went to those who made it to the end of the trail - of the 45 cars lined up for the start of the National rally, only 22 made it to the finish. Including the regional-only competitors, a total of 76 cars entered the rally, and just 44 made it to the end.
Entrants at this year's Oregon Trail were racing not only for Rally America series points, but also for a coveted grid position at this Summer's X Games. Additionally, Oregon Trail was round 1 of the new Max Attack Triple Crown Rally Series, offering 2WD competitors a chance to win substantial cash purses. (www.max-attack.com)
The action and the buzz started before the rally even began. Series contender Andrew Comrie-Picard suffered an engine failure in his Mitsubishi Evo on the practice stage, and then lost his backup engine on the Thursday press stage while giving demonstration rides. Unable to secure another engine, the young Canadian had no choice but to withdraw from the event, although he did push his car across the starting line of Stage 1 to be counted as a starter.
The Oregon Trail Rally begins each year with special spectator stages held at Portland International Raceway, near the city center. These short stages are mixed tarmac, gravel, and sod and so they pose a special challenge to the teams. Combined times for the 6 stages held at the race track are under 15 minutes, so there's not much that can be won there, but the entire rally may be lost to a single mistake. The rally was thrown wide open when series leader and defending champions Travis Pastrana & Christian Edstrom suffered a catastrophic engine failure in their Subaru WRX STI as they won the very first stage. Leading teams Lauchlin O'Sullivan & Scott Putnam (Mitsubishi) and George Plsek & Jeffrey Burmeister (Mitsubishi) were also taken out with mechanical trouble on the first stages.
With Pastrana and Comrie-Picard sidelined, the event was thrown wide open. Of the five remaining stages on the first evening, three went to Subaru Rally Team USA partners Ken Block & Alex Gelsomino, with WRC veteran Ramana Lagemann & Mark Williams (Mitsubishi) and the privateer team of Matt Iorio & Ole Holter (Subaru) winning one stage each. Interestingly, privateers Tanner Foust & Christine Beavis (Subaru) were a close second on each of the first four stages, then third and fourth place on the final two stages of the evening. 2006 Oregon Trail winners Andrew Pinker & Patrick Walsh (Subaru), WRC veteran and past Oregon Trail winner Patrick Richard & Martin Headland (Subaru) and veteran rallyists Paul Choiniere & Jeffrey Becker (Hyundai) were also close to the top of the standings. From the start, it was clear that the Oregon Trail Rally would be hard-fought and anyone might win.
On Saturday, the rally moved into the mountains of the Oregon Coast Range. While Friday had been uncharacteristically clear and dry, the forecast called for rain all day Saturday and for once the weatherman was exactly right. Saturday's stages were a mix of familiar and new roads, and with two of the toughest contenders out of the picture, every team stepped up their effort and raced for the win. The consequences were hard.
Block/Gelsomino started Saturday leading the event, but Pinker/Walsh came on strong, winning Stage 7 and whittling Block's lead to just 0.9 seconds. "Cowboy" Kenny Bartram and Dennis Hotson (Subaru) crashed on Stage 7 and were done for the weekend. Foust/Beavis won Stage 8, followed by Pinker/Walsh, with Block/Gelsomino in third.
Pinker/Walsh were back on top for the treacherous Stage 9, followed by Lagemann/Williams and Block/Gelsomino, but the stage was marred by a series of four rollovers down the field. A red cross ended the stage when the father and son team of Joshua Milos & Michael Milos rolled their Group 5 GMC Sonoma pickup. Fortunately, injuries were minor and the event safety program worked perfectly. Also out by the end of Stage 9 were the teams of Richard/Headland (Subaru), defending PGT champion Matt Johnson & Jeremy Wimpey (Subaru), Ralph Kosmides/John Dillon (Subaru), Mike Goodwin/Debbie Wenzara (Subaru), Lagemann/Williams (Mitsubishi), Dimiters/Ockwell (Subaru), and several others.
