Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Brand new LMP1 Drayson Lola: World Exclusive pictures

In an exclusive interview with John Hindhaugh on tonight's 'Midweek Motorsport' at www.radiolemans.com, Lord Drayson reveals his plans for the rest of 2009 and beyond.

Drayson is severing his ties with Aston Martin and putting all of his efforts into a full LMP1 program. The team will enter a P1 Lola powered by Judd engine on Michelin tyres.

The best news is that the car will be rolled out in the next week or two and will be debuting at Petit Le Mans next month.

Here is a World Exclusive first glimpse of what the car will look like:



The interview is available in full from 9pm UK/4pm EST at www.radiolemans.com and can also be heard as part of the 'Midweek Motorsport' show available via the archive or on iTunes.

Friday, July 10, 2009

The Pre-Toronto Standings

Hello All,

So I am finally up to date with the standings. The 'pick seven and be damned' rule seems to have changed things around a touch although not as much as I hoped. But if TCGR and Penske take each other out in a bizarre pace lap accident, then there are one or two players who are poised to take advantage.

I'm fascinated by the internecine scrap between the Werners although Draize and Harris are going to take some stopping at this stage.


1. Mike Draize - 2448pts
IRL the feeder series to ALMS

2. Ben Harris - 2324pts
IRS Racing: Presented By Helio Castroneves

3. Doug Wener - 2258pts
TCG & Friends

4. Julie Werner - 2236pts
Times 101st to 107th Most Influential

5. Julie Werner II - 2219pts
Times 108th to 109th Most Influential

6. James Broomhead - 2216pts
Team A.C.R.O.N.Y.M.

7. Jeff Ianucci - 2131pts
MyNameisIRL

8. Paul Boggan - 2127pts
Indyfauxhemains

9. Doug Werner(II) - 2046pts
Team Penske and Friends

10. Jason Kwok - 1990pts
Eco Challenged

11. Robert Duffield - 1983pts
12. Chris Vince - 1942pts
13. Conor Daly - 1926pts
14. Joe Gaal - 1922pts
15. Simon Green - 1901pts

16. Matthew Hyndman - 1900pts
17. Peter Dempsey - 1888pts
18. Dan Fay - 1884pts
19. Simon Topham - 1872ptspts
20. Morwenna Cross - 1867pts

21. Simon Speichert - 1850pts
22. Dan Enfinger - 1847pts
23. John Harbey - 1838pts
24. Chris Buccola - 1811pts
25. Emiliyan Stoykov - 1796pts

26. Robert Melvin - 1770pts
27. Michael Rennick - 1764pts
28. Philip Moreton - 1723pts
29. Mike Gathman - 1717pts
30. Paul Menard - 1650pts

31. Eddie Lynch - 1599pts
32. TJ Halsema - 1561pts
33. Declan Brennan - 1521pts
34. Vincent Mellor - 1482pts
35. Mike Brooks - 1461pts

36. Martin Wilz - 1370pts
37. Nick Daman - 1368pts
38. Andrew Harbey - 1361pts
39. Jeff Fuller - 1291pts
40. Ryan Ligon - 1269pts

41. Jimmy Magnusson - 1142pts
42. Brian Wright - 1051pts
43. Austin Hollobaugh - 1009pts
44. Jeremy Scott - 974pts
45. James Murphy - 826pts


---------------------------------------

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Her mind elsewhere perhaps?



One must assume she was counting the $50 Million she could generate in NASCAR next season, but could it not have waited until she had successfully parked the car?

Friday, June 19, 2009

A record breaking Indy 500

More tremendous nonsense from guest blogger Doug Werner


INDIANAPOLIS -  

The Indianapolis Motor Speedway in conjunction with Indy Car Series is proud to announce that the 93rd running of the Indianapolis 500 has been officially recognized by the Guiness Book of World Records as the World’s Fastest Parade.   The new parade speed record is now 150.318 mph, just edging out the previous mark held by the 2007 Iranian Gay Pride Parade in downtown Tehran.*

           
“This is really a special moment for us at IMS,” stated Tony George.   This has been a long time coming and it is great to see that we were able to accomplish this on the 100th Anniversary of this special place.   We have been working toward this moment for almost 15 years   With the careful addition of particular street and road courses we have been getting close. Last year’s race at Infineon Raceway in Sonoma is a great example and I think we really opened some eyes to what we can do this year at Long Beach. But we haven’t been able to achieve the same kind of consistency on our ovals.   I would like to thank Brian Barnhart for helping make this happen.   The last rule change making a common spec wheelbase proved to be the real clincher.”
           
“I was real concerned   that Dan Wheldon and Townsend Bell would spoil the moment for us but after reading Paragraph 3, section C of the Parade Manual, I knew we had it in the bag.”
           
Paragraph 3 allows for some changes in the parade order should servicing or assistance be required of the parade participants.
           
“I would like to extend my thanks to my family.   Without their untold millions, I would not have been able to bring the series to where it is today.   With the mix of ovals, street and road courses,   and the Firestone Indy Lights series so full of foreign talent, I think we are really on the verge of having the perfect series. This is exactly what I had envisioned when I formed the Indy Racing League.   Our focus going forward will be on consistency.”

"We were thinking that the ICS would be a lock for the World's Greatest Tragedy in Motorsports History category as well, but it looks like my friend Max is making a push for that again this year after his attempt two tears ago. We have been assured by the panel of experts that we are still in the running and that a decision won't be made until later this year which gives us some time to make adjustments."
   
“I know a lot of fans want to see us back in Cleveland .   The airport course doesn’t really fit our current model but we are trying to see if we can get a street course on the cobble stone lanes of Shaker Heights, a suburb of Cleveland .   We should have more exciting announcements shortly.”

*The 2007 Iranian Gay Pride Parade will now be recognized as the fastest parade on a street course.

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

The IndyCar Racing experience live in your very own home

One of our loyal listeners and serial letter writers to 'Midweek Motorsport', Doug Werner, has some thoughts on this weekend at Iowa. Doug and his wife are having a magnificent internecine battle in the points standings of the MWM Fantasy League and they both seem to be taking it VERY seriously.

You can tune into the show live tonight at 8pm UK (3pm EST) at www.radiolemans.com or catch the podcast at any time on the site or from iTunes (search words 'Radio Le Mans). We have 2009 Le Mans winner, David Brabham joining us tonight alon with Nick Wirth of the brand new F1 team, Manor Motorsport.

---

It’s finally time for my favorite IndyCar race of the year, The Iowa Corn 250 powered by Brazilian Sugar Cane or as I like to think of it, the Moonshine 250. It is a real shame that the ABC is broadcasting this race. This track and locale were meant for Versus TV. Imagine the Versus TV triple header. Phil Liggett and Paul Sherwen broadcast the Methane 100 from the Iowa Speedway/Velodrome/Rodeo Ring/Tractor Alignment Center. Immediately following the race, cars replace the bikes and the Green flag is dropped commencing the Moonshine 250 powered by Brazilian Cachaca. At the conclusion of another Jack Arute interview comparing Danica’s 5th place finish to a dramatic win by the late, great Emerson Fittipaldi, [sic] we are off to the Main Event on the infield of the Iowa Speedway. The feature event is the triumphant return to bull riding of PBR’s very own Ryan Dirteater, the Scott Speed of professional Bull riding. The packed crowd goes wild.

And truly the crowd will be “packed.” The stands will be “full.” The facility will be “at capacity.” But don’t be fooled into believing that that is the same as a large crowd. Put one person in a phone booth and it is “at capacity.” Put two in and it is officially “packed.” Unfortunately, like the number of TV viewers, it is still just two. The truth is Rusty Wallace created his own miniature Daytona Speedway by putting a high school grandstand in front of a paved horse track with added banking. There will be a crowd, just not as big as that of a 7-on-7 football game on Friday night. What else is there to do this time of year? The State Fair is not for another 8 weeks.

