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Day 1
NASCAR
Champions Take The Track At Lake Placid
LAKE
PLACID, N.Y. (Jan. 3, 2008) – A field of NASCAR
champions traded the asphalt for the ice Thursday as
the 3rd Annual Chevy Bodine Bobsled Challenge
presented by Whelen Engineering kicked off with an
afternoon of training runs.
NASCAR Whelen All-American Series champion Steve
Carlson was among the first ones down.
“That’s
cool,” said Carlson has he paused to catch his
breath at the end of the run. “It was kind of a
rough ride, but
it was fast – faster than I thought.”
Carlson is one of three NASCAR Developmental Series
champions invited to participate by Whelen vice
president of motorsports Phil Kurze. Carlson is
joined by NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour champion Donny
Lia and NASCAR Whelen Southern Modified champion L.W.
Miller. NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series champion Ron
Hornaday is also participating, along with NASCAR
Craftsman Truck drivers Johnny Benson, NASCAR
Camping World Series East champion Joey Logano, and
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver Boris Said.
This
year’s challenge also includes a full contingent of
NHRA drivers.
Friday, the drivers will take more practice runs and
then a qualifying run. Saturday, they will take two
final runs. The afternoon session will feature a
face off between the NASCAR drivers and the NHRA
drivers.
Prior to getting in the sleds, the drivers walked
down the course Thursday afternoon as several
members of the U.S. Olympic team took them through
the turns.
“The
good thing is they all understand pressure – how to
use it and carry it – because they do the same thing
in the car,” said Michael Kohn, a member of the U.S.
four-man bobsled team that earned a bronze medal in
the 2002 Winter Olympics. “You just feel the sled
and what the track gives you and get the speed out
of 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 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.
It
has also created race fans out of the bobsledders,
like Kohn. When he went to San Diego to train with
fellow bobsled driver Steve Holcomb during the
summer, they took the opportunity to visit with
Said, who took them out to his go-kart track. Kohn
also took part in the Petty Driving Experience at
Darlington (S.C.) Speedway. He said there were a lot
of similarities in the two sports.
“You’re going for speed,” Kohn said, “so you’re
always trying to steer at the right place and the
right time. You’re always looking ahead.”
For
the NASCAR drivers, Thursday’s experience was
breathtaking.
“It’s a different deal,” said Logano, motioning with
his hands. “That thing’s like ‘bang, boom, boom.’
All over the place. It was fun.
“It’s a way different experience than driving a race
car. When I first started down the hill, it wasn’t
hard at all. Then you started digging through these
little ‘S’ things – back and forth, back and forth –
and you start booking there. You really have to
start wheeling it. That thing was awesome.”
They’ll be back on the ice for more Friday.
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