It's often been said that racing requires more honesty than any other sport in the world. So, time to be honest. I'm wondering if I made a mistake while working corners at Road Atlanta today. I'm looking for comments from drivers and workers, should there be any other Corner Workers (present or past) here. AutoX guys, apologies for leaving you out, but working a Solo course is a lot different than the choice I had to make today.
Full disclosure: I'm posting up here first, because so many of the SCCA Worker forums are full of people who think the "tail wags the dog"..i.e., some of my fellow workers that focus upon procedures, and tend to forget that without the presence of actual racing cars, there would be no need for such proceedures in the first place. When I was an active corner worker during the 80s-90s, I thought that we were there to serve our sport, and my (very) short time as a racing driver during the same era actually confirmed (to me, at least, YMMV) that flagging and accident response procedures should be created to preserve the continuity of the racing. Y'all that hate to see the safety car called out for a single drop of rain, or a waving yellow flag for an incident 30yds off the racing line..I'm one of you.
So, here `tiz..I'm the blue flag/upstream safety responder at Turn 11, Road Atlanta. We don't have enough bodies to man the new flagging station on Drivers' Right before the bridge, so we're flagging from the T11 Kiosk right behind the bridge on Drivers' Left. Guy in a production-based (for SCCA guys, it was an STU car) RX8 comes out of T10B, gets on the throttle a lil' too soon with the left rear on the curb, and the car starts to loop clockwise. He tries to catch it, but it snaps back and spins CCW..and the poor guy backs it into the concrete bridge abutment Drivers' Left (strikes it with the RR). I have to admit, it was a pretty hard hit.
Guy's not moving very much, but I figure he doesn't realize how much damage he's taken (forgot to mention, this is about 45min into a 3hr enduro) and he's trying to fire it back up and continue (I can see him looking down at the dash, and his right arm extended to where the ignition/starter switch would be in a modified street car). I grab the fire extinguisher, jump down to the track level..and have to decide from which side to approach the car. Drivers' Right (my left, the car's upstream of the station) puts me in the road, and IMO keeps the drivers of the cars that are actually still driving on it from having enough room to to manuver. OTOH, running Drivers' Left (my right), although it would be the standard corner worker "keep the car between you and the traffic", places me in the 2-foot gap between that car and the concrete wall.
Nice choice, eh. Run out in the road and risk causing an additional impact because a driver's got less space to "rein it in", or run in the gap between the car and the wall, and get crushed like a cockroach if somebody else "loses the handle" like our guy did, and piles into our crash site. I decide to run the gap. Planning to try to jump on the hood of the thing if somebody else comes to visit us.
Weird thing: By this time, our downsteam safety responder has come to help, and he reads the situation differently. He didn't see the driver reach for the key, and he's afraid that since the impact was so hard, the driver may be hurt. He cuts to the other side of the car than I (out into the road) because that's the side of the car where the driver is, and he wants to assess the driver's health. I immediately wonder if I made the right choice. After all, if the other worker (first time I'd worked with him, but he was a solid enough worker all weekend..by the time of this incident, I trusted him) was willing to risk being splattered by some driver who didn't slow for the yellow, he must have seen something about the driver of the RX that I didn't..
So..two options, two people, two different decisions. We ended up OK, because even though we chose two different actions, the rest of the drivers either took the flags at T10 seriously, or saw the car in the concrete at the bridge, and could imagine themselves in a similar impact.
I guess I'm asking y'all to revisit those painful middle school days when they forced you to read "The Lady or The Tiger", but I'd really like to hear what our community thinks about the whole thing.
Funny thing (and actually, the "spoiler" about the tale): m'self and the other worker reach the car at the same time. The driver's cranking on the key for all he's worth, and we can hear the "whump-whump-whump" of someone trying to restart a hot rotary. We both said to the driver, "..right rear's done! Let's get the berkeley out of here!!.." at the same damn time.
I also must admit..this is one time that I didn't call the Stewards a "wuss" for calling a full-course yellow.
Apologies again for the length..but somtimes it takes a bunch of words to explain a complicated thing.