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RECREATION : TWO-TRACK MIND : Sue Pittinato Takes On Ventura Raceway After Establishing Herself at Saugus

July 07, 1989|VINCE KOWALICK | Times Staff Writer

What is a nice girl like Sue Pittinato doing dressed in grimy racing coveralls, preparing to wedge a crash helmet over her curly brown mane and climb into her pink and purple Chevelle for a few laps around the track at Saugus Speedway?

Oh, please! Enough chauvinist comments. And no more jokes about women drivers. Hasn't she heard enough in her six-year racing career?

Pittinato, 26, is one of the few women behind the wheel at either Saugus or Ventura Raceway and the only woman to race regularly in the Street Stock division at Saugus. Between pit stops at her parents' home in West Hills, Pittinato, along with racing partner Jon Christensen of Palmdale, is the only driver to race regularly at both tracks.

Competing in a predominantly male sport, however, has made her the target of occasional sexist barbs. As if moving up from the Hobby Stock division, in which she finished eighth last season, was not difficult enough, Pittinato has had to adjust to a new field of competitors in her rookie season on the one-fifth-mile dirt oval at Ventura.

"She's pretty damn good," says Christensen, a 10-year Saugus veteran. "We always tease her, 'You drive just as good as a guy.' She kind of gets mad."

For the most part, however, Pittinato, who flashes a friendly smile and laughs heartily when recalling her racing encounters, is not offended. "It has made me uncomfortable," she says. "But they're treating me OK now."

Off the track Pittinato works for an insurance company, reviewing worker-compensation claims. But on the track, she insists that she is not making a feminist statement. And she is not, as you may have guessed, the product of a tomboy, grease monkey, hand-me-that-wrench childhood.

"I really don't know anything about cars," she says. "Not as much as I need to know. It's not a lack of wanting to know; I want to learn. I'm not totally mechanically inclined."

So, if you'll pardon the sexist cliche, exactly what \o7 is \f7 a nice girl like Sue Pittinato doing in a stock car? Quite simply, just trying to have some good, filthy fun.

"I like it," she says. "I love it. I've always liked fast cars. Not that I always wanted to do it, but once I did it. . . . It's almost like an addiction."

As for the attention, she adds, "I think it's neat because I want more women to get into it."

Based on her track record, Pittinato sets a good example. She is 11th among the Ventura oval division points leaders and has won one main event and two heat races. At Saugus, Pittinato is 32nd and has yet to win a main event. But her place in the standings is deceiving because she refuses to compete in figure 8 main events, in which drivers earn roughly half their points.

"I am frightened, in a way," she said of figure 8 events. And despite the barbs at both tracks, Pittinato has earned the respect of fellow drivers as a qualified competitor.

"The first thing you think is that, 'She's a girl and I don't want to bang on her,' " said Rick Crow of Canyon Country, who also moved this season from Hobby Stock to Street Stock. "But then you think, 'That doesn't matter because she's just as good as anyone.' As far as I'm concerned, she warrants any treatment that I warrant. In fact, I ran into her a couple of weeks ago."

Pittinato has fared better at Ventura where she "loves the dirt."

"She is better than, I'd say, 85% of the guys out here," said Charles Utts of Camarillo, the track's Street Stock points leader. "She doesn't want to tear up the equipment like a lot of drivers in the lower echelon of racing. I don't know her background, but she's been hanging around some good people."

That includes Christensen, who has sacrificed his own career this season to serve as Pittinato's mechanic, although he does get on the track weekly, using Pittinato car to drive in the figure 8 events that she sits out. Three months ago, Christensen, wrench in hand, approached Pittinato in the pits at Saugus. They have been a team since.

"A lot of the guys here will come over and start helping you," Pittinato said. "They don't ask, they just come over and start helping you. Some of them stick around, some of them don't."

Christensen, whose car has remained idle this season, says that he is committed to Pittinato's cause. "I think that with the right equipment Sue could be just as fast as anybody," he said. "As a matter of fact, we're gonna start winning some races.

"She's as good as any of the guys. I keep referring to her like the guys do and I don't want to talk like that. She \o7 is\f7 a lady."

Becoming one of the, er, guys, however, hasn't been easy, especially at Ventura where Utts describes the atmosphere as cliquish.

"I'm sure she was a little uneasy," Utts said, "because, usually, the Ventura crowd doesn't race at Saugus. So, she's not only a girl, she's stepping into a scene where all the racers have grown up together. So we're all thinking, 'What's this lady going to do?' "

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