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April 25, 2009 Hard work and 'drive' leads Iles to Grand Prix winWEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. -
Iles, an industrial management major from Mt. Vernon, Ill., moved into third by the 14th lap, worked his way into the lead by lap 40 and held on for the remainder of the 160-lap race. This is Iles' fourth Grand Prix and his first win. "It feels fantastic," he said after the race. "It's like a big weight's been lifted off my shoulders. This is something I've been wanting really bad since I was probably 6 years old." Iles attributed his victory to hard work and conservative driving on the track. "My dad used to tell me when I was younger, 'Don't be dumb, be smart.' So I took a Sharpie and wrote on my roll cage, 'Be smart.' I kept looking at that and remembered that. "There's no chance to recover in something like this. You've just got to stay out of trouble, and that's what I tried to do."
"It's bittersweet," Noonan said about his second-place finish. "In my mind, I think I could have had that win. But he was obviously the better driver today." Noonan, like Iles, was driving in his fourth Purdue Grand Prix. "I've been driving go karts since I was 12 years old, so after a while it becomes kind of second nature," he said. Jake Murphy, a senior majoring in interdisciplinary engineering, and Ben McMurray, a senior majoring in fisheries and aquatic science from Trafalgar, Ind., finished third and fourth, respectively. Official results of the 2009 Grand Prix will be released Monday (April 27) following a standard review by the race's scoring board.
The highlight of this year's race was the brand new track at the corner of McCormick and Cherry Lane. The new track is a 4 feet wider than the previous track, which was used more than four decades. Grand Prix Ambassadors presided over race-related events. They were Rebecca Pankop of Albion, Ind., who's graduating in May with a bachelor's degree in nursing, and Max Vande Vaarst of Wayne, N.J., a sophomore majoring in English education and history. Ambassadors serve as spokespeople for the foundation, encouraging race support and business sponsorship and perform other duties. The ambassadors each received a $1,000 scholarship from the Purdue Grand Prix Foundation. Fifteen other students received scholarships ranging from $250-$750. The foundation receives money from Toyota Motor Corp., Coca-Cola, Purdue Intercollegiate Athletics, WAZY 96.5, WLFF 95.3, WSHP 95.7, Purdue Memorial Union, Bosch, Lockheed Martin, Bowen Engineering and Army ROTC. Writer: Soumitro Sen, 765-496-9711, ssen@purdue.edu Source: Adam Trost, 765-438-3678, atrost@purdue.edu
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