Burke/Sharkey take final round of US pro-rally series by just 3.3 seconds!
Report and Photo: www.scca.com
It didn't matter that Mother Nature tried
her best - with cool temperatures, wind and rain - to steal the spotlight
for most of the Lake Superior ProRally (LSPR), the ninth and final round of
the 2004 SCCA ProRally Championship Presented by Hot Wheels(r). No, no
matter what she tried, she was forced to take a backseat to the epic battle
waged for first between Seamus Burke and Tim O'Neil.
Posted: October 26, 2004 1:46 PM
Fifteen stages and nearly 120 special stage miles almost weren't enough to
determine who the top man was this weekend. But Burke (1:44:54), with
co-driver Brian Sharkey, was amazingly good Saturday in the Libra Racing
2003 Hyundai Tiburon, taking five of the final eight fast stage times and
beating out first-day leader O'Neil (1:44:57.3) by a final margin of 3.3
seconds.
Matt Iorio and co-driver Philip Ho (1:52:36.2) made it a complete podium
sweep for the Open class as the duo finished third in a 2002 Mitsubishi
Lancer Evolution VII, though more than seven minutes behind the top two
spots. The lead changed hands more than a few times Saturday, both drivers
refusing to back down as O'Neil, with co-driver Martin Headland, claimed the
other three fast stage times, including SS15 where he chopped five seconds
off of Burke's lead to settle at the final margin.
"We were both just trying really hard," O'Neil said. "And I was hoping that
if I could get [Seamus] to start trying even harder, then maybe I could
force him into a mistake."
However, O'Neil admitted he was the one who made the mistakes in the CPD
Racing 2000 Subaru Impreza WRX he drove for the weekend.
"I preach to my students all the time that when you come into a junction,
you slow it down earlier, get it squared away and get the job done," the
rally driving instructor said. "Don't come in too fast and that's what I was
doing all weekend." Domination might not even be the right word to use in
describing the season Mopar's Doug Shepherd and co-driver Pete Gladysz had
in 2004, capped off by another top-five finish overall (their third) and
Group 5 win (Shepherd's sixth, Gladysz' fifth) in their 2004 Dodge SRT-4.
The only other LSPR Group 5 entry, another Mopar-sponsored Dodge entry in
the form of Chris Whiteman and co-driver Mike Paulin, was knocked out the
first day during the third stage.
Jonathan Bottoms, with co-driver Carolyn Bosley, earned his second FIA Group
N victory of the year, taking fifth overall in the process. Attrition was
the story in this class as early leaders Mark Utecht and co-driver Jeff
Secor suffered engine problems after SS2 on Friday and were forced into a
DNF. Two other entries, David Anton/Nathalie Richard and Otis
Dimiters/Christian Edstrom, also saw early exits. When the smoke cleared,
the husband and wife duo of Henry and Cindy Krolikowski were second in the
class and eighth overall - about seven minutes behind Bottoms/Bosley.
Russell Hodges, with co-driver Mike Rossey, finished third.
Carolina Rallysport unveiled its new ride for LSPR, a Production GT 2003
Subaru WRX, and did so in grand fashion with Matt Johnson taking the win in
his first non-2WD ProRally event with co-driver Marc Goldfarb. The pair took
the victory by 2 min. and 40 sec. over the 1988 Toyota Celica piloted by
Eric Langbein and co-driver Jeremy Wimpey, who finished 10th overall. Behind
them, in eleventh, was PGT driver Pat Moro and co-driver John Dillon in
Moro's 2002 Subaru WRX. With the overall finish, Dillon earned one point
toward his Overall Co-Driver point championship total, leaving him two short
of the Championship's winner Nathalie Richard.
Group 2's Mark Brown and Ole Holter topped off a fantastic year by earning
their third class win over the last five events in Brown's 1987 Volkswagen
Golf GTI. Second-place finisher Eric Burmeister, with co-driver Dave
Shindle, actually posted better times in Burmeister's 2003 Mazda Prot?g?
than Brown/Holter, but were assessed nine additional minutes, leaving the
pair six minutes behind the class winners.
The ProRally field's lone Production entry, Michael Merback and co-driver
Jeff Feldt, finished 17th overall in Merback's 1990 Volkswagen Jetta.