I
still maintain my position I stated on another post. It is a matter of
perception as to what is and isn't important to race fans and the
misguided ideas that need changing.
The biggest blow to IndyCar racing's popularity is two-fold in my estimation.
First:
When the Speedway opened its doors to allow other cars onto the
Speedway to race. That came at the height of "NASCAR is the greatest
form of racing there is" and the Speedway is just a second-rate dump
unless the glorious Winston Cup cars are allowed to race there. That
move diminished the Indianapolis 500's stature in the eyes of the
casual, even some not so casual racing fans. One of the most unique
aspects of the history of the Indianapolis 500 was it was the ONLY race
at the track each year. Its non-conformity was one of the best things
about the Speedway - it separated it from all other tracks. The more
races they add to try and attract more people in August, the less
significant the 500 becomes.
Second:
With the split in open wheel racing a more devastating blow came to
IndyCar racing and it remains to this day. At the time of the split, the
perception was (at the time it was correct but no more) the "best"
drivers no longer come to the Speedway. Meanwhile the RJ Reynolds
Tobacco Company was marketing the taxi cab drivers as the best since
biblical times. The money flowed so freely out of Winston-Salem, NC that
kids who dreamed their entire life of winning Indy became Cup drivers -
can you say Jeff Gordon, Tony Stewart, Ryan Newman, Kasey Kahne! Worse
yet, the 500 even became viewed as merely a stepping stone - "now that
you have won Indy Sam Hornish, are you going to MOVE UP to NASCAR? What a
slap in the face to the Indy 500 that was/is! What a mistake that was
for Sam, but he's in NASCAR so he's great, right?
If
you want to blame Tony George for creating the problems, go ahead,
however, what is done is done. The only people we can blame for not
making it better today is ourselves for not supporting IndyCar.
So-called IndyCar fans are the biggest bunch of cry babies in the racing
world.
Here's
what I am saying, the 2013 edition of the Indianapolis 500 was one of
the most exciting races of the last decade, perhaps in the history of
the 500 itself. More different records were broken this year than in
Speedway history, including the 187.433 mph average, which was 23-years
old! Did you hear fans lining up to tell NASCAR or the media that this
is what racing is supposed to look like - NO! All I heard was people
whining that it ended under a yellow flag! So what impression does that
leave of the folks at Sports Illustrated and ESPN - it must have been a
stinker if the loyal fans are all bitching about the finish, they ought
to be doing it like NASCAR.
Let's
check out the other guys & girl. Man that race in Charlotte was
GREAT because a cable holding up a TV camera snapped and hit Kyle
Busch's car delaying the race for almost an hour so we could watch the
drivers use their Sprint Cell Phones to send pictures of their damaged
cars over "the fastest 4G Network." Then, Danica Patrick's boyfriend
tries to pass a car on the race track, suffers aero-push and starts a
14-car crash that took her out after she charged all the way from 31st
starting spot to 29th in 100 laps after a great pit call where she only
took two tires to improve track position - which to any
enlightened/bamboozled NASCAR fan is a GREAT run! What's the reaction
from your typical NASCAR fan after six hours, four lead changes among
three drivers with virtually no passing among the 43 cars who started -
That race was GREAT!!!!! And will Ricky Stenhouse , Jr. get "any"
tonight?
Ana
Beatriz passes 15 cars in the 500 without the help of a yellow flag
over 133 consecutive laps and all you hear from IndyCar fans is that she
is from Brazil and never drove a sprint car at Knoxville! Come on
IndyCar fans?
Another
misconception that is perpetuated but not true is fans watch the races
to see the cars. Really, that is a load of horse dump! The cars are
really an after thought. Old timers, ask yourself, and be honest, were
you really attracted to the Indianapolis 500 because of a Kurtis or
Watson Offy Roadster? You're lying if you say you did. You went to watch
Bill Vukovich, Jimmy Bryan, A.J. Foyt, and Parnelli Jones drive them.
You're
also full of crap if you say, "bring back the roadsters" and then say
"it's innovation that makes Indy special." During the heyday of the
roadsters they all looked like A.J. Watson built them. You say you want
innovation, but complain about the Dallara DW012. That's that most
innovative Indy car in the 21st century and all I hear out of the
non-believers is that "it's ugly." You want to know the truth - so was
the 1977 STP turbine! You loved that car didn't you? I'll be happy to
tell you why - PARNELLI JONES! If Andy had hired Bobby Grimm to drive
the car it wouldn't be in the museum. I don't hear any of you chirping
about the innovative Jack Adams Turbine. Then again, Bill Cheesbourg
drove it and missed the show.
Let's
look at some facts - that ugly car you guys are bitching about produced
34 lead changes in 2012 and 68 lead changes between 14 drivers this
year, that's 102 lead changes in two races. There weren't that many lead
changes in the Fifties! From 1950 until 1959 there were 90 lead
changes. More different drivers and teams have won races with that
"ugly" car. You want to know how many lead changes their were in 1963 -
four - Parnelli led 171 laps, Jim Clark 27, Roger McCluskey 1 and Jim
Hurtubise 1. The only real drama was if Aggie could talk Harlan Fengler
out of black flagging Jones - which he did - otherwise Jim Clark would
have won in his rookie year!
Until IndyCar management realizes a few realities they're gonna keep scratching their collective heads and getting nowhere.
1.
Only one race a year at the Indianapolis 500! No support races (Indy
Lights), no stock cars of any kind - including trucks, no Formula 1, no
MotoGp, no infield road course. Nothing is going to bring in 150,000
fans for qualifying ever again. But if you want the fans to come to see a
race, give them only ONE option, as Carl Fisher figured out in 1910 and
Wilbur Shaw and Tony Hulman kept that tradition going.
2.
The popularity of any form of racing starts with the DRIVERS. Without
star drivers people won't come. If you don't believe me, how many times
have you heard this statement, "the only reason why I even watch NASCAR
is to see how Tony Stewart is doing." Oh really, you don't watch to see
the stunning difference in the Gen 6 COT, tub of shit, from last year's
unrecognizable Gen 5 tub of shit. I thought it was about the cars?
Increased
speed is also a misconception. If more speed is what the fans want, why
do the keep coming back even though it's been 17 years since Arie
Luyendyk went 237 MPH. Fans have kept coming. Why? It can't be an
increase in speed. The Daytona track speed records are ancient. Bill
Elliott's one-lap at 210.364 was 1987 and Buddy Baker's remarkable
177.602 was set 33-years ago in 1980. If IndyCar changes the car so it
can break Luyendyk's record can you guess what will happen? The two
teams with the most money will once again dominate the races - one step
backwards! There was even more crying back then.
For
IndyCar to attract more fans they need to change is this: No one thinks
there are any "stars" driving any more. I say if marketed correctly,
folks might find out there are many drivers currently involved in
IndyCar that are star quality, we've just been conditioned over the
years to find other things to complain about, while all the time we've
been watching some very good racing in spite of what we tell others is
wrong with our sport. Yeah, the boring Texas race won't go down in
history as "great" but it also wasn't the end of the world as a lot of
folks were more than happy to tell the world. There is nothing wrong
with the cars or the overall quality of the races. Not every races is
going to produce 68 lead changes, but I would rather watch IndyCars than
that WWE Tag-Team match the Daytona 500 has become or any of the boring
races at any of the tracks the cabs are running on these days.
Let's start telling the racing world that there is a lot of GREAT stuff really going on at an IndyCar race near you!
No comments:
Post a Comment