If you can’t be there to witness the parade or watch it on TV here is how you can experience the “fun” at home. You will need a quarter painted red, one painted white, a large bowl, a stool and two posters of Danica. Go to the corner of a room and hang the two posters. Sit down on a stool facing the corner with the bowl in your hands. While moving the bowl in a circular motion, roll the quarters on their edge in the bowl keeping them going by gently sustaining the motion. Continue this while staring into the bowl until you start to feel nauseous. At this point, it is time for a commercial break. While still swirling your racers in the bowl, carefully look up at the posters and stare at each one for thirty seconds. Everyone once in a while mutter, “You deserve respect. You deserve respect.” Repeat until you lose the will to live. Stop swirling the bowl. The last quarter rolling wins. If it is red, Target Chip Ganassi wins. If it is white, Penske does. If they turn into five dimes, Danica wins. Congratulations! You have just enjoyed another ABC broadcast. Go take a walk and get some fresh air.

Let’s face it, this track is so small it should be a cage match, not an IndyCar race. The only question left is who will “tap out” first. This week it might be me.

Emerson Fittipaldi was not harmed in any manner in the writing of this blog. He is happily alive at home watching Professional Bull Riding on Versus.

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Tom Byers, Leonhard Stock and a dog's rear end.

I'm making an appearance on Speed Freaks tonight and their pre show 'hot topic' is concerning the legitimacy of Danica's one and only win in IndyCar seeing as Tony Stewart and Mark Martin have found victory lane in precisely the same fashion over the last couple of weeks in the Sprint Cup. I decided to dig out the blog piece I wrote in the immediate aftermath of Patrick's historic win in Japan.


- April 25th 2008

There was a time in the very early eighties when Grand Prix racing dominated the sporting headlines across Europe. ‘Tell us something we don’t know!!’ shouts everyone at once. But in this case I’m not talking about Brabham v Williams or Cosworth v Turbo. I mean Coe v Ovett v Cram and Ed Moses v the clock v everyone else in his wake. Battles raged on athletics tracks from Zurich to Rome all summer long.

My days as a sports mad 12 year old were marked out pretty much every night of week. I’d be out playing football or pitch and putt or tennis all day with an eye on the clock so I didn’t miss the start of the live coverage of the Grand Prix meeting from Cologne or Oslo, all of which was on proper network television, which somehow made it seem more important than it probably was.

There has always been something alluring and magical about any name said in a foreign language and/or with a foreign accent. Acqua Minerale conjures up glorious images of Ricardo Patrese blowing the San Marino GP lead at Imola in 1983 handing the win to Patrick Tambay’s #27 Ferrari as the Tifosi exploded in ecstasy. I’m not sure my memories would be as vivid if Imola had a corner called ‘mineral water’. The Welt Klasse meeting in Zurich was billed as the ‘Olympics in one night’, the greatest athletes in the world would be there and it was always a special Thursday night. I had no idea what ‘Welt Klasse’ meant but it sounded fantastic! On further examination I discovered it simply meant ‘World Class’ which in retrospect is somewhat disappointing, it seems to be the equivalent of naming your product based simply on a pronoun with as little ambition as ‘Quality Inn’ or ‘Lovely Cheese’ although the later product may only exist in my head.

The Norwegians never had that problem with the Bislett Games in Oslo. Their biggest event was the ‘Dream Mile’ it really did exactly what it said on the tin. It was a mile race which attracted the greatest middle distance field on earth. Year in and year out they would assemble for the race of the year. No doubt about it, this field was better than any Olympic final with the added bonus of a pacemaker or ‘hare’ to pull them along at something close to world record pace. This was an era where the world record for the 1500m and the mile would be broken almost every night somewhere in Europe, a truly ,astonishing and golden era for athletics.

Only the reigning Olympic 1500m champion, Sebastian Coe, was absent from the 1981 ‘Dream Mile’. It could hardly have been a more star-studded field unless Rob Halford had left Judas Priest and taken up middle distance running. The highly knowledgeable Oslo crowd sensed something big was about to take place. The ludicrously cocky Steve Ovett was planning to smash the World Record, he held it jointly with Coe at this time, and further ease the pain of his bronze medal for the 1500m in Moscow the previous season.

With this in mind pace-makers were instructed to push the pace along over the first 800 to 1200 metres, this job was assigned Tom Byers of the USA and he was joined up front by Wodajo Bulti of Ethiopia. Byers had been a distant 6th in the US Championships the week before this event (keep that in mind for later) and was there simply to keep the early pace at world record levels then drop out with a lap or so to go.

Byers pushed the pace forward at a pace that would have threatened the 800m world record let alone that of the mile. His pace was deemed to be so ludicrous that the chasing pack simply ignored him, or so we thought. Byers was 60 metres clear with 600 metres left and nobody was going to challenge him, the Oslo crowd knew what was happening and were totally behind him, banging the advertising hoardings and their Norwegian feet in rhythm with his pace.

This only served to spur Byres on even more and he neglected to step off track at the appropriate time, as all ‘hares’ do. Instead he just kept going onto the final lap, the pack only realized with 300 metres to go that they were racing for second place if they did not do something quickly; Ovett decided it was time to give chase. What was going through Byers head on that final bend is anyone’s guess, but somehow he held on for what has become one of the most amazing victories in athletics history?

At face value it is almost impossible to decipher the thought process of the chasing pack as Byers stretched his lead. All became much clearer when, in a rare interview, Ovett revealed that the official charged with giving the runners the split times, was giving the pack Byers times at the 400 and 800 metre distance, they had no clue that it was not they who were running at record pace but the tall long haired American way ahead in the distance.

So this group of world class athletes simply ignored the performance of the journeyman in front and simply chose to compete amongst themselves leading to one of the most unlikely victories in middle distance history. Now what does that remind you of?

Tom Byers was the second name that went through my head early on Sunday morning when Danica crossed the line to take victory and make history at Motegi. The first was Vittorio Brambilla; the Italian with one solitary GP victory to his name, the man who won in the wet in the rain shortened Austrian GP in 1975 only to put the car in the Armco barrier approximately 50 yards past the finish line.

Danica’s victory has catapulted Indy Car onto the front pages and into the headlines across the USA and that can only be good news for the series. Right now, there is almost no such thing as bad publicity for US open wheel racing. Closer inspection of her victory does lead one to the conclusion that it was simply a perfect storm of circumstances needed for any driver in the lower reaches of the top 10 to win an Indy Car race. For this win to take place, a number of elements had to be in place.

Primarily, the team in question needs to approach the race with the mindset that they would be unable to win in normal circumstances and strategy would be the overriding factor in their race preparation. Luck and timing need to be precisely right in terms of yellow flags and the length of each caution period. Finally there needs to be a collective arrogance or ignorance from the leading pack. Motegi delivered this on all three fronts and Andretti Green Racing capitalized beautifully by ticking every box correctly during the last section of the race.

If all of the teams had taken this approach we would have had the bizarre site of the pack racing at about 95% throttle for the last 25 laps or so in an attempt to avoid a final pit stop, but racers are racers and instinct clearly took over and to a man (quite literally) they chose to floor it and gamble on fuel mileage.

If they had all used Danica’s approach we would have had an athletics style sprint finish off the last corner and it would have been won by whoever had the best throttle response, I do find that quite appealing to be honest. It would have made for great TV!

So right now, as I write this on the eve of the Road Runner 300 at Kansas, we are none the wiser as to what her victory really means. I have made no secret of the fact that I believe she has probably had her moment in the sun. Indy Car fields are only going to get stronger and the number of oval races will be limited to about a half dozen from now on and she has little or no hope of repeating that feat on a road course or on a street circuit. She has done something remarkable that she may well never do again. Is she the Tom Byers of open wheel racing? In all probability the answer is yes.

The best case scenario for her is that she becomes the Leonhard Stock of Indy Car. Stock is the Austrian that baffled the entire world by winning the 1980 Olympic downhill gold at Lake Placid. He had almost no previous form and barely scraped into the team as number two to the great Franz Klammer who took gold in 1976 and again 1984. It was another 9 years and 100 or so events later that Stock won again, this time in a World Cup downhill event. So we can look for Danica to trouble the scorers again in about 2016 when she is 35 or so.

This whole piece is a roundabout way of saying that errrr let me see, how would Ron Dennis describe this? To quote Ron, it would be an ‘infrequent ultra violet canine posterior interface scenario’.

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

CNN do Texas reconstruction on the 'cheep'

CNN spared every expense to reconstruct Marco Andretti's travails at Texas last Saturday night.

