
Post Race Quotes
39th Annual Tecate SCORE Baja 1000
November 15-18, 2006 Ensenada, Baja California to La Paz,
BC Sur Mexico / Final round of the six-race 2006 SCORE Desert
Series
Pro Cars & Trucks
SCORE Trophy-Truck
83 Andy McMillin (1st Place in class, 1st overall 4-wheel
vehicle)
Oh my God! No problems all day – not a single mishap
all day. No flat tires, nothing. It was a perfect day. Robby
gave me the lead first, physically and I just had to drive
it. Mark post was behind us and he was only four minutes behind
us and I guess he got stuck in that section up before Loreto,
so we had like 15 or 20 minutes on them by the time we hit
the highway at 8:50. So we just had to cruise it in.
I definitely think that’s what won the race for us
is the fact that…I knew Robby could drive the whole
1000 miles, so as far as he could go and how fresh he could
be the whole way through, that was going to be key. So when
the course started to get rough, that’s where I would
get in and that’s where I would be a fresh driver and
just do my thing. And I think it paid off in the long run,
definitely.
It wasn’t that bad. The whole way, we only passed about
six or seven bikes. Not bad at all.
We finished a lot faster than I thought we would. I thought
it would be about 22, 23 hours, definitely. I was not expecting
to finish in sunlight.
My grandfather was with me all day in the truck and I asked
him to keep me safe and not let me have any problems and he
was listening to me.
Now everyone in the family helps Daniel. Daniel’s next.
Hopefully! Hopefully today!
I would much rather win this race than all the others combined.
This is the granddaddy of all races - the Baja 1000 in La
Paz! How many people get the chance to witness this…since
I was a baby, I’ve been coming down for pre-runs and
stuff. I’ve been coming to La Paz all my life. I went
out on the ’95 1000 pre-run, ’98 1000 pre-run,
Baja 2000 pre-run, I rode with my dad in ‘02, then I
drove in ‘04, now here I am in ‘06 in the winner’s
circle! It feels great!
Seriously, I was starting to weep when I turned onto the
pavement when I saw my dad with his hand out the window…
97 B.J. Baldwin (2nd Place)
I’m kind of tired, actually. We did pretty good. We
played it safe and pretty conservative all day. I think we
ended up second. I shared the driving with Tommy Bradley.
They drove it from San Ignacio to Loreto and they did a great
job. Going slow and taking it easy was the most challenging
part of the course because you kind of have to baby your car
until finish and then go racing if you need to. I was just
trying to get to the end and trying to get the championship.
We got one flat. They kind of had a little booby trap coming
down from Valle de Trinidad. Right on top of the cattle guard,
there was a big rock and if I was just to drive over it, it
would knock my driveline out. So I tried to go to the right
of it, and my truck wouldn’t knock over the post, so
we just backed up and tried to jump over it. And we cleared
it, but Brian Collins was right behind me and we took his
trans-pan out. We had some problems with the light bar and
some intercom and radio issues but nothing major. We had a
pretty clean day. I’ve never been down this far. I liked
the course a lot. It was a lot of fun – a lot more challenging!
My dad actually had a mechanical failure on his truck. The
water pump blew and he lost his motor. He was actually right
behind me. He was making time on me and just lost the water
pump.
Tommy Bradley is a fantastic driver. He just took care of
his section. I got most of my advice from Larry Ragland. He
helped me out tremendously. I pre-ran with him most of the
time I was down here and he helped me out a lot. He’s
five-time Baja 1000 champion.
My time goal was about 20 hours. I’m a little late
– by about a minute twenty-five!
The part that I only pre-ran once, I was concerned about because
I had a hard time with my pre-runner. It was a section of
silt about 10 miles long and I had kind of a rough time with
pre-runner with it, but I just blew through it without a problem.
It’s a lot different vehicle than my pre-runner.
I did run into fog about 80 miles south of Loreto.
39 Ron Whitton (3rd Place)
We made it! We had one problem on the highway. I was just
going down the highway…almost as soon as we got in the
car we got a flat. So I just changed it the last couple of
minutes. Then in San Juanico, the guys didn’t have the
pit where it was supposed to and I couldn’t’ find
my pit. I had to turn around on the course and I couldn’t
find my pit. I finally got in contact with them. They were
farther down the road. We missed probably 15 minutes there.
Then coming in, one of the silt beds, I saw a whole bunch
of trucks stuck. There were about four trucks and a quad stuck.
I barely missed a quad, hit a bush, went to the right, and
ran over some cactuses. I saw on the GPS where the course
interlinked.
I had a good battle with my dad up by Loreto. He had to fuel.
