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Open Wheel Racer
Gath
Enjoys First Career Victory at Star Speedway.
by
Mike Ippolito, Sports Correspondent, Town Crier
The odds were certainly not in favor of Kirsten Gath as she and her
race car with a newly rebuilt engine line up for the start of the
350 Supermod feature event at Star Speedway in Epping, New Hampshire
recently.
By
the end of the race, however, the odds hardly mattered, as the
19-year-old Tewksbury resident had blown away the competition
on her way to her first career win, besting some very experienced
and very talented racers along the way.
It
was a huge moment for Gath, and the crowd in attendance at the
Star Speedway seemed to enjoy the win almost as much as Gath
herself, knowing how hard she had worked to earn the victory.
"Everyone
was really great. When I finished the race and stopped, a swarm
of people came down to see me," Gath said. "My dad said you could
hear the crowd going crazy, because they knew I had come so close
before."
| fate dealt her a cruel hand... |
Yes,
Gath had come so very close just the week before to securing
her first victory, but fate dealt her a cruel hand on the night,
as just laps away from victory she suffered engine failure and
had to deal not only with a tough defeat, but also the prospect
of rebuilding her engine.
"We
thought we had it the week before. We thought it was our night, but the cam let
go and we couldn't get the win," Gath said. "So we scrapped together a motor
and we were kind of hoping just to finish. We did not expect much, but we
ended up winning."
The
'we', that Gath refers to are her crew which consists of father
Dave Jr., as well as grandfather Dave sr. and cousin Richard.
Gath's father and grandfather got her started in racing about
11 years ago. Dave Jr. raced motorcycles while the elder Gath
was a drag racer, so it was only natural that Kirsten would pick
up the sport, first as a go-kart racer.
"My
dad had taken me to a track where they were racing go-karts and
I said Dad, can I have one of those," Gath recalled. "I
got one the next week and it just progressed from there."
She
has progressed to a point where in her fourth year of open wheel
racing she was able to defeat the likes of former NASCAR shortrack
champion and Star Speedway champ Rob Wilcox among many other
far more experienced racers, reaching speeds of up to 110MPH.
"It
really felt good to beat those guys because they are so good,"
Gath said. "Especially because we did not expect it at all after
throwing everything together the way we did."
Gath
is one of few females in a very much male dominated sport, but
she has not let that stop her. She says that she is treated fairly
by her fellow racers, but at times they do take not of the fact
that she is the only female on the track. At least now Gath can
find some competition. That wasn't always the case, as she recalled
with a laugh.
"When
I was younger a lot of kids did not want to race me because I
was a girl," Gath said. "Even now, sometimes when people see
me when I pull out, they will think I am just a little girl because
I am only 5-1."
When
thinking of female race car drivers it is impossible (at least
to me) not to think of Indy car racer Danica Patrick, who thrilled
race fans with a near victory in last year's Indianapolis 500
and brought some great attention to the sport of racing.
With
her success, Gath has heard Patrick's name in comparison to hers
on numerous occasions.
"People
bring it up all the time," Gath said. "I think it's great what
she has done. She has shown that women can be successful in this
sport, which is great because a lot of people don't even know
that women can do this."
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Kirsten Gath |
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