
SAMAX
- Mid-Ohio qualifying
SAMAX/ Doncaster
Racing will start Saturday's Rolex Sports Car Series race at Mid-Ohio
Sports Car Course from ninth on the GT grid. Dave Lacey qualified
the No. 17 SAMAX/ Doncaster Porsche 911 GT3 Cup car that he shares
with Greg Wilkins, posting a fast lap of one minute 29.904 seconds
on the 2.258-mile road course (90.416 mph). The qualifying session
was the team's first on the new track surface in dry conditions.
"The
first few laps were just learning because we hadn't put any dry
laps in yet, so I was just getting used to the new asphalt. It's
great! The track is very smooth," Lacey said. "Once
we got the line down, we started picking away on the numbers and
steadily moved the needle forward. It's too bad we didn't have
the knowledge on the first lap when the tires were good. But we're
not miles off the pace and I think we're pretty close on our setup."
Goldfinger
Greg Wilkins will cram an international trip between races next
week. He will return to his home in Toronto on June 25, fly to
London, England, for a board meeting on June 28, then back overnight
to compete in the June 29 Rolex Series race in Daytona Beach,
Fla. The trip will include an interesting highlight – a
visit to a gold vault. Wilkins is chief executive officer of Barrick
Gold Corporation, the biggest gold-mining company in the world.
"We're
members of the World Gold Council and I'm on the board,"
he explained. "The council created a gold certificate, which
is backed by gold, so just to be sure that that gold is in fact
being put away, members of the council board are going to inspect
all of the physical gold stacked in nice neat bars, just like
the James Bond movie, Goldfinger."
Wilkins will
also do double duty when he arrives in Daytona, driving the No.
17 Porsche and keeping an eye on his son Mark, who will drive
his first race in a Daytona Prototype.
racing
wishes
Dave Lacey is hard at work organizing the 14th annual Children's
Wish Race Day at Mosport International Raceway in Bowmanville,
Ont. As Ontario chairman of The Children's Wish Foundation of
Canada, he initiated the program to grant wishes to children who
are seriously ill. The day also raises funds for the foundation,
which is the biggest of its kind in Canada, with 15,000 wishes
granted during the past 20 years.
"The
idea is to get friends of racing to bring their race cars or their
high-performance street cars out to the track. The day has two
objectives: we give rides to Children's Wish families and we also
charge the public for rides to raise funds. It's a great fun day
that incorporates both racing and not-for-profit," Lacey
said. "It's a good day for the kids and their families –
a day away from chemotherapy or hospitals or needles."
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