The pigeon was clearly Marco and the various pedestrians were playing the part of Danica. Notice, how the bird gets very close on many occasions but just can't get by.

Radio Le Mans live today


Dear All,

Don't forget that we have an extra special Midweek Motorsport this afternoon.

We will be on air before free practice today at 2pm UK, 3pm CET, 9am EST & 6am PST.

Lots of live Le Mans stuff as well as all the usual features.

And don't forget to pick up your Le Mans spotters guide, the 2 page guide has all the latest liveries and drivers, correct as of Tuesday evening and is available at http://www.spotterguides.com

The usual place, www.radiolemans.com, just click 'listen live' or tune in on XM/Sirius Channel 126 or on 91.2FM around the circuit.

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Wow ESPN! Tell us how you realy feel!

I have way too many guilty pleasures in my life. Gloriously over complicated rock music being one of them. How many people do you know hit the gym with 'yours is no disgrace' by Yes reverberating through their ears? Did I just actually type that?

I'm finally admitting it, I love YES

ESPN's 'talking heads' output is another one of those indulgences I pretend I to abhor. 'The Sports Reporters' on a Sunday morning is a perfect blend of seasoned hacks doubling up as grumpy old men, it really speaks to me. In fact, men (and the odd woman) shouting at each other is a key part of the ESPN's lead in to the early evening edition of Sportscenter with 'Pardon the Interruption' being so important that it now has it's own section within 'Sportscenter'. So what leads into 'PtI', Sportscenter's lead in show? That would be 'Around the Horn', a show which lets five guys shout at each other for 30 minutes and in doing so it gives you the basic outline of ESPN editorial focus for the rest of the evening. Whatever the 'Around the Horn' guys argue about, will be re-argued about immediately afterwards on 'PtI' and then analysed on Sportscenter immediately after that. With more than two months to go to the start of the American football season, of course all of the shows are focusing on 'not NFL player' Brett Favre and his shoulder operation.

So where do ESPN, a part of the ABC family of Networks, place the IndyCar Series on their list of 'hot topics', 'public interest' and 'editorial importance'? Well I'll let the following exchange on 'Around the Horn' tear the curtain back for you a little.

A quick bit of background first. The show pits four major sports journalists against each other in lively debate on a set of pre detemined topics (in the UK the show 'Fighting Talk' is based on the same concept). Writers are eliminated after each round until there are two left for the 'showdown'. On Monday (June 8th) the last writer to be ousted before the finale was the one racing fan (NASCAR but it's still racing isn't it?) who regularly appears on the show, Tim Cowlishaw of the Dallas Morning News. As he was ousted, the conversation with the host, judge and jury, Tony Reali went as follows:


Tony Reali: Tim Cowlishaw.......do you have any last words?

Tim Cowlishaw: Last words!! I'm done?!

Tony Reali: Yes! Didn't you see the score you have 22 points.

Tim Cowlishaw: Whose gonna talk about the Bombardier (or Bombadeer as he pronounced it) Learjet 550K if I'm not around?

Tony Reali: Errrm I don't think anyone is....good luck growing that goatee back...that's it for Cowlishaw!



Tim Cowlishaw (lower left) vainly trying to talk IndyCar, yesterday


So there you have it, ESPN have shown their true hand, nobody gives a tinkers cuss about IndyCar racing, it has been reduced to a contractual obligation on the family of networks and is neither loved nor hated it is simply ignored. One could wish for no worse fate than that.

Versus may have started with ratings that almost defy physics
and logic but their NHL play off ratings have shown that given time and the right product, they can deliver the goods. The quicker ABC give up the pretense that they care, the better.

And finally we are up to date :)

Can I firstly apologise for taking so long to catch up with the standings. We are a third of the way through the league and in fantasy lineup terms it has been utter chaos. Stanton Barret is out and has been replaced by Jacques Lazier and Richard Antinucci. At this point I must clarify that Lazier will be racing on ovals and Antinucci is in for Watkins Glen, there is no attempt on 3G's part to enter both drivers in the promotional two seater. On saying that, I really love the idea and I must give the good chaps at 3G a call when I have finished posting this.

Vitor Meira's day at Indy involved a giant pit lane conflagration and then a rather shocking accident where he rode the wall backwards (answers to the name 'lucky' as the old joke goes) and ended up in hospital sidelined for the immediate future. His seat at Milwaukee was taken by Paul Tracy who parted company with AJ Foyt after one race on account of the car being less effective than the stint Stevie Wonder had as Travis Pastrana's co-driver recently on the Olympus Rally. AJ Foyt IV climbed into the ABC car in Texas and the result was equally as good or bad depending how you look at it.

So Ben Harris has jumped to the top of the table precisely one third of the way through the year, mainly thanks to the astute pick up of Helio Castroneves as soon as he became available. The Werner family are dominating the Top 10 and have assumed the rights to be known as the 'first family of fantasy motor sport' which no doubt will disgruntle the many members of the Harbey household who are involved in this league.

I do need to give a shout out to Jeff Ianucci who is participating under the name of his excellent blog www.mynameisirl.com and I wholeheartedly suggest that you give it a read. His tenure in the top 10 like Ryan Hunter Reay's was brief, although one feels that Jeff has more chance of making an impact in our little league than RHR has in the championship.

Finally if you look down through the list you will see that our two Star Mazda drivers, Conor Daly and Peter Dempsey are locked in a epic battle for mid-table respectability, they are currently separated by a single point.


1. Ben Harris - 1639pts
IRS Racing: Presented By Helio Castroneves
Castroneves, Rahal, Wilson, Wheldon

2. James Broomhead - 1561pts
Team A.C.R.O.N.Y.M.
Castroneves, Carpenter, Wilson, Wheldon

3. Doug Werner(II) - 1534pts
Team Penske and Friends
Castroneves, Briscoe, Doornbos, Barrett

4. Mike Draize - 1461pts
IRL the feeder series to ALMS
Franchitti, Briscoe, Hunter-Reay, Barrett & Beatriz

5. Julie Werner - 1454pts
Times 101st to 107th Most Influential
Franchitti, Briscoe, wheldon, Barrett

6. Simon Speichert - 1446pts
Felony Pursuit
Castroneves, Hunter-Reay, Rahal, Wilson

7. Julie Werner II - 1442pts
Times 108th to 109th Most Influential
Castroneves, Kanaan, Carpenter, Tracy

8. Robert Duffield - 1401pts
Team IndyCART
Scott Dixon, Ryan Briscoe, Rafael Matos, Barrett

9. Jason Kwok - 1355pts
Eco Challenged
Dixon, Briscoe, Carpenter, Wilson

10. Doug Wener - 1336pts
TCG & Friends
Dixon, Franchitti, Wislon, Carpenter


11. Paul Boggan - 1335pts
12. Jeff Ianucci - 1274pts
13. Dan Fay - 1242pts
14. Emiliyan Stoykov - 1216pts
15. Simon Green - 1211pts
16. Matthew Hyndman - 1210pts
17. John Harbey - 1199pts
18. Morwenna Cross - 1197pts
19. Conor Daly - 1179pts
20. Peter Dempsey - 1178pts

21. Dan Enfinger - 1177pts
22. Joe Gaal - 1170pts
23. Chris Buccola - 1124pts
24. Michael Rennick - 1107pts
25. Chris Vince - 1080pts
26. Paul Menard - 1073pts
27. Simon Topham - 1072pts
28. Mike Gathman - 1067pts
29. Robert Melvin - 1045pts
29. Declan Brennan - 999pts
30. Mike Brooks - 941pts

31. Philip Moreton - 931pts
32. Eddie Lynch - 894pts
33. Andrew Haybey - 882pts
34. Vincent Mellor - 865pts
35. Martin Wilz - 858pts
36. TJ Halsema - 837pts
37. Nick Daman - 781pts
38. Jeff Fuller - 744pts
39. Ryan Ligon - 702pts
40. Brian Wright - 682pts

41. Jimmy Magnusson - 680pts
42. Austin Hollobaugh - 669pts
43. James Murphy - 532pts
44. Jeremy Scott - 494pts


---------------------------------------

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Midweek Motorsport Today

Hello all,

'Midweek Motorsport' is back with the full squad this week and arguably, the greatest guest/presenting line up in show history!

