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 Wednesday, September 22
Herta wins again at good old Laguna Seca
 
Associated Press

 Results

MONTEREY, Calif. -- If Bryan Herta knew why he has mastered Laguna Seca Raceway, he wouldn't let the secret out.

"I'm not telling," Herta said Sunday after leading every lap on the way to his second straight victory in the Shell 300. "If there is a reason, I don't know what it is and I don't care. 'm just happy to enjoy the kind of success I've had here and hope it continues."

In the midst of the happy celebration, Herta took a moment to remember Gonzalo Rodriguez.

Bryan Herta
Herta leads the way Sunday, with Michael Andretti following in second place during the Shell 300 at Laguna Seca.

Rodriguez, a 27-year-old driver from Uruguay, was killed Saturday in a crash during practice.

On Sunday, his fellow drivers stood together during a prerace moment of silence for Rodriguez and then went out to battle each other on the 2.238-mile, 11-turn road course.

"We are race drivers and we have to have a blocking system in our minds to our job," Roberto Moreno said after finishing second. "We just go out and drive every corner until the checkered flag.

"But you don't forget what happened. It's my best result, but when I think about it, it's always going to be in my mind a sad day."

Herta, fighting to keep his ride with Bobby Rahal's team, started from the pole and led all the way, beating Moreno to the finish line by 1.826-seconds -- about 10 car-lengths.

"I'm really happy for today, but our hearts and thoughts and prayers are still with Gonzalo and his family," Herta said. "This is a bittersweet day for CART."

But the lingering sadness over the death of Rodriguez could not take all of the joy out of Herta's second career victory.

"I want to thank everybody on the team," the 29-year-old Herta said, explaining that they helped turn the season into something he can be proud of.

Since his victory here last year, Herta had come up with only one top-five finish in 20 races -- a third place in April in Long Beach, Calif.

But he made it look easy Sunday.

"If that's easy, I don't know what's hard," he said. "I was pushing 100 percent all day long."

There was an early challenge from Tony Kanaan, but that ended when the Brazilian retired on lap 44 with a broken gearbox.

Team Rahal teammate Max Papis inherited second place and tried hard to catch Herta, but never was able to apply much pressure, particularly after stalling his engine briefly during his final pit stop and giving up second to Michael Andretti.

Moreno, filling in for injured Christian Fittipaldi, took the second spot on a restart on lap 62, moving past Papis and teammate Andretti, who later went out in a crash with Jimmy Vasser.

"That's when I nearly threw it all away," Herta said.

The leader, knowing the aggressive Andretti was getting ready to launch an attack on the restart, went too deep into the final turn under the yellow, locked up his brakes and nearly started a chain-reaction crash.

But, while the drivers behind him scrambled, Herta regained control of his Reynard-Ford and pulled away.

"From then on, I said, 'No mistakes, no mistakes. Just keep your focus.' "

Papis wound up third, followed by Paul Tracy, Adrian Fernandez, Gil de Ferran, Scott Pruett and Juan Montoya.

Because of the fatal crash in the morning practice on Saturday, the final round of qualifying was canceled. That left Montoya and Dario Franchitti, the drivers battling for the PPG Cup championship, far off the pace on a track where passing is extremely difficult.

Montoya, the 23-year-old Colombian rookie, started 16th, and Franchitti was 12th in the 25-car field.

Franchitti, who began the day 23 points behind Montoya, was battling Greg Moore for seventh when the two came together in turn 2 on lap 32. That ended the race for both.

"I went in there real hard and he didn't give me any room," Franchitti said.. "Of course it hurts, but there was nothing we could have done. With no qualifying yesterday, we started so far back that we had to pass people on the track. We had no choice."

Montoya, who leads the series with seven victories and had three straight coming in, showed surprising restraint. He drove a conservative race, used attrition to move through the field, wound up eighth and added five points to his lead over Franchitti..

With only three races and 66 total points remaining, Montoya could clinch the title in the next race, in Houston on Sept. 26.

Herta, led all but two laps last year, when he held off two-time series champion Alex Zanardi for his first CART victory. He had a little more time to appreciate this one before stepping out of the car.

"Last year, I didn't get a chance to enjoy that last lap because Alex as all over me," Herta said. "This time, I got to savor the last lap. That's what makes it sweeter."

Herta nearly won the race in 1996, losing it on the final lap when Zanardi made an unforgettable pass in the famed Corkscrew turn -- a blind, downhill left-hander considered one of the toughest turns in American road racing.

He also has started from the front row four straight years, and had three poles in a row.

"Bryan's definitely got the number of this race track," Rahal said.

The winner averaged 101.924 mph in the race slowed by four full-course caution flags for a total of 10 laps.
 


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 Bryan Herta takes the checkered flag at Laguna Seca Raceway.
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RealVideo: 56.6 | ISDN | T1

 Herta says his thoughts and prayers are with the Rodriguez family.
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RealAudio: 14.4 | 28.8 | 56.6