Thursday, October 05, 2006

ANGELS IN (ROAD) AMERICA


TO ALL OUR ELKHART LAKE CORNER MARSHALS:

Folks, once again, on behalf of the entire Champ Car World Series family, thank you very much for a great effort in trying conditions and circumstances. Friday and Saturday both showed us tough weather conditions, but you held up your end and soldiered on with no complaints. On Sunday, we threw two very tough and busy races at you and your response was outstanding.

I will remind you that I stated at the Sunday briefing that Road America conjures up some wild races for our series, and this year was no different. I would especially like to congratulate Lon Hake on the landline and his crew at turns 11 and 11A for holding up to the strain of Katherine's huge accident. From the several races I have worked down there as a marshal, I took away a healthy respect for anyone who spends any time down there, standing guard over that incredibly breathtaking acre of racing real estate.

The communications throughout the weekend were superb. Loose when action was slight, but tightening up when incidents arose. A number of you, including Lon, communicate volumes just by your tone, which lets us know very quickly and certainly just how things are going out there. The course checks were very sharp.

I also received some positive comments from some of you during the weekend, and I hope you can spread the word to those who have recently passed up this event, that together our bottom line remains getting the job done, but we can enjoy ourselves immensely as we do it! It's a big task to run this big track with under 60 marshals, and you should all be proud as it felt more like 100 to us up in Race Control. Thanks also to those who came from great distances, the west coast and Canada to be with us. Your presence was very welcome!

Thanks also to Pete Allen and his assistants Stew, Jim, and Larry; and also our support up in race control, Mary Durham, Don Elston Sue Robinson, as well as Melissa Harrington who rode shotgun with me for the Champ Cars. These folks really go all out to look after you out there!

We will return next year on August 12, our 25th running at Road America. Perhaps a warm and sunny weekend of "Tufte Weather" awaits.

It was great to see new faces this year as well as work again with some of my old friends, as Elkhart Lake is where I learned the trade some 25 odd years ago. Until then, please take care, and please feel free to come and see us at some of our other events! There will always be room!

See you at the track!

Jim Swintal
Clerk of the Course
Champ Car World Series



Warrior in Pink Posted by Picasa


Pffffffffew. Another race weekend, another incredibly long and trying race day. This is makin’ me old.

Any of you who have seen the play or the HBO miniseries “Angels in America” saw one of the most amazing and astounding portrayals of an encounter of a human being and an angel ever staged. Could be there was another one at Elkhart Lake’s famous “kink” with about five laps to go on race day.

I worked back there three times during my days as a Chicago Region SCCA marshal, including the 1984 CART race. Each time I walked away almost stupefied at witnessing lap after lap what a car and driver can do on the edge of adhesion, and thinking that I needed never again to have any apprehension on watching cars anywhere else on any track, as I had seen racing bravery to the nth degree.

A driver I met there in the fall of 1981 after his hub broke in the middle of the kink thought that I had saved his life at the time, as I was the first person he saw after climbing from the wreckage. We later became friends and through his connection I worked my first Champ Car race at Michigan the following year.

I had asked over the land line earlier in the weekend whether anyone in these cars was taking the kink flat. I remember only Mears and Mario back in ’84 were good enough to do so back then.

Katherine Legge came to Elkhart with a special sponsor for the weekend, Ford Motor Company’s “Warriors in Pink” program promoting Breast Cancer Awareness Month for October. The car was given a special pink paint scheme and was clearly recognizable like no other car we’ve had for a while! The paddock was filled with pink and print pattern scarves given away by Ford to commemorate the program, so it was very hard to miss or ignore the spirit of what “Warriors in Pink” were all about.

After Katherine did her first few installment laps on Friday morning, one of our corner comms mentioned on the land line that “She will have plenty of angels riding with her this weekend” as a result of the program. Boy did she.

I’m sure most of you saw the broadcast or replays. Another exciting and unpredictable Elkhart Lake race was winding down with just a few laps to go. In Race Control, I just happened to be watching the “program feed” monitor that was following a group of cars into the kink. Earlier in the race, we discussed in Race Control that the marshals at RA do not use the word “Alert” for major incidents like the rest of the U.S. They use “Mayday” - the local term I was brought up on. Away the car went and I came out of my chair - and just about out of my shorts as well - to point out what was happening. I recall crying out: “A Mayday at 11! A BIG one!!” as a car unwound itself against the fence. No time for the bell I usually ring.

As the comm at 11 and I pieced things together and calmed each other down a little by making sure all the debris was flagged properly, I asked him to try to give me an idea who it might be. As he scanned the debris field he came back with such a forlorn tone in his voice: “Control, there’s debris everywhere… and all the pieces are pink.”

Ouch. I wanted to sink into my chair, and then curse on the land line, but I thought the better of it.