By the end of Stage 10, Pinker/Walsh had taken the lead and opened up a prodigious 38 second gap on Block/Gelsomino. "These roads ... are similar to the roads in New Zealand. I think we will run strong here," Pinker said. Block/Gelsomino came roaring back to win Stage 11 by 6.4 seconds over Pinker/Walsh, and then Foust/Beavis claimed the last stage of the day by 9 seconds over Pinker/Walsh.
Rain persisted throughout the day Saturday, causing a run on anti-fog solution at the local auto parts store at the service area in tiny Vernonia, Oregon. The roads were a mixture of newer gravel and the renowned Oregon clay, making for a slick surface over most stage miles.
At the end of the soggy second day of competition, Pinker/Walsh held the lead by almost 40 seconds over Block/Gelsomino and 75 seconds over the third place team of Foust/Beavis. With Johnson/Wimpey out of the pictures, Stephan Verdier & Scott Crouch (Subaru) led the Production GT class over competitors Norm LeBlanc & Keith Morison (Subaru), Patrick Moro & Mike Rossey (Subaru), and local favorites Jamie Thomas & Matt Gauger (Subaru).
Sunday dawned a bit brighter, but with rain squalls still passing through. The teams faced a dash to the finish line with just four stages totaling 30 miles on the last day of competition. The first and third stages were a 5 mile stretch of road covered in fresh gravel, and the second and fourth stages comprised a 10 mile climb-and-drop over a ridge. Only one service interval was allowed for teams on this day - there was no room for mistakes.
Block/Gelsomino came out swinging, winning the first stage on Sunday, but Pinker/Walsh were just 1.9 seconds behind, and Foust/Beavis just 8 seconds out in third. Stage 14 showed just how tight the competition could be, with Foust/Beavis and Pinker/Walsh tied for the top stage score, and Block Gelsomino 13 seconds off the fast time. Stage 15 had Foust/Beavis in first, followed by Block/Gelsomino 3 seconds later, and then Pinker/Walsh a scant 1.6 seconds out in third. Foust/Beavis continued their surge to the end, winning the final stage of the rally by 9 seconds over Block/Gelsomino and 2 more seconds over Pinker/Walsh, but it wasn't enough to overcome Saturday's lead.
When the scores were totaled, it was Pinker/Walsh in first, Block/Gelsomino in second place at +0.46.1, and Foust/Beavis at +01.04.5. Verdier/Crouch won PGT honors, and Group N went to Wyeth Gubelman and Nathalie Richard (Subaru). In 12th position overall, Group 5 was won by Andrew Havas and Francois Morin, driving a 1988 Honda Civic, and the Group 2 victory went to Michel Hoche-Mong and Sameer Parekh in a 1985 VW GTI.
As he walked to the stage to claim his Oregon-shaped trophies at the celebratory banquet, Pinker exclaimed "I'm thinking of moving here!" The crowd, mostly composed of local rallyists and rally workers, cheered the idea.
At the top of the results Subaru was the dominant marque. Only the Hyundai Tiburon of Choiniere/Becker in the fourth position kept the top 10 from being a Subaru sweep. But in the 2WD classes, it was a different story. $8,000 in prize money was awarded to 2WD competitors registered for the Max Attack series, with checks handed out to 6 different marques. Prize money went to Havas/Morin (Honda), Sarasin/Johansson (Ford), Burmeister/Shindle (Mazda), Hoche-Mong/Parekh (VW), Buren/Buren (Subaru), and Thompson/Secor (Dodge).
After all the cars have been repaired, the Rally America series will return to the Pacific Northwest on May 19-20 at the Olympus Rally in Washington State. TV coverage of the Oregon Trail Rally will appear on ESPN2 on May 31 at 6 PM and on Driving Sports TV (http://www.drivingsports.com) in the Portland Area in late May as well (see local listing for more info).