Okay we have had bigger guests that Martin Haven but none deliver quite the value for money that MH does and I for one cannot wait to get his take on the first two rounds of the FIA Formula 2 Series. I will be butting in constantly to remind everyone that no matter how good F2 is now, it will NEVER be the F2 that we knew and loved in the late seventies and early eighties. Unless you were born in the eighties then you simply don't know what you were missing. Take for example this footage below. The BMW M12 F2 engine has been around since 1969 and has anything ever sounded better? I admire the guts of the chap sitting in the chassis. By 1982, Formula 2 was not only the best sounding Formula in the World but the chassis were simply gorgeous, particularly the examples from Maurer. Anyway, I digress, no doubt I will bore everyone with more of this on tonight's show.



Allan McNish is the star of the show this week and he will be answering many of the questions that were submitted via the facebook group.

Oliver Gavin will be dropping in to chat about Le Mans and other stuff.

We have reached half way in the 'Race for the Chase for the Cup for the Thing' so the 'Sound of the swinging cymbal' will be making it's seasonal debut, not 'alf!

There will be a quick look at the IndyCar and Indy Lights races from the weekend.

There will be lots of other stuff including a full look at the 'who is in and who is out' nonsense of the 2010 F1 season. From what I can gather Arturo Merzario (including cowboy hat), Hector Rebaque, EuroBrun and Lec are all coming back!

We will also have news of some great new sponsors and exciting new ways to listen for our US contingent (unless you already stick a glass up to the wall of the people next door).

It's all on at the usual time and place. 8pm UK, 9pm CET, 3pm EST, 12pm PT & 9am in Hawaii.

Go to www.radiolemans.com and click 'listen live' or catch us on the podcast which will be availble soon after the show has aired or get us on iTunes.

Dex

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Ferrari: Sports car racing again sometime soon?

This is the last line of the latest press release from Maranello. It was in response to the ruling in Paris this morning.
'In this situation, Ferrari will continue to compete in races of a calibre worthy of the marque, matching its level of innovation and technological research.'
Those last four words say so much. I'm not sure that a series with a spec. chassis comes under that banner, so it is hard to see them looking too hard at IndyCar - with the Ferrari brand at least.

Talk was rife, at the Spa 1000kms, about a prototype being on the drawing board at Maranello. The ALMS, LMS and Le Mans absolutely fit the bill with regards to 'innovation' and 'technical research'. The prancing horse would be welcomed back into sports car and endurance racing with open arms.

A move of this sort would see Ferrari back where they truly belong, in a disipline of the sport which they were every bit as committed to in the sixties and very early seventies (see below).

More of this please, Maranello, thank you. [img www.motortrend.com]

Alex Lloyd on Midweek Motorsport tonight.

With a ludicrous safety car situation to debate and Martin Haven to debate it, you know tonight's show will overrun. So It is very likely that you will get more than the standard 2 hours.

On the menu tonight:

A thorough look at the utter farce of a World Touring Car Championship event in Pau. Including a ludicrously heated debate over rev limiters (I kid you not).

F1 News and yet another update on who might be in and out of F1 in 2010. We also hatch our plans to enter our own F1 team for next season.

We also have a discussion on the future of De Ferran Motorsports.

We recorded the interview with Alex Lloyd last night. He was terrific, he was like an answering machine, you just ask him one question and off he goes. I was ticking the questions off as I went along seeing as he was answering them without us having to ask them. :)

Oh yes, and one more thing, Coco the dog is back.

3pm EST www.radiolemans.com, click the 'Listen Live' button. The podcast will be up shortly afterward on the site and on iTunes.

Dex

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Racing Drivers: Always looking for an edge!



Check out Dario Franchitti who has clearly studied the rules and regulations of the first ever NBC 'Drinking the Milk' Championship. Or maybe he is just a cheating Scottish sod! :)

Either way, it was outstanding rule interpretation.

Sarah Fisher (adored by our own Nick Daman) on the Daily Show

The Indy drivers did their rounds of the New York media on Monday and Sarah Fisher made a rather excellent appearance on the Daily Show (see video below). What I loved about it was the incredibly natural manner Sarah has on screen, there is nothing fake about her and there is not a single thing about the chat that shouts 'Media Training!' at you. That in itself is an enormous credit to her.

She made an appearance on our radio show last year and she was no different then, in fact, I would say she is much more confident now than she was a year or so ago.

Our F1 correspondent, Nick Daman interviewed her for F1 Digital TV at the US Grand Prix a number of years ago and he manages to mention how 'lovely' she is at least once per show.

She's not in my fantasy team right now, but If I was a sponsor she would be on the top of my list as a potential endorsee.

GO SARAH! And please come back on to 'Midweek Motorsport' at www.radiolemans.com whenever you like, it will make Nick Daman a very happy man.

The Daily Show With Jon StewartM - Th 11p / 10c
Sarah Fisher
thedailyshow.com
Daily Show
Full Episodes
Economic CrisisPolitical Humor

Monday, May 18, 2009

USGPE Power Rankings - Update


There hasn't been a great deal of road racing since I kicked the rankings off a couple of weeks ago, but things got a little busier on both sides of the Atlantic over the weekend. The F1 landscape is also changing right before our eyes and the potential cost capping could see an influx of teams, many with very familiar names.

The Week 1 Rankings are here.

RIGHT NOW

1. JR Hildebrand - Firestone Indy Lights/A1GP
2009, 2 Pole Positions, 1 win (Long Beach)
Hildebrand's ranking does not change due to the fact that he has had no race activity since Kansas, so he remains number one for now, based on the potential we saw in his A1GP cameo at Brands Hatch.

2. John Edwards - Atlantic Series - NEW ENTRY
2009, (1 win)
The 2008 Star Mazda Champion has picked up where he left off at the end of last season. With a win and a second from his first two races, Edwards has burst into the rankings ahead of his more experienced series rival, Jonathan Summerton. The 18 year old from Cincinnati is benefiting from racing in series with a smaller field than in previous years but he is still beating race winning veterans at this level. Dominating this series could be precisely what is needed to make USGPE sit up and taken notice.

3. Jonathan Summerton - Firestone Indy Lights
2009, Firestone Indy Lights Points Leader, Atlantic Series
While doing double duty in the both Firestone Indy Lights and the Atlantic Series is keeping Jonathan Summerton busy, his current inability to find victory lane is not helping his cause. He is quick, consistent and reliable but he has yet to show the raw pace, this season, which will put at the front of the line for a race seat with USGPE in 2010.

4. AJ Allmendinger - NASCAR Sprint Cup:
No change is his position seeing as he hasn't lost his ability to drive on road courses simply because he has been turning left a lot recently.

5. Graham Rahal - IndyCar Series - NEW ENTRY:
I had left Rahal off the original list based on his recent radio comments about not wanting to move to F1 just to be at the back of the grid. He also suggested that as an American he was proud of the ICS and wanted to stay in the USA and make it big again. If he continues to mature at his current rate with NHLR, USGPE will not be able to avoid giving him serious consideration.

6. Ryan Hunter Reay - IndyCar Series:
Given his recent travails, RHR would find the talk of his F1 prospects are rather pleasant distraction.

7. Marco Andretti - IndyCar Series/A1GP:
There is no current change with Marco, but if he does the unthinkable and wins the Indy 500 next Sunday, the calls and questions regarding his future will start again. Right now he really is not ready for F1 and staying in the USA can only benefit him (and the IndyCar Series) in the long run.

8. Danica Patrick - IndyCar Series:
Danica has a lot on her plate right now, she has been off the pace all month at Indy in this, her contract year. Maintaining her value as a racer as opposed to as a spokes model should be her number one priority right now. A strong showing at Indianapolis will of course kickstart the F1 rumours once again.


THE FUTURE

1. Alex Rossi - International Formula Master:
2008, Formula BMW Americas Champion & FBMW World Finals Winner
Rossi could not have picked a more technical and challenging place to embark on the European chapter of his career. Pau, in southwestern France is a storied and historic venue, racing has been held on the streets there since 1901. Races 1 & 2 of the International Formula Master Series were held there last weekend as part of the support package for the World Touring Car Championship which had some pace car fun of its own.

