Press Release

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 20, 2006
  Contact: Rally America Media
Phone: 763-553-2742
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Pastrana Wins Championship, Leads LSPR

HOUGHTON, MI -- Subaru Rally Team USA driver Travis Pastrana clinched his first rally championship title this weekend at the Lake Superior Performance Rally, after his chief series rival crashed hard just three miles into the second stage.

“I’m pretty excited about it. That’s awesome,” said a jubilant Pastrana as he pulled in to the first service stop of the race.

Even if he doesn’t finish this rally, the X Games superstar now has a strong enough lead in the championship that it is mathematically impossible for his rivals to catch him. There is only one more race remaining in the 2006 Rally America championship.

Challenger Matt Iorio and co-driver Ole Holter took a hard roll on a slick corner. They were unharmed, but their competition vehicle took heavy damage. When the car stopped moving, they were on their roof with a tree resting across the skidplate.

“There were parts all over the road,” said Pastrana. He and co-driver Christian Edstrom were positioned behind Iorio in the start order and were the first to encounter the wreck.

But even though the top spot in the championship is decided, the race is far from over.

Subaru’s Ken Block is still fighting for a top-three position in the championship and must finish well at this race. Block, along with co-driver Alex Gelsomino, were leading early but were watching their mirrors for Pastrana.

“I loose a lot of confidence at night. I can still do it, but it’s a different mentality,” said Block, adding he planned to pick up the pace on Day 2. “We’re back tomorrow in the sunlight. Even if I’m down a little bit tonight I’m happy.”

In recent contests, Pastrana has been under team orders to drive conservatively for the title. It remains to be seen whether he will now be able to drive hard, or instead face instructions to give his teammate enough breathing room to secure a much-needed points advantage this weekend.

At the end of Day 1, Pastrana was in the lead with Block 29 seconds behind him. Veteran driver Tim O’Neil – a driving instructor who counts Pastrana, Block and Iorio among his students – was another 14 seconds back, in third place.

“I’d like to turn up the heat and be competitive,” said O’Neil, who admits the level of competition has increased since he last took the start of a race two years ago at this event. “I’d like to win, but I don’t know how it’s going to go.”

The driver, who preaches a cool-headed style of rally competition, said early in the day that he’s eager to see how his students perform.

In a second championship battle decided early in the day, Matthew Johnson took the Production-GT title just by crossing the start-line. Johnson and challenger Tanner Foust have been fighting a close battle all season, but Foust suffered a bad crash last month in Colorado and was absent from this weekend’s contest.

Even so, Johnson says he doesn’t plan to cruise. The scrappy driver has now set his sights on the overall points, musing: “A top five finish in a Production-GT car for the national championship would be pretty cool.”

Based at the tip of Michigan’s northern peninsula, the Lake Superior Performance Rally is a challenging event that features a range of weather and road conditions. Course roads range from gravel to mud and truly fickle autumn weather means crews can expect everything from snow to pouring rain.

LSPR is the eighth event in the nine-event Rally America championship series. The final round takes place in November in Washington State.

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