Showing posts with label Indy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Indy. Show all posts

Sunday, May 29, 2011

Never Disappointing: Another Classic from IMS


Our view from the Southwest Vista

For those of you who have visited here for a while, you know that J and I verbally spar on the merit of Indy Car Racing and MLB. I'm not much of a fan of professional baseball, and he feels the same about open wheel racing.

But the magnitude and spectacle around the Indianapolis 500 is pretty hard to debate...but some of the logistical planners around today's race tried to ruin the day, in my opinion.

The race wasn't very well-attended last year, by Indy's standards, and seemingly, those who made decisions around the track thought this year would be the same...it wasn't. The traffic into the oldest, greatest race venue in the world was slower than I can recall in my 25 years attending the race. A pedestrian was struck and a few more accidents occurred near the track this morning, and that was the excuse we were hearing on the radio, but as we got close, we found out that wasn't the real reason.

At nearly every intersection where applicable, Indianapolis Police Officers and Marion County Sheriffs were doing a very poor, very unprofessional job of directing traffic. Perhaps the reason this was surprising is because we've become pretty used to them doing a good job and moving us to the track with ease...it seemed their job was to make law-abiding citizens frustrated and angry- they were great at that. The real problem with that is there are so many people from outside of the city here just to watch the race- they didn't get to see the best of the city today, in my opinion. But, the drivers made up for the problems outside the track.

The field looked amazingly-sound on paper. There were no under-qualified Milka Duno, no Dr. Jack Miller types. In fact, the rookies seemed solid and the part-time (not full-time on the circuit) drivers were a good-looking group. Solid, but sometimes slow, John Andretti was in, Always-fast in Indy Ed Carpenter was set in Sarah Fisher's ride. Bertrand "The Sandwich" Baguette has a year under his belt. Thomas Schechter and Paul Tracy are madmen at times, but always agressive and fast. Ex-winners, Buddy Rice and Dan Wheldon strengthened the field by their preference. The only guy that really bothered or scared me for the rest of the field's sake really, was E.J. Viso. My best hope was that he would take himself out without sweeping anyone else up in the mess (kinda got my wish).

My family and I discussed recent race winners and couldn't think of a true dark horse winning in the last few decades. In hindsight, names like Lazier and Rice seem that way, but the race was a shell of itself in the CART/IRL split days. Teams were weaker and tons of underqualied drivers were the norm.

Andretti, Ganassi and Penske have pretty-much owned the Borg Warner for the last decade. Turns out, even in a spec series, the best engineers with the greatest resources and the best drivers still dominate.

So, when Ganassi's henchmen dominated for much of the first half, no one was surprised. But, Alex Tagliani (Sam Schmidt Racing) and Dan Wheldon (Bryan Herta Autosport) kept the red cars honest by mixing it up when the opportunity arose. But, Penske machines were no where to be found...and I loved that. Plus, the Andretti machines were seemingly continuing what they had done for the past few weeks in Indy.

I don't dislike Roger Penske. I hold no grudge toward him for ancient history...in fact, I think he's great for the sport because his teams seem to be better-prepared than anyone, usually. This month was not a typical May for Penske though. They struggled finding speed in practice and qualifying. That said, this seems to happen for one reason or another every decade or so for Penske.

The second half of the race was much different much to the chagrin of Chip Ganassi. The dominant 1-2 punch of the Flying Scot (II) and The Iceman was disrupted as long stretches of green racing and green flag pitstops that helped a ton of old favorites get into contention. Danica Patrick and Marco Andretti found their way into the top-10. Tony Kanaan scratched and clawed his way into the lead pack as did Graham Rahal. Oriol Servia raced aggressively and stayed out of trouble, and second-year American racer, J.R. Hillebrand hung around quietly.

The closing third of the race was a great example of why I like to watch this race. Fuel/pit strategy, new leaders coming out of nowhere, drivers putting it all on the line and an unexpected finish were the defining aspects of this period.

Old Indy fans loved watching Rahal revive the family name as he was on top. Then, the large crowd reveled in Danica leading. As she ran out of fuel, the crowd loved being surprised as "The Sandwich" held the lead, but the best was yet to come.

Baguette was forced to get a splash of fuel and relinquish his hard-fought lead, and rising star, J.R. Hildebrand took control. Everyone wondered about his fuel situation around me, but he kept his foot to the floor 7, then 6, then 5 laps remained. The white flag came out and the young American still held the lead as Wheldon, Rahal, Dixon and Kanaan fought behind him and hoped he didn't have the fuel to go the distance...But he did.

