Racing
at the top in the winter means chilling out in the summer for Robbie Malinoski.
It's the good life.
"Yeah, you bet," he says.
He spent the summer of 2005 on and off of a dirt bike, after finishing the
snowmobile circuit in third place in the pro stock national and fourth place
in the pro open national. After two races this winter he's tied for second in
pro open and a 15 point deficit means he's sitting in sixth for pro stock.
"We're actually right there. We're one point out from first in the
open," he said.
The two races were both unusual after fog rolled in and cancelled the last
day of the Duluth race. "It all got switched to Gaylord. They had two races
in Gaylord. They finished up the Duluth rounds and then they went to the
Gaylord rounds. We got to the track at 6 a.m. on Saturday and didn't leave
until 11 at night. We got there again on Sunday at 6 a.m. and I didn't get out
of there until 5. It was a long two days," he said. "It was definitely
tough on the body and it was tough on the sleds, too. We had a lot of stuff go
south on us but we got through it. Overall we did pretty good."
Malinoski has been fortunate and avoided injuries these past seasons. If
that holds true and if he can make a lot of hole shots, this contender could
be #1.
"I'm sitting pretty good in the options right now. It's pretty early to
even be thinking about that. I'm getting ready for the Canterbury , which is
on the 14 th . Hopefully we'll win some races and chase that championship,"
he added.
He'll race stronger this year, he said, because his team, Olah Racing, has
had months to train in its new Minnesota facility.
"It's something else. It's huge," he said. "It's two snow guns and a
groomer. And then inside we have a full gym. And then for the mechanics, we've
got huge area for them to work on the machines. Then we have a wash bay for
both semi trailers to drive right in and be washed up."
This all opened in the middle of last season and Malinoski said it's been
smoother and stronger to spend time on it before this season. The off-season
was spent weight training and riding motocross in Minnesota .
"We didn't do all the races, I just hit whatever and had fun with it,"
he said. "I did a lot of mountain biking, a lot of training." There was no
day job and he didn't get back to his hometown of Humboldt , Saskatchewan
often. It's Colorado that is looming in his mind. The X-games are waiting and
pressure is high to win.
"It's the one that I always seem to have some bad luck in and I've never
been able to do really well at it. And it's the one that the factories and
teams put the most pressure on to win. I don't know if it's my favorite race,
but it would definitely be great to win."
"He's finished third in Pro Stock overall and fourth in (Pro Open)
overall, so that's pretty good for a first year as a full-out pro," said
Terri Olah, co-owner of Olah Racing , based in Fergus falls, Minn. "This
is his third year with us. He gets better and better each year."