That’s when I passed him and never saw him again.
I’d rather have a flat than get stuck for two hours.
I was just being careful and straddled the cactuses and drove
through them…and here I am! I’m just glad to get
a good finish.
I got in at San Ignacio, about mile marker 530. I’ve
never driven this strip before. I had 500 miles to get used
to it and it handled really well!
This truck works a lot better than my dad’s for the
bumps.
12 Brian Collins (4th Place)
Co-driver, Chad Ragland:
I’m in here because my dad got sick. I don’t really
know why because I didn’t have time to talk to him.
He just requested a driver change at race mile 850. So I got
out of the car at 550 from number 80. Danny Anderson got in
for me. Then I got on the highway to race mile 850 and got
in for my dad in the number 12 car. So Danny Anderson is still
in the car I started in. And I finished this one. And the
reason I’m here is the guy next to me, Billy Gherke,
one of the owners of Absolute Racing.
I want to thank Mexico and all the fans. It means a lot to
me. You guys are awesome. I love racing down here. The people
cheered me on. I had no bad incidences out there at all. The
fans were great and I’m very excited to be here in La
Paz. I want you guys to know I appreciate you guys having
us. I do this for pleasure and this is where I choose to come.
[As Chad drives away] I don’t know how to start this
car. It’s always been running when I got in!
NOTE: Chad had a little recorder around his neck on which
he took notes during the pre-run. He says they helped him
during his race run. This is his first time in the Baja 1000.
85 Todd Wyllie (5th Place)
Co-driver, John Marking: These things are so soft. They’re
so easy to drive. You actually have to be careful because
you get going fast on bumps and all the sudden, here comes
Mr. Corner. We had some fuel system problems. I got in and
tried to drive up that wash at Loreto. But I had to turn around
and come back and do some work on the fuels pump. I got in
at Loreto. They made me drive that nasty stuff. That’s
not right to make a buggy guy do that!
4 Gus Vildosola (9th Place)
Co-driver, Rob MacCachren: No trouble. When I got in, I was
four and a half hours behind the first car. That’s all
I know.
28 Alan Pflueger (14th Place)
We had a great start. I think we were 29th and we just kept
working our way up. We had an electrical problem. We pulled
over at mile 250 and then we were physically fourth on the
road. So it was a good day! It took us a while to figure it
out but we just got going again and did what we could. The
truck ran unbelievable. People were just cheering us on and
we had a great day. We just had that one little hiccup that
kind of threw a wrench in things. I think if that hadn’t
happened, we would have been home now.
Class 1
121 Troy Herbst (1st Place)
Co-driver, Larry Roesler: That was brutal! Do I look tired.
I could go without some dust for a while! Troy did a good
job but he broke his Achilles tendon about 4 months ago, and
I know he had a hard time driving. I got in at Coco’s
Corner. I don’t know what we were then, maybe 20th on
the road. With the dust, traffic and water, it was seriously
one of the toughest Baja 1000s I’ve ever done. I’m
not exaggerating. It was brutal! This was really, really tough.
I’ve won 12 and I think I’ve ridden about 30 of
them. The fog really wasn’t too bad. There was a little
coming in. I saw the sun coming through and it made the last
little part more fun, a little easier. It was mostly the dust
and traffic. You can’t come through the dust, especially
at night. There was zero wind.
The car was fantastic. I had no flats. It was just gas and
go at the pits. Everybody did a great job. You know, Troy
and I won this overall the last two years and we did make
it on the podium again and we won Class 1. Just to finish
is a feat of its own.
I think Troy may have had one flat tire. But I tell you what,
the terrain that we go through, I can’t even believe
the tires. It’s pretty amazing what they go through.
I had a wave of water come through the windshield and just
fill the whole cab with water. The water was deep. And of
course, you don’t want to get stuck, but you don’t
want to charge it too hard because you’ll suck water
into the air cleaner and hydraulic the motor. It’s just
really nerve racking. You do your homework pre-running and
you know the good lines and the bad lines. With the 39”
tires on this, you tend to think nothing is a problem, but
the water was just deep. It was 8 and ½ feet. It was
radical! But the car didn’t miss a beat.
Troy Herbst ran the first half and Larry Rossler ran the
second half of the race.
112 Mark Weyhrich (2nd Place)
They backed into us at about 40 miles per hour! That’s
probably why they got stuck in the silt– poetic justice.
It looks like they tried to pass a motorcycle without letting
him get out of the way and the guy dumped it and got stuck
in the middle of the road, they hit the brakes and got stuck.