Rossi qualified in 8th spot for race 1 and impressed onlookers with his mature performance during a 25 lap scrap for 6th spot with Harald Schlegelmilch. With almost non-stop agression from behind, he defended his position cleanly never once slamming the door in a dangerous or aggressive manner. This work took a heavy toll on his tyres and as Eurosport's Martin Haven described, 'more sideways than a sideways thing by the end, he just had nothing left to fight with, not bad for a kid who'd never seen the place before!' Rossi drifted backwards towards the end and finished out of the points, but it was clear to one and all that he is a talent and a driver to be reckoned with in this series. His fourth place finish in race 2 was testament to that ability and for him to survive such a baptism of fire can only boost his confidence as the series progresses.

2. Josef Newgarden - British Formula Ford/Formula Palmer Audi:
2009, 1 win (British Formula Ford), 2 wins (Formula Palmer Audi)
It is a desparately sad time for everyone concerned with Newgarden's British Formula Ford outfit, as team principal, Joe Tandy was tragically killed in a road accident early last week at the age of 26. As I write this, it is stil unclear as to the future of the race team. My condolences go to Joe's family and all involved in the team.

3. Gabby Chaves - Formula BMW Americas:
2009, Series Leader (2 wins)
Gaby Chaves cemented his position as a serious title contender with three podiums over the weekend at Miller Motorsports Park in Utah. Two seconds and one third place were not enough for him to maintain his series lead however as young Brazilian Giancarlo Vilarinho took a clean sweep of victories. The 15-year-old Floridian is the only driver in the series to finish on the podium in every race so far this year.

4. Conor Daly - Star Mazda
Barber National Champion 2008, Currently 7th in Star Mazda standings
Noblesville's Daly had a weekend to forget at Miller Motorsport Park in Utah, in round 3 of the Star Mazda Series. Issues with set-up left him frustrated and languishing way down the grid in qualifying. The car was much better in race trim and it gave Daly the confidence to charge hard from deep in the field. 'Then the car was extremely good in the race I just got a little to ambitious and tired to make a pass and the guy came down on my front wing', Conor explained in the immediate aftermath of the race. Front wing damage forced him to visit pit lane and that effectively put an end to any chances he had at the weekend. He now lies 36 points behind the series leader, Adam Christodoulou, in 7th place. Watch out for his latest column at www.speedtv.com later this week.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Safety Car fun in France.

While the WTCC really doesn't need the addition of any outside forces to spice up the racing, especially at a narrow street circuit like Pau, Race 2 this afternoon was significantly altered by the idiot in the safety car. Can someone please explain to the lad in the Chevy why blend lines are important!

The future of Dario's hair?

Is it me or did PR chaps and Indy make a poor decision in placing Dario directly in front of the Pagoda? Or is this actually Dario's latest style? More importantly is this what we can expect from Tony Kanaan if he does not find victory lane in the near future?

Dario sporting his latest 'do', yesterday

Saturday, May 16, 2009

A brick is not just for Christmas, it's for life!

The happy hour shenanigans during practice yesterday may have inadvertently created an new merchandising phenomenon at Indianapolis.

The dislodged brick really does have huge potential as a generator or revenue, the 'pet brick' is not a new idea.

Nobody can better explain the advantages of bricks as pets than the insanely brilliant chaps from 'Father Ted', maybe the greatest and most bizarre sit com television has ever seen.

Friday, May 15, 2009

Moving on up now?

The IBJ is reporting more encouraging news this week with regards to the Versus TV audience. The .35 Pole Day rating almost matched that for the Long Beach Race. That comes out at 388,864 US households.
Even on a fledgling cable channel, the events surrounding the Indianapolis 500 continue to be an attraction—though I’m sure the Indy Racing League’s new TV partner was hoping for better. Pole Day qualifications drew a .35 Nielsen TV rating Saturday (May 9) on Versus. That means about 385,000 TV households nationwide tuned in to the cable channel broadcast. It’s not exactly a Super Bowl type rating, but it’s as good as any Indy Racing League race so far this year.

Well, actually, Pole Day drew just less than the Long Beach race (388,864 households), but better than IRL races in St. Petersburg and Kansas earlier this year. Versus’ broadcast of the second day of Indianapolis 500 qualifications on Sunday nearly did as well, with 322,000 TV households tuning in.

-
www.thescore.ibj.com
That is a testament to the power of Indy and to the wisdom of not putting any live broadcasts up against play off games and/or NASCAR racing. It also means that we may have seen the last of numbers like this.

Let us hope this is an upward trend.

Time for a quick Brazilian?

Somewhere in a dust, and most certainly irony, free vault in Paris lies the International Prototype Kilogram or IPK. The IPK is made of a platinum-iridium alloy and is the base unit of mass in the International System of Units. In other words it is the mother of all kilograms, quite literally the one that all others are measured against.

Sport, irrespective of the discipline is no different, there are standard performances and performers that all others must measure up to. Michael Phelps, with his exploits in Beijing, has set his own literal 'gold standard' that will arguably never be surpassed. To break his record of eight golds, I would suggest that new pool based events would have to be created. Maybe this is a good time to revisit Jerry Seinfeld's idea of adapting the Biathlon concept (skiing and shooting) to create a '50 metre swim & strangling a guy' event?

Marshall Pruett of www.SpeedTV.com appeared on 'Midweek Motorsport' this week to deliver his usual calm and controlled perspective, that of an experienced competitor, engineer and journalist. When Marshall speaks we usually listen, except when we are shouting over one another or trying to be the first to say 'hello' to Allan McNish. When we started to talk about our standout performers from the opening weekend of qualifying, two Brazilian names kept popping up. Well in fact, three Brazilian names did but more of that in a moment.

Mario Moraes (left) taking some well deserved time off to shoot peasants, yesterday [pic: www.daylife.com]

Mario Moraes & Rafael Matos have little in common other than their country of birth. Moraes, a Sao Paulo native, is a member of the de Moraes family whose Votorantim Group is a global multi-billion dollar industrial concern active in steel, pulp and paper, chemicals and orange juice (I wouldn't recommend drinking that all in one glass). Matos, on the other hand, arrived in the USA from Belo Horizonte with $400 in his pocket and no contacts family or otherwise. Or as Pruett put it, 'Rafa is trying to put food on the table while Mario is driving to buy a bigger table'.
'The kid is amazing! When I look at him, of all the young Brazilians, he is the only one with that 'Sennaesque' intensity. If you look at the crash he had at St. Petersburg with Danica, that was Senna to a tee, his fault 100% but he got out of the car with daggers in his eyes and would not hear that it was his fault.'
- Marshall Pruett, www.speedtv.com
As effusive as I was in my praise of Matos and the Luczo Dragon team, I had no intention of using the IPS (International Prototype Senna) standard. By the way, similar to the way that the metric system replaced Imperial measures, the IPS replaced the Clark System of the previous generation. I was initially shocked that Pruett would use such terminology but as he explained his reasoning, it made perfect sense. While he is not comparing the 27 year old to the great F1 Champion in terms of ability at this point, he is suggesting that he has the potential to be 'the next great Brazilian we are going to see manifest stateside.'

Seven years the junior of Matos, Moraes has a potentially long and successful career in front of him, safe in the knowledge that he has enough backing to allow him to focus entirely on improving. That process is eased considerably once the ongoing search for backers does not have to be factored into the daily routine of the driver, one only has to look Stanton Barrett's recent tweets to perfectly demonstrate the opposite end of the spectrum. While 'ride buyer' is a phrase that is most often used in a derisory fashion, it should not be exclusively coined in the negative. Moraes has the opportunity to prove in the next ten days or so that the combination of burgeoning talent and pots of money can be an irresistible one.

While everyone hopes that the IndyCar Series can grow again with solid roots being provided by the young emerging American talent, it is important to remember that the credibility of the Championship can only be enhanced by the retention of all of its bona fide stars. These two young Brazilians have the potential to become part of the US open wheel firmament for many years to come.

Marshall Pruett & I will be blogging live today during Friday practice at Indianapolis on www.speedtv.com

Facebook: Harsh, cruel and very funny

(GMM) Nelson Piquet's famous father believes the Renault driver performed strongly at the recent Spanish grand prix.

Brazilian Piquet, 23, finished seven places behind Fernando Alonso in Barcelona, but he pointed out after the race that unlike his teammate he is not yet driving the "fully updated car".

