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Orleans
Racing Overcomes Mechanical Problem For Top 20 in Mansfield
MANSFIELD, OH
(May 27, 2006) - Brendan Gaughan just wont be happy
until he pulls his No. 77 Orleans Racing Dodge into Victory Lane,
but all things considered he felt nothing but fortunate to get out
of Mansfield Motorsports Speedway with a top 20 finish.
As usual when
making their annual visit to the Buckeye State, the Craftsman Truck
Series competitors had to vie with Mother Nature to get time on
the track. While the drivers did manage to get most of their practice
session in, qualifying was rained out and the lineup was set according
to the rulebook.
Race day dawned
without a threat of rain and Gaughan strapped in for the race 16th
on the starting grid. The first 70 laps of the 250-lap race went
according to plan for the Orleans Racing team as Gaughan steadily
improved his track position and the crew made preparations for their
upcoming pit stop.
Gaughan made
it to fourth place when he noted a miss in the ignition system and
his Dodge began to backslide through the field. A caution on Lap
75 allowed Gaughan to hit pit road where the crew discovered that
a short in the engine kill switch on the steering wheel was interfering
with the ignition system.
Under the guidance
of Rambo Liberati, the crew quickly repaired the problem and returned
their driver to the track in 32nd place and still on the lead lap.
From there Gaughan
had to avoid the numerous incidents that brought out the caution
18 times for an all-time series record. When the checkers fell,
Gaughan was running 17th an amazing feat in an event where
there were only two lead changes in the entire race and both came
under caution as a result of pit stops.
Weve
got to look at the good things, said Gaughan. Thats
part of being a race team. One good thing was that the boys diagnosed
the problem. We had an electrical short with the kill switch. They
hunted it down and (engineer) Clint (Jennings) was able to lean
in and fix it. All that really did was cost us some good TV time
up front.
We were
running fourth when it happened. I was running full throttle and
all of a sudden the motor just shut off. I was going to get creamed
so I had to be smart and stay on the bottom ad not cause a big wreck.
We caught the caution and Clint and the boys diagnosed the problem,
fixed it and got us back out.
We were
going to come in around Lap 80 and put tires on and that was going
to be it. We thought that would be the trick setup. When guys stopped
at Lap 20 we thought that was stupid. I remember the day when after
60 laps of racing whether you needed fuel or not you needed tires.
Thats good racing. Now you can do 220 plus laps on the tires
and thats not racing. Thats road course racing backwards.
Whoever can pit first and run to the end will win. Thats not
an oval race. We need the tires to have harder sidewalls and a softer
compound so we can race them and the tires wear out in 60 laps and
youre sliding and you need tires. 220 laps is ridiculous.
We tried
to rout and gouge. Im not a guy that likes to dump people
but I was pushing and leaning. I hit Todd Bodine three or four times.
He doored me. I doored him. That was good, hard, clean racing between
professionals. Thats called short track racing but it was
follow the leader, man. We were good enough to run as fast as Todd
(Bodine) who led at least the first 100 laps. We were as fast or
faster than him. Once we got back there the tires didnt make
any difference, so it didnt matter that we had fresh tires.
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