2012 was the 36th running of the Sno*Drift Rally in and around Atlanta Michigan, it was also the 10th anniversary of my attending and far more interestingly both by transition from pure spectator to participant of sorts and the return to the sport of Steve Nowicki. Who’s Steve Nowicki you ask? Well he’s three times American Production rally champion (well he was 20 years ago) and in some circles he’s name is uttered with the same hushed awe as Buffem and Woodener. Who Buffem and Woodener you ask? Well you either know or you’re a normal well-adjusted human with a social life and people don’t avoid you at parties as you start to wax lyrical over the history of North American rally drivers.
For the past ten years I’ve gone up to spectate either with Dan, another friend Alan or both. Initially we went up for the Saturday stages and followed the recommended spectator guide, later we caught Friday night as well and eventually started plotting rout maps in advance. Over the last couple of years this has exploded with me spending hours of what otherwise would have been productive time plotting stage maps, times, routs in and out of out of very unofficial spectating spots. I have a full binder with large and small scale maps with every piece of ‘essential’ information I could ever need for the rally. Also cheesy fake name/number panels for the car etc. Generally acting like a frustrated co driver, just without the needed overdeveloped endocrine system that generates sufficient natural Prozac and Xanax to make me able to sit next to a half crazed driver at 100+mph on sheet ice five feet from a hundred year old tree that could shorten a car (and my life) in less than the blink of an eye.
This year was to be the biggie, even without supporting Steve as part of his service crew. Dan and I had decided to take Friday off, travel up Thursday night and catch the whole rally from start to finish instead of arriving around the second Friday service. Discovering we could be part of a real team was just the icing on the cake. That pesky thing called work kept getting in the way so my rout book wasn’t as neat as usual, but come 6:30pm on Thursday we were in his R32 Golf and heading north through a depressing lack of snow, to meet the team.
The Team:
Steve Nowicki: Three time Production rally champion, Driver, sponsor, boss, wannabe rally god.
Jim Brandt: Co Driver who’s first ever rally was as Co-Driver on the 1974 P.O.R. then a part of what would become the WRC. Imagine starting out on a WRC event today!
Kevin Egere: Crew Chief whose long and distinguished motorsports resume consisted of him being the first to answer Steve’s call for a Chief.
Bill Gottschalk: Family owns the hose we stayed at (many many thanks again), Lawyer who knows more lawyer jokes than the rest of the team put together.
Jared Rundel: One of those arty types who went to CCS, owner of ‘The Big Black Dirty Ho’ an Ex-DNR Chebby Tahoe that ferried up to 6 people everywhere and anywhere, many thanks.
Dan Christie: Another of those CCS Arty types, creator of the team logo and very handy with a squeegee!
The car: A 1980 Plymouth Arrow pretending to be a Misterbitchy Lancer. When I first saw pictures of the car I thought ‘Cool, he’s gone for a retro paint scheme” It turns out I was wrong. Steve bought the car from Washington. The car had blown a head gasket in 1991 and been pushed into a barn. The owner started to strip it with the intention of building a rally car based on what Steve had run previously! The owner then had health issues, lost interest and the car sat until 2004ish when Steve went searching for a ‘new’ Arrow. He tracked this one down, bought it from the owner who was only too happy to know it was going to be built and rallied and he’s been working on it slowly for the last few years. This was the cars first ever rally. Poor thing.