Piquet was closer to the pace in practice and qualifying. "For the first time Nelsinho was better than Alonso," triple world champion Piquet Snr, who has attended every race so far in 2009, told Germany's Auto Motor und Sport.

"He was missing a tenth to Fernando, but he (Piquet) was also missing the modified double diffuser, which only Alonso had. That was worth two tenths," claimed 56-year-old Piquet Snr.

Poor Nelson Piquet Jr.

Not only is his dad now doing the adult equivalent of spitting on a napkin and wiping his son's face in public, but the interweb's famous facebook is now ganging up on him in a rather amusing way.

The clock really is ticking and how long is it before young Grosjean is being an ideal team mate to Fernando Alonso i.e. not being remotely competitive at all.

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Second US F1 Team more than a rumour?

The 'Midweek Motorsport' F1 Correspondent, Nick Daman, had some extremely interesting conversations in the paddock at the Spa 1000kms at the weekend. One such conversation revealed that Penske are looking seriously at the possibilty of entering F1 in the near future.

Tune in tonight at 3pm EST to find out more.

The podcast will be up at www.radiolemans.com by 6pm EST if you can't listen live.

And join in the chat and debate on the facebook group.

Dex

A 'horrible life' for Viso & Bell.

Well Herbalife seem to be hitting indy with a bang this year, they have signed a personal sponsorship deal with EJ Viso and the indy blogosphere is awash with images of the fully Herbalife sponsored Dallara for Towsend Bell. Thanks to www.mynameisirl.com for that one.

If they hadn't had such a lousy VP of Marketing and Coroporate Comms for so long, I suspect they would have been involved in racing much sooner [go to 1:10 in the video].

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

We are live on Wednesday

Hello All,

We're live and couldn't possibly have more to talk about this week.

F1 has gone a bit mad, Brawn keep winning and it's déjà vu for Rubens.
Nobody want's to sign on for next year and the bookies have installed USGPE as favourites for the 2010 Manufacturers title. [I may have made that bit up].

I'll be the contestant on 'Red Bullseye' and I will be helping you all celebrate 'NASCAR Day' to the fullest [I have no idea how or why]. We will have about 30 seconds of Jeff Burton telling us about how the Sprint All-Star event is a great way to celebrate the fans and is more intense than other All-Star events. [It's not of course].

We will of course look back at Indy qualifying and the Spa 1000kms. Speed TV's Marshall Pruett will also join us to talk some more IndyCar and to help us preview the next round of the ALMS in Utah.

Lots of the other usual nonsense too, 3pm EST & 8pm UK www.radiolemans.com with an encore broadcast for our US listeners at 9pm EST.

The podcast will be available on the site soon after the live broadcast.

Send any and all emails to studio@radiolemans.com

Dex

Monday, May 11, 2009

The Conor Daly Show

I work with Conor Daly on his column for Speedtv.com. While getting to know the 17 year old is extremely enjoyable, I feel somewhat guilty because I am constantly hounding him about deadlines which only adds to all of the other things he has to worry about like being a professional racing driver and full time high school student.
He has had quite a few ups and downs in the first two rounds of the season, video of which you can see here.

And if that wasn't enough to worry about, he is being beaten in the Fantasy League Standings by Peter Dempsey who is doing the same thing on the Star Mazda points table.

Another driver to bolster the grid after Indy?

I have just got off the phone with an ex CCWS driver who believes he will be on the grid from Milwaukee onwards.

I can't say any more than that now, but he is confident that the budget he has will mean he can run competitively in one of the front running teams.

Right now, that would surely put him in line for a seat at either KV, NHLR or HVM based on the fact that the 'Big 3' are at full capacity.

I will have more news as soon as I have confirmation and hopefully I will be able to announce the news along with the driver on 'Midweek Motorsport' on www.radiolemans.com in a week or two.

In broader terms this is great news for the series despite the economic downturn and the almost invisible TV numbers on Versus.

Friday, May 8, 2009

Paul Tracy is the missing link!

When Julio Franco, the veteran infielder (and I really do mean veteran, he was 49) retired from Major League Baseball in 2007, the sport lost an extraordinary link to the past.

In his rookie year Franco faced veteran pitcher Jim Katt who had, in turn, pitched against the great Ted Williams on the final day of his own rookie season of 1959.

This got me scratching my head and I decided to see how far we could go back through the history of the Indy 500 in two similar leaps.

It will not come as a shock to anyone that I started my search with Paul Tracy, now in his 41st year, who made his race debut at the Brickyard in 1992. While Al Unser Jr took the spoils that year, a certain AJ Foyt finished in 9th position. The Texan began his storied relationship with 'the 500' by finishing 16th in 1958. Two places further back that day was Wisconsin native, Paul Russo. Russo's first trip to Indy was 1940. Incidentally, Russo started second in the 1946 event which was also notable for a qualification attempt by Rudolf Carraciola.

So there you have it! In two jumps we can get from the Indianapolis 500 of 2009 to the Indianapolis 500 of 1940. Or three jumps from Tracy to Carraciola! I'm still trying to get my head around this as I type!

If anyone wants to attempt to make the fewest jumps back to the first race in 1911, please be my guest.

Wilson managing his own expectations

Marshall Pruett is blogging live again from Indianapolis.

He writes that Justin Wilson's early season speed and form do not look like being replicated at Indy:

All quiet again. Justin Wilson pulled in after several laps on his own, with a 220.023 as his best. As he predicted in his SPEEDtv.com column, expectations for impressive speeds are being kept low for Indy.

Let's hope that Wilson under promises and over delivers

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Thursday, May 7, 2009

A prelude to pole day?

Good friend of Midweek Motorsport and Radio Le Mans, Marshall Pruett from www.speedtv.com, is keeping a live blog going throughout practice and qualifying. Marshall is a race engineer amongst many other things and he is a veteran of numerous Indy 500's.

On Saturday, he will be conducting what promises to be very lively chat throughout pole day and I would strongly urge you all to drop in and get involved at some point during the day.

Marshall also suggests that today, from about 5pm onwards, we will see the first simulated qualifying runs and this will give us a much clearer idea of who has the true speed and who does not.

The Fabis had the right idea

Hat tip to Midweek Motorsport Fantasy Leaguer, Jeff Ianucci at the excellent www.mynameisirl.com for reminding me of the fact that Teo Fabi bagged pole as a rookie in 1983. Doorknobs is making a bid to repeat that achievement although it is very early and I won't get remotely excited on the Dutchman's behalf.

It did get me thinking about how he made it back to the brickyard with Forsythe Racing in 1984 while racing for Brabham in Formula 1. The answer, was of course, very much like me, enormously simple - job sharing! It was a family affair too as Teo stepped out of the car for the races in Monaco and Canada to be replaced by his younger brother Corrado.Corrado was the 1982 European Formula 2 Champion was, on paper, an ideal replacement for his big bother.



Teo Fabi racing for Forsythe (right) while Corrado (left) waits in the wings wearing a hat

But how would this work for other teams and drivers? I really couldn't see Colin Chapman being too happy about Mario Andretti offering his twin bother Aldo as his replacement at Lotus in 1978, although in fairness Aldo could well have beaten most of the field that season in the all conquering Lotus 79. Or how about Roger Penske embracing Wilson Fittipaldi's substitution of Emmo during the great years in CART?

And there isn't a team manager on earth who would fall for the old Michael to Ralf Schumacher switcheroo...is there?

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

US GPE - Driver Power Rankings


There is no on track action at Indy today, due to the weather, and the US GPE site is still very much 'coming soon', so I thought I would take this opportunity to start tracking and rating the potential candidates for the USGPE race seats in 2010 and beyond.

The easiest place to start is with the list that Peter Windsor himself supplied at the press launch on Speed TV earlier this season. One must presume that the young Americans furthest up the 'staircase of talent' are closer to getting their backsides in the car than those further down. So let's start at the top and work downwards.

RIGHT NOW

1. JR Hildebrand - Firestone Indy Lights/A1GP
2009, 2 Pole Positions, 1 win (Long Beach)
After a faltering start to the season at St Petersburg, Hidlebrand proved his worth with a win on the streets of Long Beach.More significantly, however, was his immediate pace and performance at Brands Hatch in the final round of the A1GP series last weekend. He qualified and finished fourth in the sprint race ahead of many of the established drivers in the series and showed a terrific ability to rapidly adapt to a new car and unfamiliar surroundings.


