Andretti Wins Miller 200
Restart Rule Causes Controversy By Jim DeFord©1996 SpeedCenter Internet Publishing, Inc.
In the end it was the newly implemented (at the U.S. 500) NASCAR-style restart
rule that gave Michael Andretti the win at the Miller 200 today. A rule that
Andretti had been against.
Andretti passed Unser on the outside late in the race on a restart to take the
win.
"I was a little bit surprised I was able to drive past Al like that," said
Andretti. "I was just on it."
"I guess the new rule helped me," Michael snickered. "I was one of the ones
complaining about it, but it helped me today."
Asked why he was against it, Andretti said, "We don't have fenders, for one. It
just basically bunches cars up again and restarts are the most dangerous part of
races. ... I also thought it would be cause more confusion and take more time to
organize everything. But everybody's handling it real well."
When asked why Andretti passed him so easily, Unser said, "I wasn't set up for a
trophy dash. I was set up for long runs."
Paul Tracy, however saw the new restarts a different way, from the third
position. "Those restarts are a lot of fun," Tracy said. "If you're leading, it
takes away a lot of your advantage, but it gives everybody else a chance to
strike."
"The fans were going nuts at the end. I could hear them over the sound of the
cars." The record crowd of 48,153 overwhelmingly liked the new restart
format.
But what it really came down to was tire/chassis/engine combinations.
Both Honda and Firestone, who had been dominate for the first six races, were
basically no-shows at Milwaukee.
Goodyear was responsible for 7 out of the first 10 positions and owned the podium
plus-one. The first Firestone-shod car finished fifth (Greg Moore).
Ford-Cosworth won the race but Mercedes-power snagged positions 2-5, and the
previously dominate Honda engine didn't even show until the eighth position at
the hands of Tasman Motorsports driver, Andre Ribeiro.
Lola took the win at the hands of Andretti, but the Penske chassis finished 2-4,
with Reynard's top finisher coming in fifth.
The plot thickens......As does the points battle!
The next race is the ITT Automotive Detroit Grand Prix, June 7-9.
As always, SpeedCenter will provide the best on the Net.
The SpeedCenter Team has prepared a Gallery from Saturday's
session - the Milwaukee Gallery. With more coming soon!
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