|
Medlen
succumbs to injuries suffered in recent testing
accident
Eric
Medlen, 33, who had emerged as one of the most
popular young drivers in the NHRA POWERade Drag
Racing Series, succumbed Friday afternoon to injuries
suffered when his race car crashed into a guardwall
during a Monday test session at Gainesville Raceway.
The
talented Funny Car driver never regained consciousness.
After being treated at the track, he was transported
by ShandsCair helicopter to Shands at the University
of Florida medical center where medical staff
treated him for four days for a severe closed
head injury.
"Eric
suffered from severe traumatic brain injury with
diffuse axonal injury, or DAI," said Dr.
Joseph Layon, professor of anesthesiology, surgery,
and medicine and the chief of Critical Care Medicine
at UF. "Survival rates associated with DAI
are low.
"On
Tuesday, the UF and Shands neurosurgery team performed
a craniectomy and removed the front portion of
the skull to relieve pressure and attempt to improve
blood flow to the brain," Layon explained.
"Despite receiving the most aggressive treatment,
Eric continued to have uncontrollable intracranial
pressure. His body lost the ability to manage
its salt and water levels, and he began displaying
the complicating factors associated with DAI.
"That
is when Eric's family elected to honor Eric's
wishes and remove him from the artificial life
support systems. Our hearts go out to Eric's loved
ones."
"On
behalf of the family, I want to thank the medical
staff at Shands not just for giving Eric the very
best care he could have received, but for the
compassion it showed for Eric and all those close
to him," said his father, John Medlen. "I
also want to thank the thousands of people who
offered their prayers and support to us during
this very difficult time."
As
recently as Thursday night, more than 100 drivers
and crewmembers representing every Indianapolis-based
race team attended a prayer vigil organized by
Kelly Bustos, team manager for Tuttle Motorsports,
which fields Top Fuel dragsters for 2006 Auto
Club Road to the Future Award winner J.R. Todd,
one of Medlen's closest friends in the sport.
At
Louisville, Ky., where BP/Castrol had set up booth
space for the Mid-America Trucking Show, fans
and well-wishers filled up two giant posters with
get-well wishes Thursday. Moreover, more than
4,500 individual messages of support were left
at a special e-mail address on the first day it
was activated.
"Eric
Medlen was the son I never had," said team
owner John Force. "He was the leader of my
next generation of drivers. Robert Hight, my daughter
Ashley, and I were with the family throughout
this very difficult time. This loss is a huge
blow not only to the Medlen family, but to drag
racing and to John Force Racing. I just want to
thank everybody for their support, from Larry
Smiley with Racers For Christ to the hospital
staff to the whole drag racing community. Our
prayers go out to the family."
Little
more than three years ago, Medlen took over driving
responsibilities in the Funny Car in which Tony
Pedregon won the 2003 championship. He had distinguished
himself as one of the brightest young stars on
the circuit, winning six times in his first three
seasons and never finishing outside the top five
in driver points.
A
graduate of Oakdale (Calif.) High School, where
he was a high school rodeo champion in calf roping,
Medlen trained under the watchful eye of two-time
PRCA world champion Jerold Camarillo and had contemplated
a career in pro rodeo before his father called
in 1996 to offer him a mechanic's job at John
Force Racing Inc.
After
spending one season on the team on which his father
was crew chief, he moved over one pit stall in
1997 to work on the car driven by 14-time NHRA
champion Force. Serving first as the supercharger
technician and later as a clutch specialist, he
was a member of a team that crewed Force to 50
tour victories and six championships in seven
seasons.
When
Pedregon left after the 2003 season to form his
own team, Medlen was Force's surprise pick to
fill the seat, a move that reunited him with his
father on the number-two team at JFR.
He
was the sport's top Funny Car rookie in 2004,
winning in Brainerd, Minn. He won three races
in 2005 and two in 2006, including the race contested
closest to his hometown, the Fram Autolite NHRA
Nationals at Infineon Raceway in Sonoma, Calif.
Go
to NHRA for
more
|