![]() |
Michigan
Turn Marshals
Newsletter |
![]() |
|
Home | Become a Member | Bylaws | Corner Store | Donate | Events | Gear Guide | News | Newsletters | Our Friends | Spotters' Guide | Training | Tracks | Photos | Winter Party | Worker Registration
|
|
but
those guys on the corners are our eyes out there." More
than 170,000 racing fans are expected to make their way to Exhibition
Place this weekend, looking for their annual fix of speed and noise. No
one gets a better dose of the action than the marshals, who have only
waist-high concrete barriers and reinforced chain-link fences separating
them from the cars everyone has come to see. "It's
very exciting, being that close," Coburn says. "A lot of
marshals have a yen to be a driver. In my case it wasn't in the cards, but
this is the next best thing." The
positions are entirely voluntary. Marshals pay their own travel expenses
and accommodations to fulfill their passion. The Coburns were at race
tracks around North America for 112 days last summer. This year they will
be trackside for about 80 days, standing for hours in everything from
blistering heat to downpours, sometimes even snow. "We've
never added up how much we've spent," Coburn says. Occasionally,
the cost is life itself. This past March, a Formula One marshal at the
Australian Grand Prix was killed when he was hit by a stray tire after a
collision involving Jacques Villeneuve. He was the third trackside worker
to be killed in less than 12 months. This
year's Indy marks the fifth anniversary of the death of Gary Avrin of
Calgary, the marshal who was killed at the Molson Indy when struck by a
tire in the aftermath of the collision that also killed driver Jeff
Krosnoff. Another marshal, Barbara Johnston of Michigan, who was standing
beside Avrin, was also injured. In 1990 a marshal was killed at the
Championship Auto Racing Teams event in Vancouver. "I
knew Gary, he worked with us at other corners before that year," says
Coburn, whose station this week is just down the straight from the spot
where Avrin was killed. "It's always very sad when something happens,
but there are extreme risks in this sport, not only for drivers, but for
all of us. |
right
there that I could quit if it was going to upset me too much. Or I could
say he was doing something he loved when he died, just the way I love
marshalling." The
shape of the Indy didn't stand still after the 1996 incident. There was a
coroner's investigation and the people running the event took a hard look
at their procedures. The result was more fencing, more barriers, more tire
walls and new positions for some stations. The
events in Australia inspired more calls for safety changes. Former F1
great Jackie Stewart suggested track workers should be outfitted in flak
jackets and head protection (veteran marshals tell stories about getting
knocked down by stray pieces of asphalt or other objects that can be
kicked up by tires). CART
officials are looking at ways to supplement the manual flag system with
electronic signals, meaning marshals can be moved from the more vulnerable
positions on the course. Until
that happens -- and even after -- marshals will protect themselves by
watching each other's back and taking cover behind the concrete when they
see a car getting sideways, standing up again only after the thump and the
shrapnel-like debris has flown over head. "If
I thought I was in danger I wouldn't be here," Coburn says. "You
can stand for hours with a yellow flag in your hand and nothing happens. "But
that's a successful day at the track, when nothing happens that
shouldn't." VSCDA
has been a strong supporter of MTM Let’s
support their events by signing up for the events on the calendar or
electronic registering on the Michigan Turn Marshal’s website http://www.michiganturnmarshals.org/EventRegistration.asp
The cars that race are the ones a few of our members remember when they were new and the best in technology. Join the workers at VSCDA and enjoy the envy and love of these cars and their owners. Ideas
Wanted on Worker Recruitment, Renewal and Retention
|
Please E-mail your comments or suggestions to webmaster@michiganturnmarshals.org
© 1999 Michigan Turn Marshals - This page was last updated on 01/01/10 17:41