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Night CART racing at the Milwaukee Mile Racetrack.
© Oak Park Journal photo


Dan Peters Sports Editor
Car Racing Writer
Oak Park Journal 
 
 

Sébastien Bourdais, Ryan Hunter-Reay & 
Patrick Carpentier
© Oak Park Journal photo by Dan Peters
Ryan Hunter-Reay Dominates on The Milwaukee Mile....Sets New Single-Event Champ Car Record
 by Dan Peters

Milwaukee, Wisconsin... Last year's Champ Car event at the Milwaukee Mile resulted in what was termed a dominant performance, but second-
year pilot Ryan Hunter-Reay came up with a new definition of the word Saturday night at Milwaukee in front of a strong race-night crowd. 


Ryan Hunter-Reay Car before Race
© Oak Park Journal photo by Dan Peters

Hunter-Reay rolled from the pole as night fell on the Milwaukee Mile, 
and never looked back to claim to the Time Warner Cable Road Runner 250 Presented by U.S. Bank. The Herdez driver surged to the front on 
the very first lap and became the first Champ Car driver in 12 seasons 
to lead every lap of a series oval event, pacing a Bridgestone Presents 
The Champ Car World Series Powered by Ford record 250 laps. 

“What a day!  It was tough battle with all the traffic, I couldn't relax one-second.  It was a great team effort.  We stayed sharp all night long, had excellent pit stops, and a great car setup.  It is a terrific day for the Herdez Competition team and all my sponsors.” Said Reay. 

He showed his strength early and often, taking just 14 laps to start
lapping cars and ripping off to a 20-second lead after 50 laps to put the entire 18-car field in danger of going a lap down.The field got a break
on Lap 50 when points leader Sébastien Bourdais  had a brush with the 
turn four wall and  bent his suspension. .. His misfortune. also tightened  the championship points race. 

The resulting restart ended the night for another favorite as Paul Tracy tried to pass his teammate Patrick Carpentier on the outside of Turn Two. The move pushed Tracy high into the marbles in the corner and into the wall, ending Tracy's evening. 

The middle part of the 250-lap event saw more of the same dominance
from Reay as he pulled out to a 10-second lead while Carpentier and defending race winner Michel Jourdain, Jr. battled for second and third. Jourdain had a strong run in his new RuSport Machine and threatened
for third after making his way through the field from his ninth-place 
starting spot. 

Last Year's Winner Jourdain.. “It is great to be on the podium.  Ryan 
made me look bad from my win here last year, but he did a fantastic job 
and I am happy for him.  Third is so good for the RuSPORT Team and 
my sponsor Gigante.  The team is just unbelievable.  We are making 
great improvements and becoming strong.  The car just got better over
the weekend and we had a good car for the race.” 

The fifth caution flag of the night came when debris was found on the
front stretch, opening the pits first only for the cars on the lead lap. But
a miscommunication caused Carpentier and Jourdain to miss their chance to pit with Hunter-Reay and the two decided to pit with the remainder of
the field, which was a violation of Champ Car rules. The penalty sent both cars to the back of the restart line...which effectively ended any chance
for running down the leader. The battle for second place went all the way
to the finish, with Carpentier holding off Jourdain to claim the second 
spot. 

“I tried really hard to catch Ryan, but it was almost impossible because
he had an excellent car.  We had a good car and a clean race.  I figured
that I would have to settle for second when I knew that I wouldn't be 
able to catch Ryan.  It is a good day for the Forsythe Championship 
Racing Team and Indeck.” Said Carpentier 

There were plenty of competition deeper in the field despite the fact
that the majority of the field was at least one lap down. Former series champion Jimmy Vasser turned in a strong performance after scoring 
an eighth-place starting spot. Vasser ran in the top five for the last half
of the race and scored a fourth-place finish, giving PKV Racing its best finish of the 2004 season. 

The RuSPORT Team completed its best-ever Champ Car night with Jourdain taking third and rookie A. J. Allmendinger scoring his first
Champ Car top-five. Allmendinger gained eight spots in climbing to
the fifth spot, scoring the championship point for most laps gained in
a race and putting himself back in the thick of the Rookie-of-the-Year race. 

Bruno Junqueira kept had a clean run all night and brought his Newman/Haas Racing machine home in sixth place, giving him the series points lead by one point over Carpentier. Junqueira takes the top spot in the championship for the first time this year and the second time in his Champ Car career. 

Rodolfo Lavin was in line for the best finish of his Champ Car career 
after running in the top five early in the race, but ended his night and everyone else's night when he put his car in the fence with two laps to
go. The resulting caution meant the race would end under caution, and dropped Lavin to ninth. 

Oriol Servia scored his best finish of the year in the Dale Coyne Racing machine, moving up four spots to place seventh while Mario Dominguez scored an eighth-place finish. Mario Haberfeld led the three-car 
Reynard brigade and rounded out the top-10 with his 10th-Place finish. 

The series takes a week off before heading to Portland International Raceway June 18-20 for the Champ Car Grand Prix of Portland for 
Round 4 of the 2004 campaign. 

Notes from the "Mile" .....
 


Ryan Hunter-Reay Holds the Winning Cup
© Oak Park Journal photo


Ryan Hunter-Reay’s victory marked the first time since 1992 that a 
driver led every lap during a Champ Car oval event. The last driver to accomplish the feat was Bobby Rahal, who led all 200 laps in a Phoenix win. 

The attendance for the three-day event was 46,532, an increase of 29 percent from 2003. 

Ryan Hunter-Reay, Jimmy Vasser and A. J. Allmendinger scored top-five finishes Saturday night, marking the first time since 2001 in Cleveland when Memo Gidley, Bryan Herta and Vasser finished in the top five. 

Canada takes over the lead in the Nation's Cup standings, leading Brazil 82-74 after three races. The top-five countries in the Nation's Cup are covered by a scant 17 points.