He flew around the 2.5 mile track but when he got to turn four, in view of the flag that was prepared to present his checkered flags, he stayed on the gas as he passed lapped traffic and got into the marbles. His National Guard-sponsored Dallara slammed the wall but kept enough speed to clearly get to the finish line...just not with the lead. Dan Wheldon's bright orange and White bullet streaked past the wounded machine of Hillenbrand without the yellow light flashing...and Wheldon claimed the unexpected victory, his second at Indy.

Here are a few more notes from the day:
-The double-file starts worked much better than I thought they would...and were very exciting. That said, I'm not sure if they'll work as well with a less-experienced field, but I think they served their purpose quite well for the most part.

-The Honda/Dallara era is over...and once again, the Honda engines performed amazingly. Be assured that while the two additional engines offered will return the race to what it should be, we'll NEVER see a more consistant engine than what we've watched during this era. I'm pleased that Dallara will be producing the 2012 safety cell (tub) as these cars have been astoundingly-safe.

Now, let's get back to the 230s, Indy Car...the technology can now keep the drivers safe at those speeds.
One "open wheel" concept for '12

-Hopefully the new era of Indy car racing will see a return of pace cars outside of the Chevy family. The Camaro convertible looked really slick today, but I really miss multiple manufacturers being part of the race.

Why not?

How about this for an idea: Tesla Roadsters and Model Ss pacing the field?

-Danica will probably be gone soon as a full-time Indy driver...at least for a few years, and it'll be OK. Sure, Mann, Beatriz and de Sylvestra aren't as easy on the eyes as the Go Daddy girl, but the fact that so many women are competing in the league, is nothing but positive, in my opinion. If they can go fast enough, let 'em race...and while there are great parts to the circus around Patrick, her whining and (more recently) acting like the victim just pisses me off. Her performance in the Nationwide Series has been OK, at best, but we have no reason to believe she'll compete any more in Neckcar. I hope the cashgrab is worth it for the sassy vixen.

-I hope Hildebrand, Rahal, and Bell get upgraded rides in '12. It'd be nice to see a handful of young, talented American drivers give this series a boost and become household names a la Mears, Michael Andretti and Unser (you pick which one).

-In the same way, I'm hoping for greater sponsorship dollars, and in turn, better resources and equipment for teams like Sam Schmidt Motorsports, KV Racing, Panther, Rahal and others as the economy (hopefully) continues to recover in the coming years. I'm also hoping the hayday of Nascar is nearly over and TV advertising dollars can get fed back into the unified open wheel series once again.

-Most importantly, I'm choked up, if not moved to tears, each year before the race as members of the U.S. military are honored for their brave service. I love the fact that so much reverence is shown by the oft rowdy, and sometimes drunk crowd at IMS when the 21 gun salute is fired, taps is played, patriotic songs are sung and the gigantic flag is unfurled.

Thank You.
For those of you who have protected, and continue to protect our country- Thank you. A few days a year isn't enough to let you men and women know how much your sacrifice is appreciated.

Friday, May 28, 2010

Vroom!

Who's ready for some open-wheel racing?



"It makes it difficult on the drivers behind"? (End of clip.) Hey-yo!

I like to call the following clip "WHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHEEEEEEEEEEEEE!!!"



Here's one where your butt must just pucker up the second you feel the air get under your ride:



And, of course, an IndyCar post isn't complete without a clip of the most successful a driver on the circuit.



Play ball!

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Wooden Tradition Officially Dead

In a move that's been coming for a while, the Wooden Tradition is done in Indianapolis...at least for now.

The Boilermaker BlockBuster will return for the first time since 2003, though calling a game against Indiana State a "blockbuster" is a little bit of an overstatement.

This is a real shame, because John Wooden is a source of pride for many Boilermakers and a name that still carries some serious weight. When "Coaches versus Cancer" and "The Great Alaskan Shootout" and things of that nature can garner good teams (or any teams), then the "Wooden Tradition" should be able to as well.

As we've said on our podcast before, this would be really easy to make a tremendously popular event. Continue holding it in Indianapolis and have four regular teams, such as Purdue, Indiana, Notre Dame and Butler. Have any of those play any of the others in one game, and the other two play in another game. No need for a finals if that's too much to ask -- just two great, in-state matchups that, despite being in-state, would have a national interest. Especially now, with Purdue and Butler being such national powers.

Alternatively -- like if, for instance, Notre Dame continues to be afraid to play Purdue -- you could have it be Purdue and IU every year, and then invite one or two other teams on a rotating basis. It could be smaller schools that would jump at a chance to play in a packed, city venue against a nationally-recognized program...or it could be a well-known school from another state that comes in. Wouldn't it be good for, say, Texas to come to Indy and play Purdue or IU, for example? From Texas' perspective, that's one more fertile recruiting ground that it couldn't hurt to have a presence in. Am I talking crazy talk? Or is this simply far too logical to ever happen?

