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Texas
By
A.J. Foyt
For me, the race at Texas Motor Speedway is second only to
the Indianapolis 500. It’s a beautiful and fast track with
exciting racing that usually goes down to the wire under the
lights in front of the second biggest crowd on the circuit.
What more could you ask for?
Well, a little luck would help. We lost two fuel pump
driveshafts in one weekend with less than 100 laps on the
track. I’d heard some other teams have had problems but of
course you hear about it only after the fact.
We thought we knew what caused the first failure but in
light of the second failure, we will have to look beyond
that and dig a little deeper.
With the exception of St. Petersburg this year when the
gearbox failed, we really haven’t had any mechanical
failures since Darren Manning began running for us in 2007.
That’s a credit to our mechanics and to the Honda engines
and Dallara chassis. We may not have had the best handling
car at every race, but if we didn’t finish, it was because
of a brush with the wall or getting caught up in someone
else’s mess and to be honest, there hasn’t been too much of
that either.
It was particularly frustrating for our team because we want
to do well at our home race. Actually, we haven’t had a good
race at Texas since we won here in ’98. I thought this year
would be different and I think it would have been without
the fuel pump problems.
The first problem happened after just six laps in Thursday
night’s practice . To replace the fuel pump drive, you have
to pull the engine so we were done for the night.
We had the fewest of any laps – 39 -- but still managed to
pull out a top-10 practice time on Friday afternoon before
the qualifying session. Because of that lack of track time,
we missed a little bit on one of the gear ratios and ended
up 17th on the grid, but Darren was very happy with the ABC
Supply car for the race. With less than 40 minutes of
practice on Friday, we had to focus on the race set-up
anyway.
In the race he was happy with the car. On the first pit stop
(under caution) he asked for a little more front wing
because of the car’s slight push. He got a pretty good
restart and was dicing it up when I heard him come over the
radio saying the car just quit. On the telemetry we saw that
it had lost all fuel pressure. After getting towed back to
the pitbox and being examined by the ABC Supply crew, the
No. 14 was done… after just 19 laps.
Scott Dixon won the race under caution because of a late
race accident involving Marco Andretti and Ryan Hunter-Reay.
Helio Castroneves and teammate Ryan Briscoe were second and
third, pretty remarkable because both were penalized with
pit lane violations earlier in the race.
Before closing, I was very sorry to hear about Jim McKay’s
passing on race day. I knew Jim from back in the ‘60s and
Wide World of Sports--even before ABC began broadcasting the
Indy 500. He was one of the nicest, most down-to-earth and
sincere sports guys I knew.
He was definitely the first big-time sports announcer that
I ever met. From when he started doing the Indy 500 back in
the 60s, he interviewed me many times and he was always a
real gentleman--he didn’t ask stupid questions. He did a
super job for ABC sports on TV and especially the Indy 500.
They don’t make him like that anymore. I’m glad that I got
to know him. |