The safety team surrounded the tub where it landed so no one could see much. At those times they methodically go about their business and we don’t get much from them. Tony Cotman decided to red flag the race to aid in the rescue and cleanup, and so we could finish under green if we could. After the ambulance had left, all we got from Safety communications was a “Code Three” on the driver, meaning Katherine was being taken to the CCWS Med center for evaluation, which I shared on the land line, some five or ten minutes after the incident.

And then after more waiting, an image popped up on our “program” monitor of a cheerful, smiling Katherine Legge standing at the steps of the Med Center up against a bright blue sky. This HAD to be some tape they were running about something she did earlier that day or weekend. It couldn’t be live, as we don’t hear the words, we just see the pictures. Then Jon Beekhuis’ talking head pops into the frame as Katherine disappears sheepishly into the Med Center. This IS live! Where the heck am I? Safety Communicator Joanne Jensen and I stared and wanted to pinch each other. Are we dreaming?

I saw Dr. Chris Pinderski in the airport going home the next day. He was in the second truck on the scene. He told me that even while sitting upside down in the tub, Katherine was totally matter-of-fact about the whole thing from as soon as the Safety Team got to her. No agitation, no histrionics, no tears, nothing. I feel fine. I know where I am. Yes you may get me out. To borrow an old Sicilian term, this young lady has “made her bones” in this series.

As I gave the awesome news to all our concerned ears on the land line, there was a brief moment, and then another of our corner comms reminded us that yes, those angels riding with her this weekend certainly did their job.

Katherine was introduced at the Atlantic Awards banquet later that evening by her car owner, Kevin Kalkhoven. She received a huge ovation as she waved to the crowd. Reverend Hunter Floyd then gave the invocation before dinner and joked that “Katherine sure must have bruised a few angels today.”

Did Katherine Legge pull down some Divine help that day? Did the spirit of the sponsor on her car have any affect? We have seen the results of cars going into fences and walls – either ”bottom first” on some occasions, or horrifically “top first” on others. What determines in a crash which way the tub is facing at the moment of impact?

One other thing here. Our former Champ Car President, Dick Eidswick, lost his wife Patti after a long battle just a few weeks ago. Her name was on Katherine’s car, right in front of the cockpit.

As my head hit the pillow that evening, after a long 20-hour raceday, I felt pretty thankful. For the strength of our cars, for being part of this series, and for angels everywhere – just like you all – who look after our drivers on every lap they run.

JHS

Wednesday, October 04, 2006

PIMPIN' THAT PRINT


22 x 28 print Posted by Picasa

Most of you know I am an artist away from the race track. And often I am asked what I'm working on, so here's your chance. To commemorate the introduction of our new 2007 Panoz DPO1 Champ Car, I was commissioned to create the above print, "The Future of Racing" featuring the new car in its test livery surrounded by two significant Champ Car chassis per decade, goin' back to the first car that won a Champ Car race with a rear engine. You'll find Lotus, Hawk, Eagle, McLaren, Penske, March, Swift, Reynard and good ol' Lola. Underneath is a comprehensive list of all rear-engined chassis that have won Champ Car races since 1964.

Sound interesting? A major gift giving holiday is on the way, some 40- odd days after our season closer in Mexico City ( see how our schedule marks my sense of Time?) Send me an email at jswintal@yahoo.com and I can send you a link that will allow you to pick one up for $25 plus $7.50 shipping!

Have a look at Gordon Kirby's chat with our Technical Director Scot Elkins about the new car:
http://www.champcarworldseries.com/News/Article.asp?ID=10954

RAINY DAYS AND MONDAYS


To all my good friends in the ASRQ:

Thank you all very much for your help on a very very, memorable event. It turned out to be the very first road race Champ Car has ever held on a weekday, so each one of you is now a part of history!

I want to thank you all especially for your hard work throughout the weekend. Your flagging was timely, your communications and observations were very accurate, and your interventions and on-track operations were done safely and with care. I know how difficult a day it was with only 8 laps put in between our two series on Sunday, and then you all bravely put up with the terrible weather and the "waiting around" for a decision to come back on Monday. You all handled yourselves with understanding and professionalism, and you gave me such a courteous response at the end of the day. I will never forget it!

To those 38 marshals who could return to help us on Monday, perhaps you were most impressive with your attitude in the morning meeting. I got the strong and confident feeling that you were ready to handle anything. Never before can I say that such a small group were able to accomplish such a large task. The Monday race day ran very smoothly in both races!

In conclusion, I would like to thank your officers again, Alain, France, Nancy, as well as Richard and Claude-Olivier in Race Control. They think of you and look after your interests constantly and they deserve all the praise you and I can give them.

We will not be returning to the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve soon, but will continue our efforts to return to Quebec someday, possibly in Quebec City or even out at Mirabel. Until we return, we shall keep you in our thoughts as we will long remember this spectacular finish to our five-year run in Montreal with the ASRQ. Please come and see us when you can, in Toronto, Cleveland, Edmonton or wherever your travels may take you.



