Southern Ohio Forest Rally 2022
Day 3
Up and off to McArthur for the final day of the rally, we set up service again and had a nice parc expose in town. Some teams were back after repairing cars, others spectating, and others still repairing- the bridge on Zorn's Hollow had claimed a number of cars, with a bunch sporting front end and side damage. Pretty soon it was time to get going:
SS10 was Courtney's Webb, short and full of fast sweepers with a weird muddy garbage section near the end that concluded in an ultra tight left-right through some logs. Our pace was a little faster than the day before but nothing spectacular, and Grant bumped up into first with a fast run.
SS11, America's Best, was named because John Buffum called it that and by all appearances he wasn't wrong- it was a flowing rollercoaster of well banked turns and big crests, and while fun, we didn't commit hard enough on the first pass and ran a midpack time. It's worth noting that Brock put in an incredibly impressive run here though, the second fastest in our class in an NA Volvo 240 with no power steering.
SS12 Bolster Hollow was just a normal SOFR stage, tight and with big cliffs in places. We yet again ran an acceptable but not impressive time, and at this point I was really starting to fight myself to try and get into a faster frame of mind. It didn't help when a car spun off the road directly in front of us and we were first on the scene, although luckily they were ok. As Whitsell told me at parc expose, ideal rally driver brain is 85% stupid- you can leave that last bit but you have to shut the rest off and just drive like an idiot. David Gossett photo:
At the start of SS13 Raccoon Church, Cyr was having fuel issues directly ahead of us and a spectator nearby had a fuel can in the back of his pickup- he topped Cyr's Fiesta up and refused his money. This is part of what makes this sport such a wild experience, a Team O'Neil Fiesta being fueled out of a random can somewhere in the woods of Ohio on a road named after Raccoons. This stage was muddy and had a huge hill in the middle, and Cyr broke down partway through. We were getting a bit of pace back but I completely blew a corner and had to reverse back up the road to make it- oops!
On SS14 Will's Tract South my goal was to shake the feeling of messing up that corner, and we had a 4 minute empty gap ahead of us thanks to all the broken cars we had just passed over the last few stages. Finally we got some speed here, with a fastest regional L2wd time, although only by a fraction of a second on Grant.
Back at service, Tony's 10 man service crew now had no car to work on so they made quick work of ours instead- everything was checked, cleaned, and refilled nearly instantaneously the moment we got back.
At this point, thanks to Cyr's issue, we were on the regional L2wd podium and trying to improve. Still well back from Grant, but we had made up nearly 30 seconds on McGee, who was missing first gear and losing time on every stage start.
We started off SS15 Courtney's Webb really moving, but something that hasn't happened in a long time cropped up- we got lost in the notes. Sara was slightly late, and I was trying to go full "dumb driver" and didn't give her feedback to move to the next note until too late... a few corners of confusion and we were fully lost and driving blind for the majority of the stage. We got back on the notes near the end, and I nearly slid off the road into a tree that had claimed the bumper of Santiago's BRZ just a few cars ahead. Bad stage time, big oops, but the car was fine.
Time to shake that off because next up was SS16 America's Best again, and shake it off we did- everything really clicked, we went fast, and it felt great. Nothing amazing in terms of class results but it was really good to go straight from our previous stage to just committing to every crest. Keith Kreatives photo:
SS17 Bolster Hollow I remember nothing about, but we got the fastest regional L2wd time there so things must have been working.
SS18 Raccoon Church was much more fun this time around, and we were on pace with our competition despite the sloppy conditions.
SS19 Will's Tract we went fast again, but a huge bummer- Downey and Gouin, running WAY in the lead in regional O2wd and on the regional overall podium, had crashed and were stuck on the side of the road. We did our best to ignore that and went fast anyway, but were absolutely devastated for them to go out that way in the last couple miles.
Back to service for the finish ceremony, and what was the result?
3rd place regional L2wd, 12th regional overall, 27th overall overall out of 76 entries- SOFR isn't hard on the car but it's easy to crash out there. This result is good enough to keep us in the lead for the Eastern Regional L2wd championship, although I can't help but wonder what would have happened if I had driven like I did on the last leg the entire time- need to find that pace sooner next time!
Other big results too- Kimmett and Skucas won regional overall, as well as their class, with Kramer and Smith and Gondyke and Chuong right behind them. They even won some money, both for the overall and for Krista being the highest placing female codriver:
Brock and Brolin also did well in the Volvo, despite having a structural ratchet strap holding the motor in by the end, and every class seemed to have at least one good battle in it. Then it was time for the usual: hand in the rallysafe unit, pack up, head home after many goodbyes to our rally friends. Even with the typical "curse of SOFR" truck and crew issues, this was a good one.