They will get the opportunity when the NASCAR
Winston West Series visits Evergreen Speedway on Saturday, June 29,
for the Coors Light 200 presented by NAPA and Albertson’s. The
$129,551 event is the fifth of 10 events on this season’s schedule.
The race has special meaning to Borneman for another reason as well –
it will be held on the eve of his 25th birthday.
While he is one of the young hard-chargers in the
series, Borneman stresses the need for plenty of patience when it
comes to running 200 laps on the .646-mile speedway. "You have to be
real patient," the Ramona, Calif., competitor said. "You’ve got to
wait and wait to get on the gas. It’s a real patient track. It feels
like you can go faster and be more aggressive with the track, but you
can’t. I think that’s the whole key that we need to focus on. If we
get too aggressive with the car, it just burns the tires up and you
can‘t go anywhere."
Borneman’s father has provided him with some other
advice, as well. "He said it’s a little rough," the younger Borneman
admitted. "He said to drive around the bumps. I know the preferred
line is through the bumps, but you’ve got to go around them. Any time
you hit the bumps it throws you out of line or gets you sideways."
In Borneman’s first race at Monroe, during his
rookie season last year, his father provided some special guidance.
"He was on the radio, coaching me the whole way," Borneman said. But
despite the help, he got caught up in an incident and finished down a
lap in seventh place.
Last year’s race was reflective of the
disappointments Borneman encountered through much of his rookie season
in the NASCAR Winston West Series. He had made a spectacular debut in
the series in 2000, nearly winning one race and finishing in the
top-10 in four of five races he competed in while preparing for his
rookie campaign. With such success, Borneman entered the 2001 season
with great anticipation.
"Then in the first race at Phoenix, there was a
little problem and we went a lap down," Borneman recalled. "Then we
had motor problem after motor problem after motor problem. It seemed
like we could never catch a break."
Despite those troubles, Borneman finished second in
the rookie standings and seventh in the overall championship
standings. Nevertheless, he was eager to put his freshman year behind
him and get back on track this year. "I was glad that season was over
last year and we could get a fresh start," Borneman said. "But we have
had some of the same things this year, with an engine problem or
getting caught up in an accident. It’s been stuff we can’t help and
that’s been a real bummer. Hopefully, it will start to turn around."
Borneman is hopeful the success his father found at
Monroe might help him rebound in the second half of the season. He
enters the event 10th in the championship standings, just
three points out of ninth place and 150 markers back from the lead.