Every year that I cover the 25 Hours of Thunderhill, I strive to find a different angle. A new perspective that shows me something novel about a race that is becoming increasingly familiar.
(Note: this post follows "Disaster" in the Rhythm of Racing series.) I mentioned in "On-Track Prep" that the pre-race grid walk is a going-away party of sorts. That for cast and crew, it's
(Note: this post follows "Break. Fix. Repeat." in the Rhythm of Racing series.) This is the flag that you never want to see at a race track. The other colors are, by and
(Note: this post follows "Stop and Go, Mostly Go" in the Rhythm of Racing series.) First, it breaks…The last post discussed the idea of a clean race, where everything goes perfectly, nothing
(Note: this post follows "On-Track Prep" in the Rhythm of Racing series.) What happens after the green flag flies is a series of balancing acts. When all's said and done, performance is judged