Super vee is groff's ticket to indy

Super vee is groff's ticket to indy

Play all audios:

Loading...

The urgency of the moment has made Sue Groff an instant mathematician. Her son, Mike, is a super vee racer from Northridge who has won two of the last three events and is fourth in the


Sports Car Club of America’s national standings. And with one race left--this Sunday at Phoenix International Raceway--Sue has all the needed results figured out for Mike to take the title.


“Mike would have to finish first,” Sue said. “(Carey) Bren would have to take second, Davey Jones would have to be fourth and (Ken) Johnson would have to be 12th. That’s one of the


possibilities. Now if Mike came in second . . . “ You get the idea. For Groff, the SCCA national championship is important. The super vee is a sort of minor league for aspiring racers who


want to get into more prestigious racing. The cars, powered by 190-horsepower Volkswagen motors, look like scaled-down versions of Indy cars and race many of the same tracks. The super-vee


race at Laguna Seca--a nine-turn, 1.9-mile course--was run just before Sunday’s CART Indy car race. “It’s a real serious kind of racing,” Groff said. “You’ve got to dominate the circuit. You


have to prove to them (the Indy car teams) that you’re for real.” And for the 33-lap race, Groff tried to prove himself. With the underpowered motor, he made good use of passing slower cars


to keep Jeff Andretti, the sixth qualifier, from gaining time. But the seat belts snapped on the fourth lap and Groff said later he couldn’t feel the car. Late in the race, Andretti moved


right behind Groff and overtook him in the corkscrew turns on the final lap. Groff finished sixth behind winner Davey Jones of McGraw, N.Y. The finish, which earned him $1,000, dropped Groff


from third to fourth in the point standings. MORE TO READ