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Race Report: Iowa Corn Indy 250

NEWTON, IA June 21, 2009—The Iowa Corn Indy 250 ended
before it really got started for the No.14 ABC Supply car.
Ryan Hunter-Reay was the victim of being in the wrong place
at the wrong time when rookie Robert Doornbos spun on the
first lap and collected the No.14.
Hunter-Reay’s debut with A.J. Foyt’s team was proceeding
smoothly up till then as the team transitioned to its fourth
different driver of the season. With just a day of practice,
the team was 13th in speed heading into the qualification
rounds.
With a couple tweaks to the ABC car, they were confident,
thinking that Hunter-Reay might even break into the top 10
in qualifying. Then problems with the track’s surface—weeper
holes leaking water in turn four—forced the IRL Officials to
cancel qualifying. According to the rules, the grid would be
set according to the entrants’ points which meant that the
No. 14, 18th in points, would start 17th because the 10th
place No. 21 car (Hunter-Reay’s former car) was no longer
competing in the Series.
On the first lap E.J. Viso drifted high between turns three
and four and hit the outside wall hard. Doornbos also got
loose there and did a quarter spin to the inside directly
into Hunter-Reay, who was trying to squeeze by underneath
him. Doornbos clipped the No. 14’s right front wheel and
knocked out the right side front suspension and wing. “We had a decent start,” said Hunter-Reay. “We were a little
loose to begin with but nothing we couldn’t have worked
with. I started moving up a little bit and was passing
Doornbos in turn four, got underneath him and he just lost
the car and got into us.
“Unfortunately, we were in the wrong place at the wrong
time. It’s a product of starting back there. If qualifying
hadn’t been cancelled, we wouldn’t have been back there. We
were looking forward to a really good day for ABC Supply and
I think we were really going to have a good day.
“We had a good weekend going. The best practice times and
the best speed I’ve had all year turning left on an oval has
been with this team, it’s been fun. I’ve had a good time
this weekend. It’s a bummer to be out on the first lap. I
feel bad for all the guys ‘cause they worked real hard.
We’ll just have to get them at Richmond.”
Dario Franchitti won the event which was slowed for
accidents four times involving seven cars. Second through
fifth were Ryan Briscoe, Hideki Mutoh, Dan Wheldon and Scott
Dixon.
The next race for the IndyCar Series is this coming Saturday
night under the lights at the ¾ mile Richmond International
Raceway. The race will be televised on VERSUS starting at
8pm ET.
Qualifying Cancelled for Iowa Corn Indy
250
NEWTON, IA June 20, 2009--Qualifying for the Iowa
Corn Indy 250 was cancelled today due to moisture problems
with the track's surface in turn four. Weeper holes allowed
ground water to rise to the track's surface causing an
unsafe condition. The grid will be set according to
entrants' points. Ryan Hunter-Reay will start 17th in the
ABC Supply Honda/Dallara/Firestone car. He will be the third
different driver in the No. 14 since Vitor Meira was injured
at Indy.
Notes & Quotes: Iowa Corn Indy 250

• Ryan Hunter-Reay on Iowa: “The key to Iowa Speedway
is getting your car balanced so that it works in both the
low and high grooves. The track is only 7/8 of a mile but it
races like a 1.5 mile track because of the banking; so in
that sense you approach it the same as you would a 1.5 mile
track only with more downforce [because of the larger
wings]. The traffic situation at Iowa can be pretty
straightforward as long as you can run both grooves. But if
you can only run one groove then you’re at the mercy of the
other driver’s line—so how well you can handle it depends on
the balance that you get in your car.”
• Vitor Meira Update: Vitor Meira is continuing to
recover in his Key Biscayne, FL home. He has not used pain
medication since June 4th and an x-ray taken on Wednesday,
June 10th revealed his healing is progressing as his doctors
anticipated. Meira: “All I’m trying to do now is to get
better soon, so my day and tasks are built all around my
getting better. This means a lot of light workout and
rest... it’s not very exciting but it is the fastest way to
get back to the car!” Currently Meira spends 20 minutes in
the morning on his bike followed by time on his steering
machine to maintain his arm strength. After a light lunch,
he will spend another 20 minutes on the bike followed by a
30 minute walk, usually with his Mini-Schnauzer ‘Quattro.’
And to exercise his mind? He finished a 2000-piece
Ravensburger puzzle entitled New Wonders of the World. Meira:
“I have a lot of free time!”
• Hunter-Reay on joining a new team: “I’ve definitely
become accustomed to joining new operations so I’m getting
good at it. I hope to bring some stability to the ABC
Supply/Foyt program until Vitor returns as well as do some
on-track development and hopefully get the next breakthrough
performance.” [Challenges?] “The biggest challenge is to
establish the communication. You’re starting fresh with a
new engineer and crew chief and that usually takes a couple
days but we have to do it more quickly because it’s a race
weekend. But we’ve all [meaning himself and the Foyt team]
worked with new situations before so I think we can make the
most of it. We’ll be building the communication over the
weekend so with every lap and every session, it’ll get
better and better. We just have to take it one step at a
time.”
• ABC Supply roofing customer, Nelson & Son Siding
of LeClaire, IA won the ‘Your Name Here’ contest for the
Iowa Corn Indy 250. The company name will be atop the
sidepods of the No. 14 ABC Supply Dallara/Honda. Ryan Nelson
will receive selected merchandise, race tickets, hospitality
and garage passes, plus a Meet and Greet with Ryan Hunter-Reay.
The “Your Name Here” promotion selected winners by random
drawing from a pool of entries sent in by ABC Supply
customers earlier this year.
• ABC Supply will entertain over 300 guests in their
hospitality tent this weekend.
• Iowa Connections: Housby, an associate sponsor of
the No. 14, is based in nearby Des Moines. Since 1969,
Housby has been known for the quality of the new and used
trucks they sell as well as their excellent customer
service. Founder Jack Housby, a former NASCAR driver and
team owner, started out Housby as a Mack Truck dealership
and with the help of his sons Kevin and Kelly, has grown it
into a business conglomerate offering multiple services to
its customers.
• The Iowa Corn Indy 250 will be shown live at 1:00
p.m. ET Sunday, June 21 on ABC-TV.
• For more information on the Foyt Racing program,
please check our web site: www.ajfoytracing.com. |