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Round 5: Mid-Ohio S
ports C Course
ar
ROAD .RACE
AMA National Championship R R
oad aceSeries
AMA250cc Grand P Series
rix
R
ound5: Mid-OhioSports CarCourse
Richie Rich
By Henny Ray Ab rams
LEXL'lGTON, OH, JUNE 2
eam Oliver Yamaha's Rich Oliver
was the smartest rider in an intelligent field of 250cc Grand Prix rider s who distinguished themselves b y
being the only class to comp lete race
distance without a red flag on a cold,
wet, and windy day at the Mid-Ohio
Sports Car Course,
Riding as he has all year, Oliver bolted to the front on the rain-soaked track,
pu lled out a pr udent lead of abo u t
seven seconds, then put it on cruise control to win his fifth consecutive race of
the season.
"1 just tried to watch my pitboard
and not go any faster than I had to," the
Yamaha TZ250-mounted Oliver said
after extending his lead in career 250cc
GP wins with 27. "1 felt like I was going
sort of slow but it was relati ve to what
mv lead was and the conditions, so I
didn' t go too crazy ."
Oliver compl et ed the 16-lap, 38.4mile race in 31 minutes, 20.530 seconds
at an average speed of 73.511 mph. He
won the race by 10.175 seconds, but it
could easily have been much more .
The win, along wi th the extra point
for lea di ng the most laps, gives him a
perfect 180 for the five-race-old sea son.
He lead s Randy Renfrow , second today,
by 32 points. After finishing fifth today,
Kristian Kaas is third with 137.
Se co n d p lace in tod ay ' s race wa s
d ecided on the 11th lap wh en Crest Racing's Cliff Tolley repassed JHA Racing/ Dunlop/Elf's Perry Melne ciuc. Tolley, in his first wet road race, seized the
initiative when Melneciuc slowed late in
the race to card a career-best second in
his eight-mo n th-old road racing career.
"My moto cross experience helped in
th e wet," the 33-year-o ld New Zea lan d er and form er moto crosser said.
Melneciuc, who fini sh ed abo u t 10
seconds behind Tolley, said that it was a
" Ii tt le s po o ky. I h ad a coup le of
moments going down the back straightaway and that kink. The bike got a little
sid eways and I came ou t of th e seat. I
just wanted to bring it hom e. I backed
off a little bit then Cliff caught me and I
tried to ch ar ge afte r him afte r threequ arter d istan ce a nd came ou t of the
sea t a cou ple of tim es and I sai d, 'ju st
finis h:"
Rand y Ren frow Motorsports' Rand y
Renfrow o w ne d four th mu ch of th e
race, excep t for a few laps toward th e
en d, and w as a ble to pull well away
when it cou nted.
"It wa s a p retty slow first half of th e
r ace and a pr etty fast seco n d half,"
Renfrow , wh o was riding w ith broken
b one s in hi s r ight fo ot, s ai d . Th e
H onda RS250-m ounted Renfrow had
co m pleted tw o lap s during th e morning's wet practice se ss io n before his
H onda brok e. "1 just needed s o m e
more pr actice. I definitel y didn't want
to fall: '
Performance Machine 's Kristian Kaas
took over fourt h on the 13th lap and left
Durmach/Yamaha Sports Pickering/
RNG Refin ishing 's Mark O rchard
behind.
Orchard crossed the line in sixth, followed by Tea m World Sports Imports '
Bobby Keith, who passed two riders to
take seventh on the final lap , Deutsche
Financial Services Mark Foster ended up
T
...
eighth.
The race began in a light rain late on
Sunday afternoo n, the track ha ving been
rava ged by thr ee previous races wh ich
sa w a n inordin at e number of crashes,
red flags and dela ys.
Oliver jumped into the lead of the 24rider field an d left them in his spray. He
gained better tha n 1.3 seconds a lap and
had a seven-second cushion by the fifth
la p . Th at' s wh er e he ke p t it unt il it
spiked up over 11 seconds two laps later,
then to 14, before he backed it down,
"1 got the holeshot, I took off, I built
up a 14-second lead ," Oliver sa id. "By
halfw ay I had nine, th en 14 a t threequarter, and then 13-14, 13-14, I just held
it. I had no probl ems. I was jus t trying to
be calm, easy on the gas, just rea l gentl e.