That’s what caused the whole grid at mile 844. We were
following Herbst for about 80 miles. We thought we finally
got him and he was backing up and he ran smack into us! I
think they had their ignition off so it caught Kenny by surprise.
We came up on it and jammed on the brakes. Then we saw his
amber so we stopped and he punched it going backwards.
125 Richard Boyle (3rd Place)
Co-driver, Ron Brant: We had an electrical problem. When we
hit the pavement, it wouldn’t run. It would start for
a second and shut off for ten. Then start for a second. But
we made it! I think there’s a loose fuse. Otherwise,
Nothing major. I don’t know if Richard had any trouble.
Richard Boyle started and went to San Ignacio. Then I got
in.
The biggest challenge was the handheld radio.
Class 1-2/1600
1649 Sammy Ehrenberg (1st Place)
Co-driver, Shane Reed: Sammy Ehrenberg started and went to
El Crucero. Then L.J. Kennedy went from El Crucero to San
Ignacio. Wayne Lacher went from San Ignacio to Loreto. I went
from Loreto to the finish.
Sammy got stuck at the wash and Cameron Steele showed him
a little way to get through. Cameron’s Trophy-Truck
was broken down and he’s a 1600 guy. Plus Cameron and
Sammy were high school buddies, so that’s why he got
through. Other than that, we had no problems. No flats, no
mechanicals.
It’s been a long time coming. We’ve been trying
this for 20 years. We’ve got a lot of seconds and a
lot of thirds, but never a first. To win our first at La Paz
means a lot for our whole group. That’s what I was thinking
when I came up on the finish line.
1604 Brian Burgess (2nd Place)
This is not my first La Paz finish. I finished third here
two years ago. That course was a lot smoother. This was pretty
bad. We race every race and we got our butt kicked from San
Juanito to 855. We absolutely got our butts kicked! That’s
where it was absolutely brutal. Miles and miles of first gear
rock turns. You wanted a break and you never got one. But
now that I’m finished, I’m glad it was that rough.
Out there, I wouldn’t want it that rough, but I’m
glad it was.
The biggest challenge was not sinking in the deep water crossings,
not flooding the motor out.
Class 3
300 Donald Moss (1st Place)
Co-driver, Kenneth Moss:
It went pretty good today – mostly yesterday. I had
a good race up until the last 100 miles. We broke a track
bar and lost all our turning system but we made it in on batteries.
I was surprised about all the extra rough stuff.
That section over by Loreto was fun. We got to go through
the cactus fields.
Note: Donald Moss and Kenneth Moss alternated driving; they
split the course in fourths.
Note: Class 3 champions since 2002
Class 5/1600
550 Marcos Nunez (1st Place )
It took me one hour to change the clutch. No other problems.
Only the clutch.
Co-driver, Norberto Rivera: Marcos Nunez started, then Edmundo
Fernandez took over. We had a good race. Only we had to change
the clutch at race mile 70. At the start of the race, there
were about 21 1600s starting. The course is very difficult
and hard on the body. I’m happy with the race. I’m
happy being the champion again!
Class 8
801 Nick Vanderwey (1st Place)
We had a great day. No problems. One flat tire up north. The
highlight is right now. Hour after hour when you keep beating
it down, you just don’t know how lucky you are to get
away. You’re so exhausted that the emotions just run
in short spurts; jubilation, excitement. All the prep, all
the time, all the SCORE people – it’s unbelievable.
The people down by the beach with the flags were incredible.
They were waving us on.
Co-driver, Larry Vanderwey
We were just keeping it together. I’ll tell you what
– you had to hope it wasn’t your turn, your mile,
your bush, your tree. And like we said, we just slipped through
Baja’s fingers today. It’s incredible to be standing
here with an in-tact truck with no problems. It’s unbelievable.
This is the original. This is the one you always want.
Nick Vanderwey and Mike Vanderwey went to San Ignacio. Then
Paul Dennis and myself went from San Ignacio to here.
Class 10
No. 1000 John Cooley (3rd Place)
Co-driver, Chris Harrold: This is the first time coming to
the finish line! Around here it was starting to get a little
like San Felipe where they’re jumping out in front of
the car but for the most part, the spectators were awesome.
They were cheering us on, no booby traps, pointing us in the
right direction. It was a lot of fun. It was great.
Hopefully, I was really taking care of everything. The biggest
problem we had was being able to see because we got blasted
with mud, then we got all the silt and it was foggy. So we
had to flip our shields up and the backsides of the shields
got wet, then the front sides, then all the dirt coming off
the car with the silt was just sticking in there. It was horrible.
I’m trying to leave the shield up but the silt was getting
in my eyes.
