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Subenet Features
For Immediate Release
Contact Scott Putnam: (612)
309-5938
Back Together
Again – in Blythe
The reunion
of Rally pros Lauchlin O'Sullivan and Scott Putnam at the 2010 Desert
Storm Rally produces good times – and a win
– with their Lucas Oil-sponsored Subaru WRX
SUBENET IN-CAR VIDEO! What's it like to go 116 MPH down a gravel road? Find out as you ride along with Lauchlin and Scott as they flat-out on Wiley's Well, the fastest stage of the event!
(BLYTHE, CALIFORNIA) March
22, 2010 – They came, they saw, they conquered.
It might be a little overstated
to compare rally competitors Lauchlin O'Sullivan and co-driver Scott
Putnam to the Roman warriors of old, but they did dispatch the competition
at the 2010 Desert Storm Rally with a mighty performance.
"I think things went amazingly
well, and I really couldn't have asked for anything more," said
O'Sullivan, the driver of the Lucas Oil-sponsored Subaru, who luckily
got to celebrate the Desert Storm Rally win and St. Patrick's Day
all in the same week. "Both days we finished first overall and we
didn't sustain any damage. The desert is a very demanding environment
to drive a car, particularly given how fast some of the stages were,
and how rough others were."
In fact, during one stage,
O'Sullivan and Putnam and their Vermont Sports Car-owned and prepared
Subaru WRX were too fast. O'Sullivan said having time deducted
for that reason was a first for him and his long rally career.
"It was a 10-mile stage and
we averaged 83 miles-per-hour, with a top speed of 116 miles-per-hour!
They had to pull our time down when they realized the stage was way
too fast. And keep in mind we achieved that 116-mph mark in a stock-engine,
Group N car, not even a true Open class car. So some adjustments will
probably have to be made there before next year's rally."
Veteran co-driver Scott Putnam
knew some adjustments would have to be made from his seat as well, seeing
as how it's been two years since he and O'Sullivan had last been
paired in a rally car.
"There were really two big
challenges to overcome," recounted Putnam, who is the fleet sales
manager for Morries Subaru in suburban Minneapolis when he's not racing
in them. "The first is that rally drivers have to retrain themselves
to assimilate the pace notes if they haven't competed in a while because
the language – ‘caution, jump into right 2 tightens, don't cut'
– is so different. The second challenge, unique to Desert Storm, is
that there are so few defining features on some of the roads."
The subject of pace notes is
an interesting one, and they haven't always been around. When O'Sullivan
first started competing it was in so-called "blind rally" events,
where the instruction amounted to, "Go down this road for two miles
and take a right." It's obviously a lot more sophisticated today,
and a whole lot faster as well.
"It's amazing how quick
you can go when you're on the notes and you're clicking with your
co-driver, says O'Sullivan, who previously paired with co-driver Scott
Putnam in the Rally America national championship series. "I always
tell Scott it would probably take me three full events to get back to
where I was when I was a full-time factory driver. Because like every
other form of motorsport, seat time is what rallying is all about."
"It didn't take very long
for us to get back in sync," recounts Putnam of the Desert Storm Rally
win. "From then on it was just a matter of managing our rally, and
we did, all the way to the top of the podium."
One of the things they did
to manage the rally, was slow down. No, not so they would get docked
any more time, that was an anomaly, but rather to save the car. A Subaru
that belongs, by the way, to Vermont Sports Car, the same stable that
prepares the factory rally rides for the likes of Travis Pastrana and
Dave Mirra.
"There are some massive washes
out there," said O'Sullivan, referring to the 109 special stage
miles they racked up in the Sonora Desert. "The roads take you into
the wash and it would be like this big ridge going in. But once the
car is in there, there's a big wall coming out of it as you go back
up the ‘ramp.' That's the stuff we slowed down for and crawled
through. Plus there are a lot of cliffs and berms and you have to keep
it really straight and tidy."
"Everyone wants war stories
after an event, but I really don't have one for Desert Storm," said
an obviously pleased Putnam. "There wasn't a wheel placed wrong
the entire weekend, and no moments of anxiety. It was all just a pleasure."
There was a moment, however,
in the turnaround area at the end of stage 3 when crew chief Graham
"Whiskers" Evans wanted to remind the guys they had some strong
competition. O'Sullivan explains.
"Whiskers relayed our stage
times and just wanted to let us now we had some other rally competitors
who were out there really attacking the course. My reply to that was,
‘I'm trying to play it smart, trying to take care of the car.'"
There is plenty of care being
given to a car during a rally. A typical service will involve pulling
wheels, inspecting brakes, re-torquing suspension bolts, inspecting
fluids, inspecting and/or changing tires and cleaning the windows. Often
times though, there are more serious repairs required such as swapping
radiators, turbos, struts, control arms and headlights. Fortunately,
none of those more serious repairs had to be done at Desert Storm for
the Lucas Oil Subaru.
"I think we hit a rock with
a wheel once, but that was about the worst of what happened to us,"
said O'Sullivan, a former factory driver and professional rally winner.
"We actually did spend a lot of time watching for rocks, which is
why you can't attack every corner at 95%. Since we were starting stages
first, and clearing the rocks for everyone else, we had to be careful.
We were comfortable with our speed, and it was enough to win and it
went really well."
Since O'Sullivan and Putnam
hadn't been together in a rally car for two years, both said prior
to the rally "they just wanted to do their best." Obviously their
best was good enough.
"We had a down and back stage
on the second day of the rally that was just sublime," Putnam said,
smiling at the memory. "Everything was working, the car was great,
Lauchlin and I were in sync, we could see around the corners and know
there wasn't any danger lurking. It was one of those rare times in
rallying where you really could just relax and enjoy the moment."
For his part, O'Sullivan
enjoyed every moment.
"To jump in a car for the
first time, merely change the position of the seat, then go out and
feel comfortable in it right away, is a beautiful thing. The camaraderie
and the sense of community that's so strong in the sport of rallying
is also a beautiful thing, and I sort of forget that when I'm not
around it for a while. Of course, being in the car – and winning –
is just about the greatest feeling in the world and I love that, too.
I can't wait to see what the future holds."
Desert Storm
Rally (www.desertstormrally.com)
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