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Avondale - In a hard-fought race, marred by collisions and
mishaps, Jon Herb emerged as the victor of the Phoenix 100 Infiniti Pro
event at the Phoenix International Raceway. So devastated was the
field, that the race was shortened to 90 laps by league officials
because of time constraints and unusually high attrition.
However, the shortened race had little effect on the outcome as by that
point, Herb was comfortably in command of the event and barring an
unforced error, would have easily been able to hold the lead until lap
100 if necessary.
The race began with a three car incident in Turns 1 and 2 which
immediately eliminated two fan favorites - P.J. Chesson and Jay Drake -
along with former Indy 500 starter Marty Roth. Cold tires, close
racing, and start-of-race jitters were likely the cause as the three
contacted each other immediately following the green flag as the 14 car
field raced into the first turn.
After an eight lap
caution, the race was restarted only to have Jaime Camara spin in Turn
4 on the restart. As Camara spun, he collected Jeff Simmons and
they both ended up in the wall, bringing out the safety crews
again. At this point, with zero laps run under green, five cars
were already out of the race, with four of them being extremely
competitive entries.
As the field turned for the next
restart, Jon Herb, who started fourth, passed Travis Gregg, who won the
race at Homestead in February, for the lead. Also on the restart,
Wade Cunningham, a rookie, made a quite impressive pass of Arie
Luyendyk, Jr. a series veteran and former championship runner-up.
Luyendyk seemed to be fighting problems with his car all day and was
never really a factor in the contest once Cunningham passed him.
The
mid-race looked to be relatively benign with the cars spacing out into
a single-file running order. Mishael Abbott, the Inifinti Pro
Series' only female driver, was consistently falling back and Jon Herb
was extending his lead. Then, on lap 33, Mishael Abbott spun in
Turn 1 and made moderate contact with the SAFER barrier in Turn
2. It looked like a case of pushing an ill-handling car just a
little too far.
As the field restarted on Lap 41,
Travis Gregg spun while exiting Turn 4, collected Al Unser and pushed
him into the inside wall. In a fine example of racing luck, Gregg
only suffered minor damage to his front wing, while Unser was
eliminated from the race by contact with the wall. During the
caution, Gregg entered the pits where his crew changed his front wing,
allowing Travis to re-enter the race after only losing two laps.
The
rest of the race was relatively uneventful. Jon Herb did make an
excellent outside pass of two slower cars (Travis Gregg and Scott
Mayer) on Lap 58 which allowed him to hold his lead over Chris Festa
who was running in second place at the time. Festa appeared to
have the ability to run with Herb, but whenever he would close the gap,
Jon Herb always seemed to find some extra speed in Turns 3 and 4 which
enabled him to pull away. Marty Roth repaired his car and was
able to re-enter the race, however, running 40 laps down, he later spun
his car and brought out the caution yet again. During this
caution period, the Infiniti Pro Series officials shortened the event
to 90 laps.
As the race ended, Jon Herb won comfortably,
with Chris Festa finishing second and Wade Cunningham placing a
well-deserved third. Perhaps the most impressive feat in the
race, short of Herb's solid victory, was the fact that Wade Cunningham
was able to finish at all. According to Cunningham, "Every
accident except one was when I was directly behind that person. I
guess it was just good luck and a lot of timing, but I got by
unscathed, but it was always very close. " Whether it was luck,
or timing, or both, there were seven other drivers sitting in the pits
during the last lap who wished they had a bit of what Wade Cunningham
possessed at the Phoenix 100. |