2. Jonathan Summerton - Firestone Indy Lights
2009, Firestone Indy Lights Points Leader
Summerton's consistency and ability to keep his nose clean has given him a 4 point lead in the Indy Lights standings but rather worryingly, we are yet to see the consistent speed needed to win in the category. It is hard to see any driver making an impression in F1 if he cannot dominate let alone win races in the junior categories. The Floridian has already had talks with USGPE and his extensive experience in Europe could well work in his favor. He is also the only US driver to have a victory in A1GP (China 2008).


3. AJ Allmendinger - NASCAR Sprint Cup:
At the time of the USGPE launch, AJ Allmendinger had a limited Sprint Cup schedule with Richard Perry Motorsports and quite a lot of free time on his year planner. 10 races into the Sprint Cup season, new sponsors, a top 30 ranking and a contract through 2010 all mean that it will be financially tough to wrestle Allmendinger away from oval racing. Can he be bought out of any contract with RPM, of course he can?
The five time winner in Champ Car has the strongest road racing resume of any American candidate, whether he has the desire to make the late switch to the pinnacle of global open wheel racing is another matter.


4. Ryan Hunter Reay - IndyCar Series:
Ryan Hunter Reay's 3 US open wheel victories have been evenly distributed across his first six seasons of racing. All of them have been earned in machinery that would never be described as absolutely 'top level'. His performance for Vision Racing at the 2009 season opener will surely have raised some eyebrows within the USGPE brain trust and for this reason alone he has to be seen as a viable not to mention experienced and capable F1 candidate.


T5. Marco Andretti - IndyCar Series/A1GP:
Despite the extraordinary selling job by Mario during the USGPE launch on Speed TV, Marco has much to prove if he is to have any future in Grand Prix racing. He has shown sporadic flashes of speed on both street circuits and road courses over the last three seasons but certainly not enough to suggest that he can compete week-in-week-out in IndyCar let alone be competitive at the next level. The AGR A1GP program was, at best, inconclusive although we saw one or two flashes of what he may be capable of. It would make a lot of sense for him to put even more effort into that series in 2009/10. Marco's F1 test with Honda may have come too early for him and at 22 years of age he certainly still has time on his side.


T5. Danica Patrick - IndyCar Series:
Danica would be number one on this list if it was merely a gauge of revenue generation, publicity and hype. There is no way by any reasonable measure that she should be considered for an F1 seat based on her resume but the commercial considerations may well be too much to resist for Peter Windsor and his marketing men. In truth she would need at least a year of testing and a season of GP2 before she could make the transition to F1. That sort of conventional wisdom, however, may not enter into the decision making process at USGPE.


THE FUTURE

1. Alex Rossi - International Formula Master:
2008, Formula BMW Americas Champion & FBMW World Finals Winner
The 17 year old Nevada City, California native is the only driver in the rankings who is guaranteed to get seat time in an F1 car this season. He will do some demo laps in the current BMW F1 car at the 2009 World Finals as part of his prize for winning the 2008 title. In conversation with Rossi earlier this season, it became obvious that F1 is his goal and his odds of making it are vastly improved by plying his trade on the circuits of Europe. International Formula Master will become GP3 in 2010 and this year's winner will get a GP2 test at the end of the season.


2. Josef Newgarden - British Formula Ford/Formula Palmer Audi:
2009, 1 win (British Formula Ford), 2 wins (Formula Palmer Audi)
In an interview on Midweek Motorsport late last year, Josef Newgarden made it very clear that like Alex Rossi, Formula 1 is his ultimate goal and he too realizes that he must perform on some of the toughest proving grounds in the sport if he is to make it to the top. A win in the 'Kent' class of the 2008 British Formula Ford Festival was not a bad way to announce those intentions. He returned to the UK earlier this year to contest the British Formula Ford Championship and took one win in the triple-header opening weekend at Oulton Park, becoming the first American to win a round of the series since Patrick Long in 2001. In an effort to accelerate his development, Newgarden is also competing in the Formula Palmer Audi Series. FPA is a 'semi-pro' mixture of young talent and highly experienced and competent amateurs racing with turbo charged Audi power plants, slicks and wings. The 18 year old, Nashville born, Newgarden won the opening two rounds of the series and leads the standings after three races. The top three in the final standings will get a Formula 2 test at the end of the season.


3. Conor Daly - Star Mazda:
2008, Barber National Champion, Currently 3rd in Star Mazda standings
Conor Daly chose to stay in the United States to take up a fully funded season of Star Mazda racing which was the prize for winning the 2008 Barber National Series. Winning the Mazda title will earn him a full season of Atlantics in 2010 which will keep him in the USA for at least one more season. His ultimate aim is to follow his father's footsteps to Europe and he has already made his mark there by winning the 2008 Walter Hayes Trophy for Formula Ford cars. His Star Mazda season has been fraught to say the least (see video below) but despite some setbacks he is sitting third in the standings.




4. Gabby Chaves - Formula BMW Americas:
2009, Series Leader (2 wins)
16 year old Chaves arguably represents the longest term prospect of the future stars. On saying that, he has certainly taken the F BMW Americas series by the scruff of the neck so far this season, finishing no worse than second in any of the four rounds so far.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Updated Driver Values

Hello All,

You may want to check the driver value list as it is now as up to date as I can possibly make it. Alex Lloyd in his shocking pink Sam Schmidt car has been on the track as has Paul Tracy. In fact Tracy topped the time sheets in Rookie Orientation yesterday with a lap in excess of 223mph.

The first official practice, for all drivers, is this afternoon and can be followed with live video as well as Timing & Scoring below.

Cheers,


The Commish

--------------------------------------------------------------------

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

It's the flu that reduces congestion!

In times of media-fueled health scares I tend to follow as many of the ridiculous instructions that TV news people can offer me. So with the recent swine flu outbreak I have avoided all pork products, stopped watching GolTV, disposed of all of the Doritos in the house, refused to venture outside my front door and even resisted the temptation to post on the Adrian Fernandez fan club message boards.

Tony Teixeira, the A1 GP supremo, has taken matters slightly further by canceling the finale of the series in Mexico City. This was scheduled for Sunday May 24th, a day (and weekend) that, for many of our listeners, is one of the best of the year. The logistical farce that was the 2008/09 A1GP Series almost triumphed over itself by consistently producing some of the best road racing seen anywhere on the planet. We have not only lost the chance of an exiting season finale in Mexico but all race fans have been denied a crucial chance to fully test our love of the sport and the limits of our endurance.

That whole weekend will be as much a test of stamina for the fan as it is for the 200 plus teams taking part in the Nurburgring 24 Hours starting on Saturday, May 23rd. Thank goodness there is no live radio coverage of that event this year, otherwise I would be in danger of overdosing on 5 Hour Energy and M&M's.

Here on the East Coast, Sunday will kick off with a frantic 6am search for live online coverage of the Porsche SuperCup and GP2 from Monaco before turning on Speed TV for the Grand Prix itself. I can enjoy breakfast with the best announcing crew in all of televised racing, topped and tailed by their refreshingly brief pre and post race coverage.

Richard Philippe wearing possibly 'The Greatest Spectacles in Racing', yesterday (Photo: www.flagworld.com)

The bridge to the Indy 500 pre-race would have been nicely spanned by the A1 GP sprint from Mexico, swine flu has put an end to that option. So part two of the day's festivities will have to comprise of me shouting at ABC's abysmal 'contractual obligation' build up to the 'Greatest Spectacle in Racing'. I wonder who Jack Arute can 'kill' during the race? Jackie Stewart or Gordon Johncock possibly or maybe he could give Chris Amon a Grand Prix win or an F1 title?

The 'Late Great Formula 1 Champion' Stirling Moss on the set of 'Al Jolson's Grand Prix Adventures' in 1955 (Photo: www.nextcar.com)

So once Dixon, Franchitti, or both, drink the milk it's on to Charlotte to watch the '43 Greatest Drivers in the World' (I do love the willful ignorance of that expression) do battle. Sprint Cup racing is rapidly losing it's appeal for all but the diehard fan. The Coca Cola 600 is the racing equivalent, right now, of 'Revenge of the Sith' or 'The Matrix Revolutions', it will be viewed by many simply to complete the full day's experience in the full knowledge that it has lost much of its luster and will inevitably end in disappointment, regret, anger and moment of realization that those last four hours can never be retrieved.