Where I wa s strong was on the brakes at
the end of the back straight and at the
end of the Thunder Valley thing, I was
strong through there.
" It wa sn 't fun because w hen you' re
in m y po sition yo u have so mu ch to
lose, if you move off line or hit somebod y' s dirt from wh ere they pick their
bike up . Just anything," he ad ded.
Lik e Oliver , To lley and Melneciuc
also split from the pack, the pair clearl y
away from fourth , sticking to each other
and swap ping their order on the th ird
lap w it h Me ln eciuc holding th e spo t
until the 11th lap . Then Tolley realized
th at he had a secure third an d decided
second was better.
"1 was keeping Perry (Melneciu c) in
Sigh t. Wh en I sa w plu s-15 on m y pit
board I d ecid ed it wa s time to get
going, " Tolley said. "1 saw Perry on the
front stra igh t an d he had a hell o f a
wobble."
That allow ed Tolley to close up and
pass him with five laps to go . Once in
front, Tolley sped away at close to two
second s a lap for a safe second.
"It was getting kind of slippery and I
was making mistakes and I wanted to
be consistent and bring it to the end,"
Melneciuc said. "With Elkhar t Lake and
Loudon coming up I didn 't want to
bring it home in a basket."
Another 40 seconds behind came Renfrow, the Virginian getting down to business in the second half of the race after a
rough start that saw him seventh into
tum one after running right up the white
line on the edge of the track. On the third
lap Renfrow moved into fourth and was
there until Mark Orchard caught him on
the 11th lap . A lap of that an d Renfrow
split, taking fourth by over six seconds.
After a slow start, wh en he completed the first lap in 10th pl ace, Kristian
Ka as m ov ed up to ta ke fi ft h fr om
Orchard on the 13th lap from.
Aft er g ett in g a bad sta rt, Pe r fo rm an ce Machines' Rol and Sand s
ap pea red to be catching Ren frow, closing the gap to within thr ee seconds on
the sixth lap . Tha t would be as close as
he got. Runn ing down the back stretch
on that same lap, Sands crashed , taking
out the number-one brake marker when
he skidde d off the tra ck at the end of the
back straightaway at about 120 mph.
"1 had Randy in my sights and I was
going for it," Sands, wh o was competing
in his first wet race, said.
Orchard held on to se venth and
Bobb y Keith jumped pa st Mark Foster
and Chris Roger s, with whom he'd been
spa rring the last five lap s of the race, for
seve nth on the last lap . John Burgoyn e
ended up 10th.
0
Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course
Lexington, Ohio
Resuits: June 2, 1996 (Round 5 01 10)
250« GRAND PRIX, I. Rich Olive r (Yam); 2. Oiff
Tolley (Yam) ; 3. Perry Melnectuc (Hon); 4. Rand y
Renf row ( Ho n) ; 5. Kristia n Kaa s (Yam ); 6. Mark
Orchard (y am ); 7. Bobby Keith (Yam); 8. Ma rk Foster
(Yam ); 9. Chris Rogers (Yam); 10. John Burgoyne (Hoo );
11. Eric Stephens (Yarn); 12. Dave Avery (Yam); 13. John
France (Hon~ 14. Jelf Vas ( Ap r~ IS. Jason Roth (Yam);
16. Jim Bonner (Yam); 17. Charles Mackay (Yam); 18.
Ja m es Ma r ti n (Yam); 19. Dav e Pa re ( Hon); 20. Joe
Skrocki (Yam); 21. Roland Sands (Yam); 22. Greg Esser
(Yam); 23. Bill Himm elsbach (Ya m ); 24 . Jeff Ortlip
(Yam).
T ime: 3 l min .• 20.530 sec.
Distance: 16 lap s, 38.4 mi les.
Average Speed: 73.511 mph.
.
Margin of Victory: 10.175 SE!'C
25O