The above missive was posted for me on the ASRQ/QRFA website the week after what was our last event in Montreal at the Gilles Villenueve circuit. The weekend ran quite smooth until it started raining on Sunday morning, the only big question on our minds being when and where we might return. The rights-holder to the events on the circuit, Normand Legault, made it clear to us we were not coming back. Busch Grand National and Grand Am will replace us. Mon Dieu, where will they paddock all those cars??

It was really one of those days, hadn’t had one since Elkhart back in 2003. The rain came down, we red-flagged the Atlantic race after a slow single file rolling start, as it was just too much, hoping to continue after the Champ Car race. A small break in the weather got the Champ Car race underway but the rain steadily picked up again and we red flagged that one too, much to the delight of the slippin’, slidin’ and soaked drivers.

I stood watch at my laptop weather radar , spouting off my prognostications as to when the rain would stop, and eventually it did, but the track conditions were long gone by 5 PM, so arrangements and agreements were negotiated by our promoter Alain Labrosse (a great guy, btw) with the City to allow us to run again on Monday. There are a TON of services that need to be re-connected for an event that was supposed to end on Sunday, so it took awhile before we could call it an official day. All of which left our marshals either crouching underneath their rain tarps or whatever they could find for a few miserable hours. A tough day all around but a great effort and help nonetheless.

Our promoter’s reaction to all this was phenomenal, when confronted with the fact that all but a handful of our marshals had to return back to their jobs on Monday, it was proposed, and quickly agreed, to PAY those who could rearrange their schedules to come back the next day! The ASRQ reckoned the daily rate for marshalling test days at St. Jovite is around $90 CAN. But with so short notice, The ASRQ thought they would ask for more than that to get a sufficient number of marshals on the Monday. A figure in the 150 dollar range was going to convince enough people to miss work by either calling in sick, taking a vacation day, or taking an unpaid day off. Being quite used to what some of our other US promoters would think of this, I quietly thought “fat chance,” but Mr. Labrosse came thru and offered to split several thousand dollars among the 38 marshals who could make it back. Wow. This, along with some honest explanations, eased the brunt of standing around all day waiting for something to happen!



Yes, there are only two marshals in this photo. Posted by Picasa


The next morning the brave 38 returned, and it worked out to two marshals per post at the “busy” stations with just one alone on the straights and others. I was really , really impressed at how confident, yet cautious, everyone looked at the briefing. Even though this would be the thinnest per mile we would ever attempt for a Champ Car road race, my French Communicator Richard LeDuc quickly reminded me that for club events this is the usual turnout and they all were more than used to working with so few. New for me, but something I’m sure you have all experienced. Could be a look into the future, I’m afraid to say, as the average age of Marshals in the US is probably creeping over 50 plus. We will have to get used to doing events with less people in the coming years, but where will we be in 2020?

The Atlantic race was fairly quiet, as I expected a “let’s get it done” attitude from the competitors, which often shows up on a Monday race. The closest finish in quite a while as Graham Rahal held off a charging Simon Pagenaud right at the line. It seemed all the action for the Champ cars happened at the “English Chicane” so dubbed by me as three of the four marshals assigned to the three posts there that day were Anglophones!

Merci beaucoup and thanks to all again for the longest road racing weekend in our history. Let’s look for warmer, dryer weather at Mt. Tremblant!


JHS

HEY, WE GOTTA SCHEDULE!


Hooray! In case you have not heard, Champ Car released its 2007 Schedule last week. Only one surprise in my book, the decision to go back to Quebec next year at the beautiful Mt. Tremblant Circuit in St. Jovite, where Champ Cars last raced in the sixties. It'll need some upgrading, but our people in the ASRQ say its well worth the effort.

There is still a significant hole waiting to be filled in September and Champ Car has signed letters of intent with two newer circuits, Assen in the Netherlands and Ochersleben in Germany, so details on these still have to be tweaked out for 2007.

We shall start the season with three in a row - A Las Vegas Street race on Easter, followed by LongBeach and Houston. The Las Vegas Race may be pretty popular. Send an email to Ian Cook, who is collecting a list of interested marshals. This event will require only about 100 or so marshals and because of the demand, it could be they only accept those with the most experience. We'll see. Send your experience level, license grade and info to iancook@sbcglobal.net

2007 Champ Car World Series Schedule

April 8 Las Vegas, Nevada - Street Course
April 15 Long Beach, California - Street Course
April 22 Houston, Texas - Reliant Park
May 20 Zhuhai, China - Road Course
June 10 Portland, Oregon - Portland International Raceway
June 24 Cleveland, Ohio - Burke Lakefront Airport
July 1 St. Jovite, Canada - Circuit Mont Tremblant
July 8 Toronto, Canada - Exhibition Place
July 22 Edmonton, Canada - City Centre Airport
July 29 San Jose, California - Street Course
Aug. 12 Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin - Road America
Aug. 19 Denver, Colorado - Pepsi Center
Oct. 21 Surfers Paradise, Australia - Street Course
Nov. 11 Mexico City, Mexico - Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez
Dec. 2 Phoenix, Arizona - Street Course