SCORE Lite
No. 1200 Tim Noe (1st Place)
I drove the first 375 miles from the start to Bahia de Los
Angeles. Tommy Watson went from Bahia de Los Angeles to Loreto.
Gary Arnold went from Loreto to the finish.
We had no problems at all. We made it the whole day with
no problems at all. We were really out there just to finish
the race because we only needed to get in eighth place to
win the points championship for the third year in a row. So
we just started going for it. For about the first twenty miles,
we were conservative. But then it was full-on racing. We stick
to our plan which is no plan!
It hasn’t hit me yet. I’m sure it will when I
walk around the corner.
Gary Arnold brought it in. I started it. He wanted me to
bring it the last fifty miles. I told him I’m tired,
I’ve done my job for the day!
Probably the biggest challenge for me was Frog Canyon in
the mud. I’m not sure about the other guys. I’m
sure we all have stories we’re not telling what we did
wrong, you know – a few mistakes.
2004 was about the same as this year. 2005 was a loop race
so it was totally different. I like coming down here. They
should have this one every year. It’s a challenge. You
know, the beautiful Mexico where we get to get away with everything
we do. It’s fun down here.
Stock Full
No. 861 Josh Hall (1st Place)
Darn it! I wanted to do it in less that 24 hours.
Co-driver, Thad Stump: We had one problem that lasted about
an hour and a half. We have something that resembles a disintegrated
rag floating around in our fuel cell. So it’s warming
up the strainers. We cleaned the pumps and strainers out one
time. Now we can alternate fuel pumps and we can run on one
fuel pump for about an hour until it gets plugged then we
can switch to the other one. While that one’s running,
the other one shakes itself free and all the lint and crap
falls off the sieve. So we just go back and forth.
Stock Mini,
No. 762 Rod Hall (Third Place)
Only racer to have raced in either a car or truck in all 39
Tecate SCORE Baja 1000 races. Hall also has the most class
wins in the event with 18.
I put it on its side 12 miles into the race and cost us four
hours of daytime.
The toughest SCORE Baja 1000 ever, I thought I would never
get out of the silt beds near El Datil, race marker 925.
Protruck
No. 236 Rick L. Johnson (1st Place)
Jimmy Nuckles went second at Loreto. From there, Jimmy brought
it home. But not before he got stuck with first place. We
pulled our truck out and then we pulled Creagan out. It was
actually a credible today for the entire Toyota Tundra Protruck
number 236. We had a long race at the end with a lot of troubles
but that’s what 1000 is about. There are a lot of unforeseen
things. With Dane Cordone and Jimmy Nuckles and myself, when
we’re co-drivers, we’re able to soldier on and
bring it in to the finish. Hopefully in first place. This
is the second time with the Baja 1000 into La Paz. This is
sweet. Anytime you finish the Baja 1000, it’s sweet.
Last year we lost it by a minute and 45 seconds. We finished
second and lost the championship to Jimmy Nuckles who ended
up beating us. So to bring down here in first place with Jimmy
is an incredible feat. It’s very exciting. Hopefully
this will get us right into the points depending on how Tavo
finishes. If he finishes, it will be a very tight points race.
The tracking unit helped us tremendously. We were able to
have somebody sit at home and tell us how our truck was doing.
The tracking unit is absolutely incredible. Anybody who didn’t
run one lost out. It’s a great product and just from
a safety standpoint, allows us to keep track of our vehicle.
No. 203 Dave Creagan (2nd Place)
They helped us when we got stuck because they called right
away to see if we were okay. It was very good. The minute
we stopped, they were already talking to us.
The dirt was the biggest challenge. It was an awesome race
but I’ve got to say the Mexican people out there cheering
for you in the desert are the best. It’s awesome. SCORE
did a really good job marking the course. It was a really
good race. The truck worked good and those guys in front of
us really are number one are great people, too. We got stuck
and they pulled us out. He deserves it.
The race was hard on equipment. You know, it’s a tough
race! Obviously, there are not a lot of Trophy-Trucks here.
I don’t know what the attrition rate is here but it’s
got to be pretty serious.
[What did you think as you came upon the finish line?] Oh
thank God I didn’t blow it!
Micron Baja Challenge
BC 16 Steve Appleton (1st Place)
No mechanicals, no flats, and never got lost. The two of us
were in the car the whole time. We only got out twice to change
drivers. Other than that, I’ve been sitting here for
24 hours. I don’t want to sit in this seat for a couple
of months! I think I’m going to go ride my motorcycle
for a while. I have more of dirt bike background. It’s
kind of hard sitting in a seat for 24 hours. Neither one of
us have driven cars before. It was perfect weather. Wasn’t
too cold, never got foggy. We never got stuck one place. We
couldn’t have done it better. No flats, nothing. Not
one mechanical.
