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Orleans
Racing Deserved Better Than 16th at Michigan
BROOKLYN,
MI (June 17, 2006) - Considering how much progress the Orleans
Racing team made during their two-day visit to Michigan International
Speedway, Brendan Gaughans 16th place finish in the Con-way
Freight 200 was a bitter pill to swallow.
The
instant Gaughan took to the 2.0-mile track in the first practice
session he knew he was in for a challenging weekend. An evil vibration
had the Las Vegas native hanging onto the steering wheel for dear
life and it was all he could do just to bring it back to the garage
in once piece.
At
nearly 13.5 seconds off the pace, the crew had no choice but to
institute a complete overhaul of the front end and thankfully for
them they werent dealing with a one-day show.
It
was then that Gaughan turned to long-time friend Robbie Gordon for
assistance. Robbie took the Orleans Racing Dodge out for several
laps early in the second practice and his feedback and advice to
the crew proved to be invaluable. When Gaughan got back on the track
during the session the truck showed significant improvement and
was less than two seconds off the fastest time recorded.
By
race day, Gaughan finally had something he could work with and he
was able to put the No. 77 Orleans Hotel and Casino Dodge 20th on
the starting grid for the 100-lap race.
The
pit crew took advantage of several early cautions to make adjustments
and then it was up to Gaughan to race through the pack.
Gaughan
more than held his own on the multi-groove speedway and on a restart
with 19 laps to go he was shown 13th in the running order. Three
laps later, Gaughan was battling Todd Bodine for seventh when the
two drivers went for the same piece of race track and the No. 77
Dodge bounced off the outside wall. Gaughan was able to run to the
finish but the damage to the truck dashed any hope he had for a
top five finish.
It
was just racing, said Gaughan of the incident that ended his
forward motion. The 30 team has been pretty nice to us and
helped us quite a bit this year. Its just a bummer. It looks
like a deal where his spotter didnt tell him we were there.
The 4 truck (Bobby Labonte) was on the outside too and when he came
by he gave him room but we got put in the fence.
It
knocked our tow out and knocked the front fender in. We were tight
already. Once that happened it just got worse. I was battling, beating
and banging. On the green/white/checker, every lap I hit the wall.
I did not lift. I didnt care. I was not giving up another
spot.
Robby
Gordon came down and helped us a ton on Friday. He gave us the idea
to do what we did with the shock package. He helped me with the
feel of the thing. He gave me an idea how to drive through it and
gave the guys an idea how to fix it. He helped us a ton.
He
really, really bailed us out, so I really want to thank him.
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