For our European stalwarts, this is a day that stretches well into Monday morning and anyone of them who makes it to Victory Lane in Charlotte deserves credit and my sympathies. I can only presume that fans in the Southern Hemisphere simply call in sick on Monday or quit their jobs on an annual basis.

So with all of that to consider we must thank A1GP for having the sense to give the true race fan a break in the action on May 24th. Even if it is only for the half an hour it takes to heat up another frozen pizza.

Monday, May 4, 2009

Quick poll - 'Edgy' & 'Fun'

These colors are orange/brown & black, they are also, apparently 'edgy' & 'fun' (photo: Indy Star)

I think the colors are really sporty and very cool. It sort of reflects how I am. Edgy and fun.

- Danica Patrick, www.indycar.com


Is Brownie Orange really 'edgy' and 'fun'?
Yes
Don't be feckin daft
If Danica says so
Yes, if you consider rust 'edgy' and 'fun'
I've seen edgier satsumas
pollcode.com free polls

Five Star JR - Could Hildebrand be the real deal?

If it was purely based on his popularity amongst the players of this Fantasy League, JR Hildebrand would already be Firestone Indy Lights Champion for 2009. That would, of course, be a terrific position to be in as he could start his discussions for 2010 by May 1st of 2009 and he may even be able to land a drive for the 500 this season. Townsend Bell managed a similar feat in slightly less timely fashion in 2001 when he parlayed a triumphant Indy Lights campaign into a number of late season races for Pat Patrick in CART.

Sadly for the 21 year old from Sausalito, popularity amongst a disparate group of global fantasy racing fans doesn't pay the mortgage. It hasn't helped him in the standings either as his two pole positions and chart topping speed at every round has only netted one win and fourth place in the current standings. Outright pace may not be the key to winning the Firestone Indy Lights title in 2009. Consistency and that inate ability to avoid trouble will most likley be the magic combination this season. Just ask Jonathan Summerton who tops the standings without having seen victory lane this year. In terms of this Fantasy League, it means having to try and pick a single driver to give you maximum points each week is almost impossible.

Hildebrand hit the ground running at Brands Hatch last weekend.

One of the flaws of the Firestone Indy Lights Series, in some respects, is the wide open and varied nature of the competition. The almost chaotic and unbalanced qualifying system on street courses and the clear disparity between some of the teams and drivers abilities when moving from those street courses to ovals, are two reasons why we have seen no clear superstar rising from the pack at this early stage. In 2008, Dillon Battistini won four races on ovals, more than any other driver, but could only manage 6th in the overall standings. The eventual series champion, Raphael Matos never found victory lane by turning left but took the top step of the podium three times on road courses.

Pure road racing talent is something Matos has in abundance, a fact underlined by the contents of his trophy cabinet which contains the 2007 Atlantic Series Cup alongside his 2008 FILS silverware. That ability clearly attracted Luczo Dragon Racing who signed him for 2009. If the IndyCar pit lane was not aware of Hildebrand's similar prowess it will have been forced to sit up take notice by his performances last weekend in Britain. Racing at Brands Hatch in A1GP for the Andretti Green run Team USA, the Californian put in the outfit's most competitive performance of the year. It would be unfair not to acknowledge the work that Marco Andretti and his engineers have done with the team to date and this was something that Hidlebrand was very quick to point out. "Marco and the whole team have done a great job over the last few races getting the setup pretty close to where it needs to be. I get the pleasure of being able to capitalize on that a little bit", Hildebrand remarked after qualifying and finishing fourth in Sunday's opening sprint race. This is absolutely true but it also plays down the difficulty that any new driver faces coming into this series with limits on tyre useage, no testing opportunities and extremely limited track time on race weekends.

Marco Andretti has seen some of his happiest moments away from the IndyCar Series

I talked about Marco's struggles, and his enigmatic career to date, in an earlier blog entry. Hildebrand's run to third place in the opening Sprint race does put some of those prior performances by Andretti and the whole AGR team in some perspective. It also raises the question of who will be in the seat when the A1 GP Series reconvenes on the Gold Coast in October. By then, the IndyCar and Indy Lights seasons will have drawn to a close and both AGR contracted drivers may see success in A1GP as key to their future careers. Michael Andretti may have the unenviable task of chosing between the driver who may need more seat time to hone his race craft and the Indy Lights Champion on an upward career curve ready to win races for team and country.


Presented by 'Car Jack Streets' for iPod and iPhone. Out Now!

Sunday, May 3, 2009

Mark one for BMW

fail owned pwned pictures
see more pwn and owned pictures

Genius!

The Southern California BMW dealers deserve a pat on the back for this one. :)

Thursday, April 30, 2009

Operators are waiting so call now!

Zero degrees Kelvin (0K), or -459°F, is the scientific term for absolute zero, the temperature where all molecular movement stops also known as the theoretical absence of all thermal energy. To put it another way, it is the point when stuff stops being stuff and starts not existing, a little bit like Scott Speed's talent.




















Kelvin Burt wishing for an actual absence of thermal energy, yesterday


I'm a relatively keen student of the great landmarks of physics and I am well aware that this state is purely theoretical and has never been replicated under laboratory conditions. Well that is what I believed until I saw the IndyCar Series ratings for Kansas on Sunday.

The figure I read was so alarmingly tiny that I had to check that I hadn't looked at viewing data for Women's Lacrosse or candle pin bowling. The number, .15 of one ratings point, is all the evidence I need to believe that we are not far off nailing absolute zero seeing as IndyCar and Versus TV almost managed it in far from ideal conditions on Sunday.

In less scientific terms those ratings are marginally above those of good infomercial numbers and maybe this is a positive and indeed a commercial opportunity for the marketing departments of IndyCar and their TV partner.

If Vince Shlomi - The Shamwow Guy - can find time in his schedule to stop battering hookers he could help sort out all the issues about racing in the rain. I mean you have seen what the orange rag can do right? Get a tarp roller made of that stuff and rain delays will be a thing of the past.

We need to get Jack Arute out of pit lane as soon as possible and not just because at Long Beach he announced the death of Sir Stirling Moss live on air while handing him a World title he never won. Incidentally, this made Moss only the second ever posthumous World Champion, and the first to earn that honor while still alive. If Versus are worried about the numbers, just replace him with Billy Mays and start selling all of the stuff that Jack normally has a good look at in the pits. This would include all sorts of worn out, no longer useful tat like tires, brake discs, damaged nose cones and AJ Foyt.

Lindy Thackston can go crazy with the Ginsu knife slashing through everything in her path, well, when I say everything I am of course excluding the TV audience as that could only be split further using a particle accelerator.

This also has to be a tremendous opportunity for KV Racing and Dale Coyne to sell their additional seats for the Indianapolis 500. 'If you buy now we will not only give you 'The Greatest Spectacle in Racing' but you will also get the Milwaukee Mile and Kentucky Speedway absolutely free'.

My only worry is that the figures will shrink to the point where race budgets will be drastically cut (without the need to resort to Lindy's knife) and teams will be forced into this type of racing and venue.

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

I swear it wasn't me!

Video footage has been released of the very recent theft of Danica Patrick's race car for Indy.

EDIT: This is a very elaborate publicity stunt.



Kim Green has been quoted as saying:

“I am disappointed that this video was leaked because it creates an unnecessary distraction as we prepare for the 93rd running of the Indianapolis 500. We are in contact with the individuals in the video and are making progress in getting the car returned prior to Opening Day at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. We have no further information to offer at this time and will provide additional details as they become available.”

What are your thoughts, use the comment bar on the blog.

EDIT: This in from Fantasy League member Austin Hollabaugh.

It most likely has something to do with the commercial they are shooting at the new Indianapolis airport (I forget where I read about it at), but she is going to be driving her *new* paint schemed car down one of the tarmacs. Most likely after she rescues it from these heathens! What a stretch..sorry to ruin the plot for ya!

- The Commish