When you get a Trophy-Truck running by you, you wish you
had one of those. That will be our campaign next year, probably
- or a Class 1. We probably will.
I started 16th. I was in 3rd place at San Felipe and 1st
place at Bahia de Los Angeles, and we never looked back.
We’re like an old married couple. Our intercom didn’t
work. We didn’t have one argument. We didn’t talk
to each other the whole time. Hand signals. That’s it.
We didn’t talk to each other.
It was great being with my brother. It’s definitely
an honor and a privilege.
BC 14 Eustaquio Escandon, Sr. (2nd Place)
Co-driver, Steve Hilbert: This is my third Baja 1000. I’ve
done it twice in a car and once on a dirt bike in the 2000.
I drove the last third, from just north of Loreto down to
here. The first two sessions were Jaime Zunzunegui and Eustaquio
Escandon in the first session; then Clark, the co-driver here
and Richard Wadehouse were the second drivers.
I liked this course. It was really fast. It was not as technical
and rocky. But that’s a relative term in Baja. It’s
a beautiful road. But you can’t at the view –
not while you’re racing.
We lost the motor and the transmission. It barely made it
down the road here. I don’t know what’s wrong,
but you have to be Arnold Schwarzenegger to get it from second
to third or third to second.
We were stuck and a Protruck hit us. We didn’t get
any serious damage, but the front of his Protruck pretty bad.
We were real stuck. But he almost got me out. He moved me
forward five feet just by hitting me.
Note: Tommy Cope was the driver of the truck that hit BC
14
Pro Motorcycles
Class 22
No. 1x Steve Hengeveld (1st Place in class, First overall
finisher)
We didn’t come here to get second, we came here to win
and that’s what we did tonight. I didn’t have
any problems I just kept riding and I don’t’ think
they had any problems either. The new sections were really
hard but that’s what Baja is about. It’s not supposed
to be easy, it’s supposed to be technical and that’s
what we had here today. We all had our tough sections and
it’s just a really good, tough course. This is my 5th
Baja 1000 in a row and we made history tonight so I want to
thank my other two riders Quinn Cody and Mike Childress. It
takes a team to do this and we did it tonight. All the Mexican
people, thanks for cheering us on, letting us race here, and
really supporting us.
We look forward to seeing you out on the track. This is the
best race in the world! We have a good team, we worked really
hard. We made history tonight to win the first Baja 1000 for
the 450x and for breaking Johnny Campbell’s win-streak
and continuing mine with five in a row.
I got on the bike at mile 700 and the bike still ran flawlessly,
like it’s brand new to the finish line.
That stuff was bad! Dude, I saw a full on accident right
in front of me on the highway. I had to hit the breaks or
I was going to get caught up in it!
Co-driver, Mike Childress
I have the best two teammates here tonight. We all did our
jobs. We all came here and accomplished what we needed to.
Thanks for letting us tear up their peninsula here this whole
day, all the people were awesome. It’s great to see
and hear them here, screaming and yelling. It really makes
you feel good.
I started the race this morning and I rode the first 333
miles to El Pasero. Quinn Cody rode to mile 724 and Steve
rode from there to the finish. I passed everybody by the time
I got to mile 45. Our other teammate, our other 450x team,
hit a booby trap in the dust and crashed. I stopped to make
sure he was all right and stayed with him for a few minutes.
Then I inherited the lead at mile 45 and never looked back.
It’s nice having a wide-open course. I mean the course
was a rough one this year. The hurricanes and weather have
done some damage this year, but our 450x got us to the finish
with zero problems.
Our time was about right - I guessed it at 19 hours, so it’s
a little quicker. But when Sal did the course, he definitely
challenged us a little more going to La Paz – it’s
a lot tighter - but that’s what we’re here for.
Co-driver, Cody Quinn
I wasn’t really worried about getting caught. I just
had to adjust my style. I was trying to be conservative because
we had a big lead and I didn’t want to make any mistakes.
That didn’t really work for me so I decided to pick
it up my and ride my normal pace and get comfortable on the
bike and everything went flawless. No issues the whole ride.
I’ve been pre-running – I went over my whole section
six times and I had it pretty much wired, so it was just like
I expected except our race bike was about 10 miles per hour
faster than my pre-runner so there was maybe a little bit
of backing out of the throttle here and there. Other than
that, everything went perfect. We made it, got our lights
on right in time and basically did what we expected and everything
went really well.
No. 6x Robby Bell (2nd Place)
I hit a booby trap around mile marker 40 or 42 something.
