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Rally: Frankenstein takes on The Rock

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  • Rally: Frankenstein takes on The Rock

    The Globe and Mail (Canada)
    September 9, 2011 Friday

    Frankenstein takes on The Rock;
    'They say this is the iron man of motorsports events and I'm expecting
    it to be a very special challenge'

    by BOB ENGLISH



    More than 80 competitors will click their cars into gear and
    accelerate out of St. John's next Monday morning to face five days of
    the best, and maybe the worst, this rugged part of Canada can throw at
    them as they take part in the milestone 10th annual edition of the
    2,200-kilometre Targa Newfoundland Rally.

    Included in the strong international field facing what promises to be
    one of the toughest Targas ever staged will be factory-backed rally
    racers and some very serious private entries driving modern machinery
    bearing the badges of Dodge, Fiat, Porsche, Subaru, Mini, Kia, Lotus,
    Ferrari, Lamborghini, Maserati, Nissan, BMW, VW and Toyota as well as
    classics such as a Ford Falcon Sprint, Acadian Canso, Chevy Camaro and
    a Datsun 240Z.

    Plus a lone 1973 Porsche 914 - affectionately known as Frankenstein -
    steered by an American more familiar with facing the challenges of
    rugged coasts from offshore at the helm of a twin-hulled yacht than on
    twisting shoreline roads behind the wheel of a vintage mid-engined
    rally car. Adding to the drama is that Targa will also be he and his
    co-driver's first rally.

    Gregor Tarjan of East Setauket, N.Y., is a very unusual guy in many
    ways, but not untypical of those who decide to test themselves in
    Targa. "I love to drive. It's the core of my love of cars," says
    Tarjan, and he expects Targa to represent a unique challenge.

    "My brother Michael and I have dreamed of doing the Paris Dakar rally
    and the Carrera Panamericana, but they're big-ticket events and far
    away." And maybe they'll do them, he says, but Targa was right on the
    doorstop.

    "I'd been eyeing Targa for six or seven years, but never had the right
    car, or the funds or the time. But this year I said I'm going to pull
    the trigger." His brother's schedule won't allow him to be in the
    co-driver's seat, but good friend Peter Archey, a mechanic and
    ex-racer, will fill that role.

    For Tarjan, now 49, Targa likely will, as it has for many, prove the
    high point of their involvement with automobiles, which in his case
    goes back a long way. Born in Vienna into an Armenian family, he
    developed an early passion for motor sport and sailing, which
    developed further on his arrival in New York as a teenager.

    After completing a degree in art history, he tacked into a job as a
    photographer with the New York Times, then altered course into yacht
    design, helping to create America's Cup winner Stars and Stripes in
    1986. He then found a berth in high-end auto auctioneering before
    moving back to Europe to establish a couple of art galleries and
    manufacture carpets.

    He's also an expert on pre-Columbian textiles, on which he's written a
    book. But he now earns his living as a specialist in, and distributor,
    of cruising multi-hull and international catamarans - he's written a
    couple of books on these too - through his company Aeroyacht Inc.

    Plans to compete in Targa began to coalesce with the purchase of the
    1973 Porsche 914 a couple of years ago.

    Tarjan had spent time on the track driving about as fierce a car as
    most would ever want to run, a Porsche Turbo S, but decided to back
    things down a notch - "I'm not a superhero" - and go vintage racing as
    " a form of risk management." This he did initially in a 1958 Peerless
    GT (he also owns a 1925 Stutz 695 Speedster), but decided he wanted
    something that handled like the twin-turbo but without its "killer
    instincts."

    Enter the Porsche 914, fresh from winning the Porsche Club of
    America's California autocross championship in 2009.

    The Porsche 914 was the product of an alliance between Porsche and
    Volkswagen in the late 1960s when the former needed a new entry-level
    car and the latter wanted something sportier than its Karmann Ghia.
    The partnership would combine VW production brawn and Porsche panache
    and brains, but the result wasn't quite what either had hoped for.

    The car that emerged was mid-engined - in 914/4 form with VW's 80-hp,
    1.7-litre, flat-four and in 914/6 versions with Porsche's 2.0-litre
    flat-six - and clad in two-seater bodywork that was immediately
    controversial.

    The 914 was produced from 1969 to 1976 and sold in Europe as a
    VW-Porsche and in North America as a Porsche only. Porsche-philes
    proved 914-phobic, however, and only 3,360 914/6s were built, but the
    914/4 did better with a total of 115,646.

    Tarjan's 914/4 has been improved to GT spec and its engine modified to
    make 140 hp. He uses it on the track and for autocrossing, and now
    with some additional mods to suit Newfoundland roads, it will make its
    rallying debut in the Targa class on Monday.

    Having the personal signature of Vic Elford on the hood - a racer who
    became a legend driving Porsches in Sicily's Targa Florio open-road
    race - should serve well as a go-fast talisman in that event's
    Newfoundland namesake.

    Tarjan says that for a road-racer the thought of arriving at corner
    apexes he's never seen before in half a dozen special stages a day for
    five days is a bit daunting, although after three Atlantic crossings
    under sail and countless other long hauls he figures he can deal with
    the mental stress. "But they say this is the iron man of motorsports
    events and I'm expecting it to be a very special challenge."

    And it will likely live up to his expectations, as it has for others
    over the event's now decade-long history.

    You can follow next week's event at www.targanewfoundland.com



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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