WORSHAM KNOWS FOCUS
WILL BE CRITICAL, BUT
DIFFICULT/bigger>/bigger>/bigger>
HOUSTON (March 27, 2007)
-- Del Worsham knows he needs to focus. He knows this weekend's O'Reilly Spring
Nationals are his assignment, as he attempts to put his Checker, Schuck's,
Kragen Funny Car into the Winner's Circle at a race sponsored by one of CSK
Auto's retail competitors. He knows his team needs to solidly begin the process
of turning around a disappointing start to the 2007 season, and he's well aware
of some substantial history of his own, at Houston Raceway Park. He's just not
so sure how it's all going to feel, after the recent loss of friend and fellow
Funny Car driver, Eric Medlen.
Worsham did spend last weekend racing, on
an off-weekend for the NHRA, and has, therefore, already dealt with the
immediate need to grapple with Medlen's death while he, himself, was strapped
into a race car. This weekend's Houston event, however, will be the important
first full gathering of the NHRA family, though Worsham will be attending a
memorial service in Indiana before heading to Houston.
"It was really
hard, this past weekend when we were racing in San Antonio," Worsham said. "Eric
got injured on Monday, and we were all beginning to think he would finally pull
through, in some way. Then the word that he had passed away started to circulate
on Friday afternoon, and it was all kind of surreal. We had to somehow digest
the news, try to make sense of it all, and then get right in the car make a lap.
Something like this tests your focus, and it hurts you inside.
"I wanted
to be at the services as soon as I heard the details, and that will be a good
step forward for all of us, but getting together at the track in Houston is when
the healing will really start to happen. We'll be back where we all belong,
we'll get back into our routines, focus on our jobs, and move forward. It's just
that Eric won't be there."
It's highly questionable there's any means,
other than passage of time, for getting through the grieving and healing
process, but success on the track certainly wouldn't hurt. If there's a place
Worsham remembers as a track where "things turned around," it might just be
Houston. In 2001, Worsham arrived in Houston having won only a single race since
1991. He and his CSK team had been through many trying weekends in the four
years since he secured the CSK sponsorship prior to the 1997 season. They'd had
their shares of DNQs, first round losses, and sheer frustration. Then, Worsham
qualified No. 1 in Houston, and went on to win the race.
"It was a huge
turning point for us," Worsham said. "We won two races in 1991, then went eight
years before we won another one. The win in 1999, in Seattle, was enormous, but
it wasn't a big performance weekend for anyone. We just kind of 5.15'd our way
to a win on an iffy track. In Houston, the conditions were good, and you had to
be fast to win. We got a jump on everyone Friday night, with a big run under the
lights, and ended up No. 1.
"On the way into the track on Sunday morning,
a guy we know walked up and just said 'This is your day, Del,' and it was. We
beat everyone who got in our way, including John Force in the final, and that
win really got our team rolling. From that point on, right through 2005, we won
a ton of races, 18 to be exact. We could use that sort of jump-start right
now."
Worsham is not one who puts personalities on inanimate objects. He
doesn't much believe in a car's ability to be, literally, bratty but he knows
the complex combination of mechanical systems makes these cars very difficult to
tame. He also knows that confidence and a positive attitude make the tuning
calls slightly easier.
"Our rough start has taken a toll on our
confidence, there's no getting around that, but I'm smart enough to know it's
not the car's fault, it's not picking on us," he said. "But, what has happened
this week, with the loss of Eric, puts it all into so much perspective, I think
we'll feel like we're starting over on Friday in Houston. We'll all be thinking
of him and his family, and I know we're going to do all we can to represent his
legacy and his memory well. Our attitude will be positive, and we will be
focused. I can guarantee that."
The process will continue. The focus will
be there. Del Worsham guarantees it. |