It was just like a 2-foot tall curb or square or something
that some guys built. I was behind 2x still. And he hit it
and went down and then I was in his dust and I had no chance.
I hit it. I cartwheeled and broke my chest protector off and
lost my fanny pack. But the bike was totally straight. At
first I was a little dingy and I started going backwards on
the course. Then I saw Mikey coming so I got straightened
out. So I got going straight again. It broke my goggles when
I crashed so I rode with no goggles to Pit One. Once I got
goggles, they duct taped my visor straight. Then I slowly
picked it up as I felt better. I kept it pretty close, like
within 10 or 12 minutes to Mikey. Until just after Puertecitos,
I got a rear flat and had to ride with a flat for like 20
or 22 miles. So I lost tons of time there. We got the flat
changed. When we got going again, I was like 45 minutes behind.
I gave it back to Kendall at altrazera. Then we met him at
Vizcaino, at the highway, and we heard he broke his hand.
So I had to get back on the bike and ride from Vizcaino all
the way to race mile 724. I had no idea where I was going
and it was at night and it was kind of sketchy at times, so
I had to ask for directions a couple of times, but I got it
back to Johnny in one piece.
I knew it was at least 45 minutes, or close to an hour as
soon as I got back on the bike. I wanted to keep the streak
going for Johnny, the goals had to change and I tried to make
it a Honda 1-2, and finish the race to get the 1x plate. I
just played it safe, made sure I didn’t get lost, didn’t
go down, didn’t have any problems and give the bike
to Johnny in one piece so we could finish the race.
Co-driver, Steve Hilbert: The first long silt bed, I got crossed
up in and I started going sideways. Then, I missed a turn,
east of Ciudad Constitution on a really fast road and I looked
down at something. The road kept going straight but we veered
off at the last twisty section before 17, and I said ‘whoa,
there are no markings!’ I came out good, though. My
tires are just a little low in the back.
My team did what they were supposed to do. I’m very
proud. We got delayed by a couple of patches on a flat tire.
I got the bike about 7:50 pm and had about 325 miles to go.
That was probably the toughest part of the course because
it’s at night and it was demanding – really technical.
So at that point in the race I decided to bring it in because
we were so far down that it’s hard to make up that much
time. So I paced myself. I was on the bike for a lot of hours.
I just rode it in and I’m happy to be here. The 450x
is a phenomenal machine. I was so pleased with the way it
worked. It was really fast, light and easy handling –
all the rocks, turns and elevation changes in my section.
The 450x was an awesome machine. It takes a lot less effort
than other bikes I’ve ridden.
Robby Bell rode from the start to mile 333. Kendall Norman
was supposed to ride from 333 to 724 but he got off and hurt
his hand. Robby had to get on somewhere near San Ignacio and
ride the second half of his leg. So he brought it down to
me at Checkpoint 7, mile 724.5 and I got on there and went
to La Paz. I don’t know any details [about Kendall’s
hand] because I heard everything third-hand information. Something
happened early in the race – Robby hit a booby trap
just outside Ojos Negros, so right away we had a problem.
I’m glad Robby’s here – he was able to get
back on the bike because he went down pretty hard. I guess
Mikey had to pick him up, so we’re fortunate.
No. 16x Allan Donaldson (5th Place)
The whole thing was just mentally tough. I’ve been riding
for about 25 years and this is my first time in the Baja 1000.
[What got you started?] The movie (Dust to Glory).
No. 18x Anna Cody (20th Place, solo rider)
I have been through a battle. I made it! I’ve been riding
since 6:30 yesterday morning. I stopped about 20 minutes at
a pit to refuel and hydrate and go on. It was tough –
the toughest SCORE race I’ve ever done.
It’s such an awesome feeling. I just said a little
prayer to my former teammate that we did it and I wish she
could be here with me. I’ve always wanted to solo it
to La Paz.
Note: Has become the first woman to ride solo on a motorcycle
in the Baja 1000.
Class 20
No. 151x Charles Schnell(1st Place)
Co-driver, Nancy Emde: Racing is part of our family tradition
and I’ve always wanted to race the Baja 1000. I did
the last section from Punta Conejo to here. It was pretty
rough. It’s nice that it’s over. It’s been
a long hot day.
Everything went according to plan. Unbelievable.
I have three grown children; three daughters and a son. There
were a lot of things going on out there and we had a lot of
fans.
The biggest challenge was probably the sand washes that had
the big washouts in them. It’s hard to go fast when
they have a lot of those.
I’m glad it’s over. It’s been a long night
and a long morning. But I’m ready for next year!
