Open-Wheel Talent At Daytona 500 In A Big Way :: The EDJE

by Edmund Jenks | February 18, 2008 at 07:39 pm
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2008 Daytona 500 Finish

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2008 Daytona 500 Finish

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Open-Wheel Talent At Daytona 500 In A Big Way :: The EDJE

Open-Wheel Talent At Daytona 500 In A Big Way :: The EDJE

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uploaded by Edmund Jenks

That's right, open-wheel racing talent will be represented at the 50th running of the NASCAR stock car season kickoff Daytona 500 in a big way.

Champions League is what we'll choose to call them here at The EDJE. It’s a league within a league and frankly, these drivers, and their skill coming to the most prolific and commercial of world autosport racing series, NASCAR, is long overdue.

The chasm that had existed in the culture between open-wheel and “stock” car racing series was a little like Television actors not respecting Feature movie actors or either not respecting Broadway actors and visa-versa.

Get over yourselves and do what you all do best – RACE!

 

Sign of the Times – This 50th
anniversary Daytona 500 logo will be seen early and often in the countdown the
2008 running of the “Great American Race.” Image Credit:
www7.justmarketing.com

Why is it that only two open-wheel racing
team owners are fielding teams at NASCAR, and conversely, NO stock car team
owners field teams at Champ Car World Series or Indianapolis Racing
League?

Those drivers with recognizable names with ample open-wheel
racing experience are as follows (past open-wheel champions in BOLD):

Did
Not Qualify - AJ Allmendinger (2004 CCWS Rookie of the Year), Patrick Carpentier
(1997-2004 CART, 2005 IRL), Jacques
Villeneuve (1995 CART Championship, 1995 Indy 500 winner, 1997 F1
Championship)

Quailfied Car #/Position: Tony
Stewart #20/6 (1997 IRL Champion)
, Casey Mears #5/9 ( 5 CART starts,
with one top-5 finish, 3 IRL starts, no top-5 finishes/nephew of four time Indianapolis 500 winner
Rick
Mears
), Juan Pablo Montoya #42/15 (1999 CART Champion, 2000 Indy
500 Winner,F1)
, Sam Hornish Jr #77/19 (2001, 2002, 2006 IRL
Champion)
, John Andritti #43/22 (1988 CART Rookie Of The Year [61
top-10s in 74 career races in CART], IRL), Robbie Gordon #7/26 (1992-1999 CART
[106 starts], Indy 500 [10 starts] ), Dario Franchitti #40/40 (1997-2002
CART, 2003-2007 IRL, 2007 IRL Champion, 2007 Indy 500 winner)


Starting lineup for
the 2008 running of the 50th Daytona 500. Video Credit:
nadeau1064

This excerpted from ABC News -

An open-wheel invasion of NASCAR is in full swing
for 2008.

By
TERRY BLOUNT - Feb. 7, 2008

Since NASCAR's early days, stars of
open-wheel racing have occasionally stopped by to visit.

Things have
changed. Now they're coming to stay.

The 2008 Daytona 500 will have at
least three Indy 500 winners on the starting grid -- Juan Pablo Montoya, Sam
Hornish Jr. and Dario Franchitti. Jacques Villeneuve will make it a historic
foursome if he qualifies.

Having Indy 500 winners at Daytona is nothing
new. Even 45 years ago, four men who would win Indy competed in the Daytona 500
-- A.J. Foyt, Johnny Rutherford, Troy Ruttman and Parnelli Jones. But two of
them -- Jones and Rutherford -- hadn't accomplished the feat at the
time.

The 1981 race was the last time two men with Indy 500 wins on their
résumés -- Rutherford and Foyt -- competed in the Daytona 500.

In the
past, the big names of Indy were just passing through, racing in NASCAR's
biggest show as a little sidelight before heading back to the open
cockpit.

And for the most part, they were Americans who sounded the same
(well, sort of) and didn't have hard-to-pronounce names. They just happened to
spend most of their racing careers in a different discipline.

They could
make more money and gain more fame by concentrating on Indy cars. Frankly, the
idea of racing full time in NASCAR was laughable.

2008 Daytona 500 Pace Car - Image
Credit: z06vette.com

Who's laughing now? Indy-car racing did
everything possible to destroy itself over the past decade with two competing
leagues and constant feuding.

The open-wheelers are here now because it's
the place to be. The men who won the past two Indy 500s -- Hornish and
Franchitti -- will race full time in Sprint Cup. Neither will race in the 2008
Indy 500.

Montoya coming to Sprint Cup last year was just the
beginning.
----
Villeneuve and Patrick Carpentier are Canadians who plan
to race full time in Cup this season.

Cup will have four foreign-born
drivers competing for the first time. Montoya is Colombian and Franchitti is a
Scotsman.

They are bringing attention to the sport from people and places
that never cared in the past. But there's also an element of NASCAR's old guard
that doesn't like it.
----
NASCAR officials have embraced a
"return-to-its-roots" theme for the 2008 season to try to regain the trust of
the old-school fans. Obviously, the open-wheel invasion doesn't help sell that
concept.

