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LAKE
PLACID, N.Y. (Jan. 5, 2008) – Boris
Said has been bobsledding longer
than any of the other drivers at the
3rd Annual Chevy Bodine Bobsled
Challenge presented by Whelen
Engineering, but he’s still learning
new tricks. He utilized some of what
he picked up Saturday morning to
successfully defend his title.
In his
second championship run, Said shaved
more than 1.5 seconds off his time
to beat L.W. Miller and three other
finalists. Said’s two runs were
52.12 and 50.53 seconds, for a total
time of 1:42.65. Miller, the 2007
NASCAR Whelen Southern Modified Tour
champion, posted the fastest first
run time at 52.11 and finished
second overall at 1:43.37.
Three-time NHRA Powerade Pro Stock
champion Jeg Coughlin was third with
an overall time of 1:43.99, followed
by former NASCAR driver Larry
Gunselman at 1:44.90 and 2007 NASCAR
Whelen Modified Tour champion Donny
Lia at 1:45.46.
“I
changed my line a little bit,” Said
said, “and I made a lot fewer
mistakes. Like in racing, I’m always
learning – every turn, every lap.”
Each of
the 15 NASCAR and NHRA drivers took
one championship run. The top five
times advanced to take a second
championship run, and the finish was
decided by the best aggregate time.
“I
didn’t expect to win this year,”
said Said, who won three of the four
races in the first two years. “I
thought (NHRA driver) Morgan Lucas
would. But he made a mistake and it
cost him.”
Lucas
was consistently one of the fastest
during Thursday and Friday, and was
just .23 behind Said in Friday’s
qualifying. But a bobble during
Saturday’s first championship run
left him 11th at 54.21 and out of
the hunt. Ron Hornaday, the 2007
NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series
champion, finished sixth with an
initial run of 53.06 – just .01
seconds out of qualifying for the
second run.
Said
got a chance to faceoff against
Lucas in the finals of the NASCAR-NHRA
Challenge Saturday afternoon. Said
recorded a time of 50.99 in the
finals to best Lucas’ 52.06.
In the
Challenge, five NASCAR drivers
(Said, Randy LaJoie, Todd Bodine,
Hornaday and Johnny Benson) and NHRA
drivers (Phil Burkhart, Lucas, Todd,
Bob Vandergriff and Coughlin)
competed against each other in
elimination rounds, to determine the
finalist from the two sides.
Said
beat Bodine in the NASCAR finals,
while Lucas defeated Coughlin in the
NHRA finals.
Many of
the drivers like Miller were
experiencing bobsledding for the
first time this week.
“The
first couple practice runs, I
learned everything not to do,” said
Miller, who was optimistic after
running fifth quickest in the final
run Friday. He was the sixth sled
down the hill in Saturday morning’s
first championship run and posted a
top time which held up through the
remainder of the runs.
“When I
got down there, it was the first run
since I got here where I felt I did
everything right and I just had one
bobble,” Miller said. “I knew I had
a shot at a podium finish, but I
needed Boris to really mess up to
have a shot to win it.”
Instead, Said put together a nearly
flawless run.
“I wish
I knew how I did it, but I’m not the
smartest guy in the world,” Said
joked. “To me, it’s just a blast.
This sport is just so awesome. It’s
like when you were a kid on your
flexible flyer – times ten.”
Sled
Notes
A special auction was held Friday
night to raise money for the Bo-Dyn
Bobsled Project and Phil Kurze
called it the most successful event
to date. Kurze, the vice president
of motorsports for Whelen
Engineering, is the president of the
Bo-Dyn Bobsled Project.
“It’s
grown ever year,” Kurze said. “The
main thing is we’re getting exposure
for the sport of bobsledding. What
can be better than meeting your
goals and having fun doing it?”
The Bo-Dyn
Bobsled Project was the brainchild
of former NASCAR driver and 1986
Daytona 500 winner Geoff Bodine.
After watching the 1984 United
States Olympic Bobsled team finish
well outside of medal contention,
Bodine decided to get involved and
help bring the sled technology up to
par with the world’s top programs.
Bodine
proceeded to partner with Chassis
Dynamics and Whelen Engineering to
build a bobsled for the U.S.
athletes. It was an idea that led to
the creation of the Bo-Dyn Bobsled
Project that has since put the U.S.
Bobsled team back into Olympic medal
contention. The Geoff Bodine Bobsled
Challenge was started three years
ago as an avenue for the project to
raise funds, as well as awareness.
New
York Army National Guard members
served as brakemen on the two-man
sleds for the entire weekend. They
were also responsible for the
loading, unloading and maintenance
of the sleds.
The
Bodine Bobsled Challenge will be
aired on SPEED Jan. 20 and 27. Fans
can go to www.bodynbobsled.com to
learn more about the project and
make contributions.
Driver
1st Run 2nd
Run Total
Difference
1.
Boris
Said
52.12
50.53
1:42.65 --
2. L.W.
Miller
52.11
51.26
1:43.37 .72
3. Jeg
Coughlin
52.21
51.78
1:43.99 1.34
4.
Larry Gunselman
52.99
51.91
1:44.90 2.25
5.
Donny Lia
53.01
52.45
1:45.46 2.81
6. Ron
Hornaday
Jr.
53.06
7. Todd
Bodine
53.61
8. Joey
Logano
53.65
9. Bob
Vandergriff
53.74
10.
Steve
Carlson
53.90
11. J.R.
Todd
53.94
12.
Morgan
Lucas
54.21
13.
Phil
Burkhart
54.29
14.
Randy LaJoie
55.39
15.
Johnny
Benson
55.54
NASCAR
vs. NHRA Challenge
First
Round
NASCAR
– 1. Boris Said, 51.12 seconds; 2.
Todd Bodine, 51.79; 3. Ron Hornaday
Jr., 51.82; 4. Randy LaJoie, 52.71;
5. Johnny Benson, 52.77. NHRA – 1.
Morgan Lucas, 51.85; 2. Jeg
Coughlin, 52.22; 3. Bob Vandergriff,
52.53; 4. Phil Burkhart, 52.68; 5.
J.R. Todd, 53.74.
Second Round
NASCAR
– Bodine def. Hornaday, 51.94-52.12.
NHRA – Vandergriff def. Coughlin,
52.69-52.82.
Third Round
NASCAR Finals – Said def.
Bodine, 51.53-51.64. NHRA – Lucas
def.
Coughlin, 51.76-52.03.
Championship
Said
def. Lucas, 50.99-52.06.
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