Class 30
No. 300x Gerardo Rojas (1st Place)
No. 307x Ron Wilson (2nd Place)
We’re just happy to finish today! We kind of got buried
in the back of the pack. One of our partners did a little
damage to the back of the bike about half-way. So we got pushed
back to about 13th. I don’t know what happened. We’re
the non-crashers of the two.
To break up the ride, there were four of us and we just basically
split it in quarters. I did about the last 300 or so, Tim
did about 300, the two guys in front of us did a little bit
less. Scott Meyers started. Then he gave it to Steve Garnett.
I think both of them are seeing double right now!
I actually got to ride through some water which was nice
for a change. It was fun. It was definitely a fun course for
sure. It was challenging which is good. Good, good, good!
Class 40
No. 400x Jeff Kaplan (1st Place)
It went really well out there. We got the bike in great shape.
We were sixth overall and just passed a few guys. Then we
caught up to the third team but couldn’t quite get through
their dust. So we just hung tight and I think we beat them
on time because just finished two minutes behind them.
The bike was incredible. It didn’t miss a beat all
day. No problems. I tipped over right before the finish in
the dust, but very slowly, though. Everything else was smooth.
[How did you break up the ride?] Up north, I can’t
tell you. From San Ignacio, it was Randy Morales and Jeff
Cheats and myself. The starter was Lou Frankel. He just rode
70 miles and I’m guessing he passed a lot of people
because we stated about 50th and we got to 4th overall. My
guess is Louie passed a ton of people. So they did all the
work in the north end. It went well. Those guys did a good
job. We didn’t have to do much but hold it…pick
off a few more.
This is one of the roughest 1000s. It’s like the old
days, like the ‘70s. It’s similar to what we used
to run before the runs were real fast and easy. This is what
it used to be like. I’ve never seen this much water
down here. It made it nice. It made it fun. We earned it this
time!
Class 50
No. 500x Jim O’Neal (1st Place)
Co-driver, Bobby Hanson: I was just telling my partner, Andy,
that we had a real bad day yesterday but a real good day today.
So when the sun came back up, everything seemed to work out.
I think we got the class win! We’re real happy even
though we had rough times last night. I bent a rotor and took
us way behind. But at Pit 14, they put a new wheel on it and
everyone picked back up and now we’re here.
On Thursday, we missed the rider change, so he had to do
the real rocky section from La Barista toward Loreto which
he wasn’t supposed to do. That was supposed to be part
of my section so we had a few frantic cell phone conversations
to work that out. So bobby hadn’t ridden that section
yet and didn’t even know where we were going to do our
exchange, so he had to track the rider down and practically
drag him off the bike to let him know. We lost about 40 minutes
in the whole thing but it worked out. Basically that extra
section was the only part that wasn’t pre-run.
Co-driver, Greene: No matter how much you plan, things change.
And you have to be able to move with those changes to make
something like this happen. If you can’t adjust to it,
then that’s where you have a problem. Because everybody
has problems somewhere in races. The team pulled together
and adjusted to the problems and made it work.
At night, it’s just a matter of getting through it.
Everything looks basically the same anyway. The only problem
is nothing looks familiar so you don’t know how far
you’ve gone or how far you’ve got to go. If I
could do it without GPS on the bike, you just keep going until
you get to your finish. The problem I had was I was stranded
because my truck was someplace else so I had to hitchhike
to Santa Rita. That’s where I ended up finding my truck
again. It was a fun night, a tough night.
Class 60
No. 601x Donald Lewis (1st Place)
I’ll tell you, it was an amazing event. I enjoyed every
minute. I’ve been down here pre-running. I ran my section
five times. I think we did a great job preparing for this.
It was just a wonderful experience.
There were eight of us that rode. I thought there would be
an injury or two, but there wasn’t. All of us just made
it through.
No major problems at all. We did it. We cleaned the clock.
We’re the first class 60 team ever to do it.
I loved every bit of it. It was just terrific. I wouldn’t
miss it for the world. Honest to God, we’re proving
that you can redefine what is possible. You’re life
is not over when you’re sixty. We’re the first
ever Class 60 team. It was a terrific experience.
Pro ATVS
Class 25
No. 7a Danny Prather (1st Place)
That was an awesome course! Man, those rocks were gnarly!
It was a good time. I just looked back and saw that I had
a truck behind me. We just barely beat them…good times!!
It was a perfect race. We changed a couple of rear tires to
keep them fresh. All the guys did what they need, we came
here to win.
