
DENVER, NC (October 14, 2015) – One year ago, a commercial welder in Canada had a dream to race professionally. She scraped, saved, and sacrificed daily in order to have enough money simply to race a single event at Daytona.
Fast forward a full year. That very same commercial welder has overcome obstacles, broken down barriers and carried herself to the precipice of history. Following the event at Kansas this weekend, Sarah Cornett-Ching is in position to become the highest finishing female rookie in the history of the ARCA Racing Series presented by Menards.
But her successes weren’t without struggles.
In the initial ARCA pre-season tests at Daytona, Sarah was in the top 15 in speed with the legacy SB2 engine package, but the new ARCA Ilmor 396 technology advanced prior to raceday in February. Despite the engine disadvantage and other bad luck, Sarah turned enough heads to find funding for the rest of the year through her media and charity work.
During her second career ARCA start, she was swept up in a first-lap crash at Mobile. But she persevered to a top 15 finish. At Nashville, the team fought handling problems after a lapped car knocked the front end out of alignment and yet she still nearly cracked the top ten at the end of the race.
“It was a bit overwhelming the first few races we ran this season,” said Cornett-Ching. “We had crazy things happen and a bunch of bad luck, but I believe that helped me to gel that much quicker with the team and to get comfortable faster than maybe I would have otherwise.”
As the season wore on, the No. 2 team made a habit of fighting adversity and overcoming it. The rookie driver gradually worked her way up in the standings, sitting as high as sixth, just a few markers out of the top five.
The adversity trend continued at the second Pocono race when a defective engine relegated Sarah to the garage before the checkered flag. At Springfield, she drove one of the five fastest cars on track through the field until temperature issues within her ARCA Ilmor powerplant sent her to pit road for several laps.
However, it wasn’t all bad news throughout the season. She set the record for highest finishing female in an ARCA road course event in New Jersey. She captured a bundle of top ten finishes at some of the tour’s most difficult tracks and drove through the field at Chicago to finish eighth after missing the drivers meeting.
Entering Kansas, Cornett-Ching sits 60 points out of sixth in the standings, the equivalent of only twelve on-track positions. If she is able to ascend back to sixth, she will tie the overall year-end finishing mark for any female in ARCA competition set by former NASCAR Sprint Cup driver Shawna Robinson in 2000.
No matter how Kansas plays out, Sarah Cornett-Ching is truly living her dream. One year ago, the experiences she has been part of this season were only dreams in her head and countless people quietly had their doubts if they would ever materialize. As 2015 comes to a close, those doubters will continue to talk, but Sarah plans on exceeding her own expectations and working towards goals and records that many said were once unattainable.
For more information on Sarah Cornett-Ching, visit her website atwww.sccracing.com, “like” her on Facebook at facebook.com/sccracing, and follow her on Twitter (@SCornettChing). The final race of the 2015 ARCA Racing Series presented by Menards can be seen live on Fox Sports 1 on Saturday, October 16 at 8:30pm ET.










