Learning how to turn-off distractions and focus on only the essential information you need to drive your race car is a still that needs to be developed by most new racers.

“There are 1,000 channels of information coming at you and you have to figure out what are the most important ones,” explained GT racer Andy Lally. “There are probably 20 important things and all the rest are white noise. You kind of check off the box – OK, that vibration is fine, that little bit of slide, that compliance, that rebound … all those things are OK; check it off the list and think, ‘OK, next time I feel that, I can ignore it.’ You focus and whittle down to the things you need to feel.

“You have to figure it out – is it the tire, or the car,” Lally continued. “Is the tire always going to do that or is there something that I can do with the shock, the spring, the swaybar to make the car better? The answer is almost always ‘yes.’”

Lally was discussing the challenges in adjusting his style to drive a Global MX-5 Cup car. Most of his racing is done in GT3 cars, but he was taking the opportunity of the Global Mazda MX-5 Cup Challenge at Sebring to try something different. But something different has a learning curve, and that’s something every racer deals with in learning, whether it’s a new car or a new tire.

“Start with the things that touch the ground and move up from there,” explains Mazda factory driver and driver coach Tom Long, speaking on how to focus on the important stuff. “Think about the tires and the contact patch … if it’s a vibration, maybe it’s pickup on the tire, maybe a flat spot, maybe an imbalanced wheel. Then move that up into the suspension – springs, swaybars, dampers.”

The idea is to focus on things you can do something about and ignore the rest. Much of that comes with experience, says 2017 USF2000 champion Oliver Askew. But comparing lap times with others to see how you stack up may indicate that what you’re feeling isn’t really a problem, he notes.

“Maybe you can only get so much out of it,” says Askew. “If you’re feeling something that’s consistent, that’s not changing when you work on the car, if that issue is not changing and you’re still competitive, maybe the track conditions and tire translate to that issue. That’s a telltale sign that there’s nothing you can do about it.”

For some drivers, though, just moving on isn’t always so simple. Once something gets into your brain, it’s easy to obsess about an inconsequential car behavior that you can’t do anything about. Long has a few ideas about that topic.

“If you’re distracted by something, you need to get back in your rhythm,” says Long. “The way to do that would be focusing on your points. I’m looking at my brake points and I’m going to focus on that; the gear I want to use in the corner; getting a good run off the corner. Focus your mind on the things you want to do and push out the negative aspects so that keeps you focused.”

The most important role for you as a driver is to keep your focus on what’s important at the moment. If you do that you’ll get the most out of the time on track.