Most of the veteran drivers don't care. The open-wheelers are
just other guys they have to beat.

"To me, it makes no difference," said
Ryan Newman, Hornish's teammate at Penske Racing. "I was an open-wheel driver
[sprint cars] when I came in. I just wasn't an IndyCar driver.

"The
bottom line is they're drivers, they're competitors. I don't care whether
they're male or female, open-wheel drivers or late-model drivers from the local
short track. They will learn if they deserve to be here. In the car owners' and
sponsors' eyes, they feel that they are."
----
This is an uphill climb on
an icy slope. It's unlikely any of them will enjoy the type of success Montoya
had last year when he finished 20th in the standings. Montoya won the road race
at Sonoma and had six top-10s.

For now, Montoya is in a league of his own
among the open-wheel newbies.
----
Talent isn't always enough. Carpentier
and Villeneuve don't have guaranteed spots in the field, racing in cars that
never have come close to winning.

Hornish, a three-time IndyCar Series
champion, does have a guaranteed spot. He swapped points with teammate Kurt
Busch. But Hornish is part of a new third car at Penske with a new crew, an
almost certain recipe for struggle.

Franchitti is going to an
organization (Ganassi Racing) that hasn't won an oval-track race in five
seasons.
----
"It was a tough decision to make," Hornish said. "But I got
to a point in my career where I decided this was the next
challenge.
----
Money tops the list. NASCAR is their best option for
cashing in while they can. Villeneuve and Carpentier are 36. Franchitti is 34.
Time is running out.

Another reason is safety. NASCAR has become a much
safer form of racing compared to open-wheel cars. Franchitti was lucky to escape
unhurt from two terrifying airborne crashes last year en route to the IndyCar
Series championship.
----
"I know it's going to be hard," Franchitti said.
"But every year since I started racing, I've always asked myself one question at
the end of the season: 'Do I still want to do this?' Being in NASCAR is what I
really want to do."
Reference
Here
>>

UPDATE - Post Race
Results For "The Champions League" (the league within a league)
-



50th Daytona 500
Finish – Video Credit: Mikey2448

The race was won by Ryan Newman,
Sam Hornish's teammate on the Roger Penske Racing team. So the race was won by
an open-wheel racing series team owner.

Order of finish for those who
have open-wheel racing experience:

Tony Stewart -
3, Robby
Gordon
- 8, Sam Hornish
Jr.
- 15, Juan Pablo
Montoya
- 32, Dario
Franchitti
- 33, Casey Mears -
35, John
Andretti
- 40
Reference
Here
>>

... notes from The EDJE

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ryan
ryan
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 20:13 on February 18th, 2008

Edmund Jenks, thanks for this article. I'm going to have reveal my ignorance here, but what is the difference between a stock car and an open-wheel car?

0
Edmund Jenks

The Indianapolis 500 is the greatest specticle of open-wheel racing here in North America. One of the greatest Canadian open-wheel chamions is Paul Tracy. Vancouver used to have one of the greatest open-wheel temporary street circuit races held at the end of the summer. In North America their used to be only one series - CART. Politics and egos lead to a seperation that led to ChampCar World Series (mostly road courses) and IndyCar - Indianapolis Racing League or IRL (mostly ovals).

Down here in Los Angeles, we have the granddaddy of them all ... The Long Beach Grand Prix ... usually run in March or April.

Stock cars are anything BUT stock. They are custom from the ground up and have a full body that covers the tires (wheels). NASCAR is the premire stock car series in the world (racing mostly on oval race tracks). It got its start during prohibition (when liquor was illegal) and the "Rum-Runners" would compete on dirt tracks to show their skills.

Open-Wheel Racing is faster because the cars are more powerful and are way lighter (can go from 0 mph to 100 mph and back to 0 mph in under 15 seconds). Open-Wheel may take a little more skill due to the danger if the wheels should touch a competitors wheels (airborne).

I hope this helps. 

0
ryan

Oh - when you put it that way...I used to sneak down to the track with my father every year and watch the race through the fence. And one year we got press passes through the CBC, that was a real delight. I guess I just wasn't familiar with the terminology - thank you for the clarification.

0
Edmund Jenks

You guys up in BC should put the track back on the map. I walked the track a couple of years ago and watched every race when it was televised.


A grand  and great road race ... I remember Michael Andretti getting clobbered in the chicane one year ... just a brutal dogfight and a hell of a good venue!

0
ryan

I totally agree that we should bring it back. The problem is they've build hundreds of condo's around the track area and the residents aren't the most amenable to the 'noise' of Indy.

0
Edmund Jenks

 

0
Edmund Jenks

You guys up in BC should put the track back on the map. I walked the track a couple of years ago and watched every race when it was televised.


A grand  and great road race ... I remember Michael Andretti getting clobbered in the chicane one year ... just a brutal dogfight and a hell of a good venue!


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www.theedje.blogspot.com


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