ZANARDI
TO COMPLETE FINAL LAPS OF 2001 GERMAN 500
IN SPECIALLY-EQUIPPED CHAMP
CAR
INDIANAPOLIS (May 3, 2003) – "Profiles in Courage" is a book written
by late U.S. President John F. Kennedy that studied some of the great
men of history, but former Champ Car title winner Alex Zanardi may
spark a need for a rewrite after what he will accomplish prior to the
May 11 German 500.
The 1997 and ’98 CART champion will make an unprecedented return to the
cockpit of a 750hp Champ Car less than two years after suffering the
traumatic amputation of both legs during an accident at the 2001 Champ
Car race at EuroSpeedway Lausitz, as he will be driving a
specially-prepared race car with hand controls that will allow him to
finish the final 13 laps of the race that he did not get to complete in
2001.
The car will be fitted with a hand clutch and throttle mechanism that
will allow Zanardi to drive the laps around the two-mile superspeedway
at speed, making the popular Italian champion the first driver to ever
pilot a serious race car by using hand controls.
“I am honoured to serve as the Grand Marshal for the German 500 and look
forward to seeing all of the Champ Car fans again,” Zanardi said. “It
was always nice to be cheered by the crowd and it will be great to hear
those cheers even through a symbolic effort such as this.”
The idea was developed through the efforts of Champ Car Director of
Technology Lee Dykstra and Adam Schaechter, who was a race engineer at
Mo Nunn Racing when Zanardi raced with the team in 2001. The
Ford-Cosworth/Reynard/Bridgestone machine will be painted to match the
#66 car that Zanardi was driving when he suffered his accident on Lap
142 of the 2001 event.
“I’m really excited about this and the opportunity to do this with Alex
because I know that it is something that he really wants to do,”
Schaechter said. “The challenge really is just to make the car
comfortable for Alex. Getting it to where he can drive it is not really
a problem, and I know that he is not interested in doing anything
half-measure. He will want to go flat out.”
The task was made easier for the engineers after Zanardi sent a
surprising report to Schaechter about a trip to a local karting track
with his son and his nephew. As the boys were rocketing around the
track, Alex was coaxed into trying a few laps. His lower limb was
secured to the brake pedal while he worked the throttle lever with his
hand, but Zanardi found to his surprise that he could put enough
pressure on the brake to get the car stopped and was immediately turning
fast laps in the kart. He immediately sent an email message telling
Schaechter of the development, which was a relief to the designers of
the car controls.
“The most difficult part for us was to find a way to get the car stopped
that was going to be 100 percent reliable,” Dykstra said. “We were
experimenting with hydraulics when we found out that Alex could work the
brake himself. That made things much easier.”
The fact that the car, which is being built and fielded by Mi-Jack
Conquest Racing, with considerable help from Derrick Walker’s
organization, is running on a superspeedway makes the task a bit easier.
The road-course wing package on the car means that Zanardi can run
comfortably at top speed nearly all the way around the track.
Zanardi tested the car earlier this week prior to the Brands Hatch
event, and the hand controls were tested last week in a private test at
Indianapolis Raceway Park with 1991 Indy Lights champion Eric Bachelart
at the wheel. The 15-time Champ Car race winner will also be re-licensed
as an official series driver by Chief Steward Chris Kniefel.