Mike Cafro started and took it to Ojos; He gave it to Dana
Skreech in Puertecitos; Mike Cafro got back on and took it
to Bahia de Los Angeles; Levi Marana took it to San Ignacio;
Mark Speath to north of Loreto; I took it Loreto down to Ciudad
Insurgentes; Levi got back on to, rode to Santa Rita and I
took it from Santa Rita home, back to the finish line.
I knew that the next team was coming. I kept looking back.
He was getting close for about the last 30 miles. I could
feel him. There’s a fast stretches and I knew he’d
be coming in soon. I’m surprised he didn’t catch
me earlier. But I’m glad he didn’t, man. I hate
getting passed by those guys.
I’ve never won a Baja 1000 and this is by far the best
one to win. Going down to La Paz is just awesome. I can’t
even explain it.
Everybody had some issues, but we were spared this one and
we pulled it off.
It feels good, man. It’s a sweet win, a great win! I’m
hoping we win some money!
No. 4a Jeff Hancock (2nd Place)
Co-driver, Larry Hancock: It was pretty fun. We had a tight
battle for probably the first 500 or 600 miles and we broke
an A-arm. Luckily we were close enough to a road we got an
A-arm and a front shock in, put that back on but we lost about
an hour or an hour and a half. You know, other than that,
no major problems all day.
Jeff Hancock started. Kyle Pethens ran through San Felipe.
Jeff got back on and ran down to Bahia de Los Angeles. I got
on, then Kyle got on. I brought it in the last 100 miles.
It was great fun.
The logistics is probably the most challenging part, just
getting the trucks coming down. When you’re on a bike,
you just ride as fast as you can. That’s all you know
how to do. But, you know just getting the stuff where it needs
to be. Just having a team that can get that stuff really helps.
SPORTSMAN
SPT M/C>250cc
No. 211x Carlos Gonzalez (1st Place)
Another vehicle cut in front of us. He broke my concentration
a little because I’m not used to having a car catch
up to me. And it’s something that scared me a lot. That
gave me a little extra pressure along the way.
All the people of La Paz, especially kids, were cheering
me on and it made me forget that I was tired.
No. 236x Paul Crandell (2nd Place)
Everybody rode their part of the course. It was a total team
effort. Everybody did their 100 or 200 mile sections. It was
unbelievable. I actually like riding better at night now.
I hadn’t ridden at night until next. Now, riding at
night goes a lot faster.
No. 250x Colie Potter (14th Place, solo rider)
I hit a bunch of rocks but it ran great all day. The bike
ran perfect.
I had to pull way down deep here at the end, but its fun.
I love to ride motorcycles. I only took gas breaks and stopped
for food. I didn’t sleep or anything. I took like four
15 minute breaks.
I think my time was pretty good. The new section up by San
Ignacio – I haven’t done that part before. I never
pre-ran it. There was a little bit of people in the water,
a little bit of carnage. But I actually got around it okay.
But on the silt, the sand was all chewed up and it was silt
everywhere. There were a lot of buggies and Trophy-Trucks
stuck. So you kind of had to pick your way through the weeds.
But it wasn’t bad.
I really liked seeing Javier, that canyon out of Loreto.
It’s a beautiful view, especially at sunrise. It was
good. Gonzaga Bay is nice. This city is nice. Nobody got hurt
and my goal was achieved.
I’ve never raced on a team. It’s just satisfaction
for me. A lot of people don’t know what it’s like
unless they actually do it. I really have to pull down deep.
It’s a lot of mental work. Not as much physical. I mean
you have to know how to ride, but in the wee hours, it’s
all mental.
238x Alastair Hilson (17th Place, solo rider)
I feel trashed! The whole thing was the best part of it. The
course, the pre-running. Sal does such a good job.
After a couple of beers, I might do it again. I’m trashed!
The Mexicans are the most supportive people. It’s great!
They keep you going. I didn’t have any problems. It
was a good, except the silt and rocks. It was brutal, especially
the last 300 miles of silt.
I don’t know what would feel better – to win
or just to finish. It’s two different people. One’s
doing it for time the other’s doing it for satisfaction.
SPT ATV
No. 54a Craig Christy (1st Place)
Co-driver, Jessica McCreary: It was great! It was awesome.
I’ve been down here every single week for the last few
months to train. We’ve been down each other’s
throats and now it paid off.
For me, seeing the sunrise was really nice. That was the
best part. I think it really helped coming over the hill and
seeing all the girls light up, realizing that I’m a
girl. I’m like ‘YEAH!’. That was cool.
The most challenging part was having to go to the bathroom.
I really hated stopping. Everything was challenging. They’re
always tough. Actually, they were really nice in this race.
This is my first time coming in within the time limit! Each
of our riders did about 250 miles.
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