It doesn't have to be difficult and it doesn't have to be something where Purdue is desperate to find opponents. Commit to playing in someone else's hometown gathering in order to get them to come play. Then if that other team can bring in a Purdue or an IU to their local November/December basketball shootout, all the better for them.

I know we're not that smart and we've figured this out. So it can't be that hard.

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

No Time For Regrets

Showing that they weren't going to lament too long over the loss of F1, the IMS & Tony George announced that Moto GP will be coming to the world's most famous racing venue next year. The whispers of this move have been around for about five years, but the announcement showed that the IMS will be just fine without F1.

I like this relationship quite a bit. There is a strong following of Moto GP in North America, but the nearest stop on the circuit currently is in California. This race should bring fans from Europe, possibly the Far East, as well as the Eastern US. Plus, we won't have to see Eccelstone or Mosley for a few years (until they come back with their hats in their hands).

If you've never seen this form of racing, check it out some time...it's ridiculously fast and seems to be the most dangerous-looking form of racing in the world. In my opinion, it's pretty entertaining stuff.

Fixing Open Wheel in America

We discussed this a couple of days ago- how open wheel racing in America, specifically the IRL & Champ Car circuits need eachother. I have a three-part solution that would go a long way in fixing the product.

First, a $5 million winner's purse for the Indy 500 would help. This prize might bring hedging Champ Car teams back to the IRL circuit...at the very least, it would be an incentive for drivers who love the 500. Maybe drivers like Bourdais, Junqueira & others over for at least one race, if not the entire season. Champ Car already has no events during the month of May...it seems to be catered for such a move.

You may even see NASCAR drivers come give it a whack again. How great would it be to see the 500 field with Gordon, Stewart, Johnson, Champ Car drivers and the best of the IRL drivers in one field? Plus, this flux of talent would make qualifications exciting again (thus generating advertising dollars throughout the month). The second part of this plan is George needs to go to NASCAR and politely ask them to move the Coca Cola 600 back to Monday or forward to Saturday. This would give Indy the stage by itself on Sunday.

The third and final part of my plan is more radical, but I think would be an amazing olive branch to Champ Car from George. If Champ Car is not going to fold (which to me, still doesn't seem to be definite), team up with that league to form a new Grand Prix in September at the IMS. The IRL season would be over, so you might get a few of that league's drivers to come over for just this race. Plus, if this race succeeded, IMS wouldn't need to get back into negotiations with F1. Granted, this portion of my plan is probably a pipe dream since George doesn't want to negotiate with Champ Car either, but I think this solution would help all sides.

Friday, July 13, 2007

Au Revoir US Grand Prix

Much like NFL Europa, very few sports fans in America care about the US Grand Prix that has run at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway for the last 8 years. I'm right there with them, but, I live in the Indianapolis area...so the event, or should I say, its fans, have been in my face each year. Despite the fact that this event brings in quite a few Euros, Pounds & Dollars to Indy, I'm really happy it's going away.

My dislike affair began the first year the race came to town. I was downtown getting something to eat and was suddenly surrounded by drunk, non-showered, ballet shoe & tight pant-wearing Euros. To tell you the truth, I could deal with that...I worked for a German company in my first years out of Purdue. So every six months, at my employer's sales meetings I dealt with something pretty similar. Plus, drunk race fans are the norm, if you've been in Indy during one of the three major races held at the IMS (Indy 500, Brickyard 400, USGP).

But, I couldn't handle what happened at the race of 2005.

Michelin and Bridgestone are the two "tyre" sponsors/suppliers of the USGP & the greater F1 circuit. Many of the drivers on the circuit didn't like the course at Indy because they thought it was tooooo scary! Supposedly, the Michelin "tyres" supplied to half of the teams didn't hold the track as well as they would have liked. So, instead of trying to solve the problem diplomatically or at least like men, these race teams decided to boycott the 2005 race...the morning of the event. The result was the 123,000 ticket-buying fans were left with a fast parade of about 8 cars. Honestly, I couldn't tell the difference between that and a normal F1 event, but the die hards could. That "race" completely wrecked the relationship between Tony George and megalomaniac Max Mosley. Although George took the high road in the presser on Thursday 7/12, I'll say what he was thinking, "So long A-hole!"

Mosley, who was born with a silver spoon in his mouth, has spoken and acted as if he and his organization are entitled to everything he's desired since he became President of the F1. I'm extremely pleased the IMS had the gonads to stand up to him.

I'm sure both the IMS & F1 will be just fine following this parting of ways...and I can absolutely tell you that the greater-Indianapolis area, and more specifically, Boilerdowd, will be much better off sans the USGP.