CART: Robby Gordon Motorola 300 Race Notes/Quotes
30 May 1999
Robby Gordon #22 Johns Manville/Panasonic/Menards Toyota-Swift Race Notes/Quotes -- Saturday, May 29, 1999 Motorola 300 Round 6 of 20 in the CART FedEx Championship Series At Gateway International Raceway - Madison, Ill. Robby Gordon's day ended prematurely when he spun and hit the wall between Turns 3 and 4 while working Lap 11 of today's Motorola 300. Gordon sustained a bruise and abrasions to his right calf in the incident, his first during a race this season. Gordon now heads for Indianapolis to compete in the #32 Johns Manville/Glidden/Duracell entry of Team Menard in Sunday's 83rd running of the Indianapolis 500. It will be Gordon's fifth appearance at The Brickyard. Quotes ROBBY GORDON on the race: "I drove my golf cart back from the medical trailer to our garage, so I guess that means I'm fine. The ankle's fine. The calf's little sore. The bigger issue for me is trying to figure out what happened. I lost it way before I ever got to the corner. That's odd. The car gave no indication of being loose there all weekend. Maybe a tire went down. Maybe something broke on the car. I'll be anxious to find out. It's frustrating because we had a very good car today, and we'll never know what the final outcome would have been had we not crashed. The tethers did their job, because everything was intact on the car. I'll be fine tomorrow. I had a great race car here today, and I know I have a great race car for the 500. It's just a shame that the weekend started out this way. But we'll get over it, especially if we have a good day tomorrow." JOHN MENARD (Team Gordon co-owner): "That was a rather abrupt end to what we thought was going to be a promising day. The car stepped out in the corner a bit more than it should have, and we're not quite sure what happened. It'll probably double Robby's resolve for tomorrow (in the Indy 500). It's just very frustrating. We've all been through this. Racing has more frustrations than triumphs, which sometimes makes us wonder why we do this. But the triumphs make up for the frustrations, that's for sure. The tethers performed just like they were supposed to. I'm just sorry we had to be the first ones to test them."