Thursday, July 16, 2020

A 2020 INDYCAR Two-Fer In The Iowa Fields Of Corn: ZOOM Interview With Miles, Montri & Rahal

Pato O'Ward leading a pack of cars during the REV Group Grand Prix Race 2 at Road America Sunday, July 12, 2020. Image Credit: Joe Skibinski via NTT INDYCAR (2020)

A 2020 INDYCAR Two-Fer In The Iowa Fields Of Corn: ZOOM Interview With Miles, Montri & Rahal

After a very strong and exciting opening four races in the COVID-19 era augmented NTT INDYCAR SERIES - Super Speedway at Texas Motor Speedway, Road Course Track At Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Two-Race Weekend On The Dedicated Road Course Of Road America - we will be treated to the second weekend in a row where fans will be allowed to attend with all of the Wuhan Virus protocols will be observed and two races will be run in two consecutive days so as to make up for events being cancelled at the beginning season health event shut down of the country.

It's hard to imagine that we are racing and how hard it was to get here. Welcome to the tight oval bullring known as the Iowa Speedway.

In order to get a gauge on how the series and team owners are beginning to settle into this strange new professional competitive 2020 season, INDYCAR held a ZOOM news conference and this is how the introductions then questions and answers went.


NTT INDYCAR SERIES News Conference - Thursday, July 16, 2020 - Indianapolis, Indiana, USA

Mark Miles - President and CEO of Penske Entertainment

Michael Montri - President of the Iowa INDYCAR 250s

Bobby Rahal - Rahal Lanigan Letterman Racing

Press Conference

THE MODERATOR: Good afternoon, everyone. Welcome to the NTT INDYCAR Series video conference. I'm Kate Davis.

Today we were joined by Mark Miles, president and CEO of Penske Entertainment; Michael Montri, president of the INDYCAR 250s; and Bobby Rahal, co-owner of Rahal Lanigan Letterman Racing.

Gentlemen, thank you for joining us.

Mark, let's begin with you. Could you give us your thoughts about how weekend's first event back with fans at Road America went from the series' perspective and looking ahead to Iowa.

MARK MILES: Sure. Thanks, everybody, for joining us.

We're looking forward to getting over there tomorrow ourselves. Hopefully a great doubleheader weekend at the Iowa INDYCAR 250s.

Last week from my perspective was a treat. It's such a great place. The fans are so knowledgeable and so enthusiastic. Racing is part of their life. The Elkhart Lake community really tuned out for the event.

I think it went really well off the track. We just keep doing more and getting better at these COVID precautions or procedures.

As you probably know, everybody that came inside the track, whether they were fans in mobile homes or vehicles, or people in the paddock, our competitors and our participants we generally think of them now, everybody was screened with questions and with the contact-less I call it a gun, but I'm sure that's not the medically correct term. Everybody knows what it means. It went really well.

We had no resistance that I'm aware of from the fans as they entered. The paddock now has really got it down. This may have been the first race back with fans, but obviously in Texas and Indianapolis prior, we'd gone through this before. It's a very thorough process. I can elaborate if people want.

Before the paddock folks leave home till their arrival, and again on arrival each day, then follow-up after a race, we're in touch with all the competitors, all the folks in the paddock, to see if anybody has developed any symptoms that could be concerning.

Then there we separated the paddock from the public. We don't love to do. We'd rather have the fans in a more normal setting, be able to really get their fill of up-close access to the teams and the drivers and the cars. Under these circumstances, that doesn't make sense. But that went well.

I thought the fans were very understanding and onboard really with the procedures that we felt were necessary there.

So love the fact that they were there. We thought the turnout was great. Obviously with the acreage there, 640 acres, a perfect place to reintroduce racing with fans. I thought it came off very well.

We loved the racing. What happened on track was outstanding. Seems like Chip is trying to run away with the year. Scott is a central actor in that plot. But the young guys stepped up, add a whole other long anticipated dimension to the stories on track, which is exciting for us. NBC was pleased.

I just think we give it a solid A for the weekend.

Looking forward, understand it's going to be hot. It's Iowa. Probably will be hot and humid. That's better than cold and wet, right? We're looking forward to that.

The team there has done a great job. They've worked very closely with the regulators and all the right precautions will be in place. As I say, each week we're sort of more rehearsed, more practiced. I think we expect to execute more flawlessly every time we get on track. We're looking forward to being there and having a couple really cool evenings of INDYCAR racing.

THE MODERATOR: Michael, you've been on the ground all week there in Iowa. Tell us how it's going and what fans can expect there.

MICHAEL MONTRI: Yeah, it's going well. It's been an interesting and fun week so far gearing up for Iowa's first race of the season here. We're going through a lot of the similar protocols and procedures that Mark referenced in Road America. I had the opportunity to be up in Road America, help them a little bit from the INDYCAR side with their planning there. I thought it really went well up there, like Mark said.

We're looking for similar results here as far as the screening process for when anybody sets foot on property here at Iowa Speedway. Workers, guests, partners, officials, everybody will get screened. Everyone will get a mask and hand sanitizer. They'll go through the process just like everybody else. In the grandstands, they'll be safely spaced.

We're looking for a fun weekend. We should have somewhere between 4,000 and 5,000 fans when it comes down to it, when you take the social distancing in to respect and the manifest for tickets.

As far as on track, looking forward to seeing some of those young guns go at it on the 7/8th mile oval here at Iowa. Should be some exciting races. Two night races in a row. Doubleheader. It will be interesting to see what some of the teams do from one night to another.

I know on Bobby's team, Graham is switching livery from one night to another, so his team is going to pull an all-nighter getting it done. Should be an exciting weekend.

THE MODERATOR: Bobby, if you could talk about what it's been like this month of July with three race events and two doubleheaders, what it's been like from the team owner's perspective as we head into another doubleheader weekend at Iowa Speedway.

BOBBY RAHAL: Let's face it, we were very pleased to get to Indy and the race. Had a good race there with Graham, and Takuma had a decent race. Of course, Elkhart is my favorite track. I've been going there since I was a kid, little kid. So pleased to see.

The weather was spectacular. The races were great. The fans were great. I was with George Bruggenthies who ran Elkhart for many years, is still involved in kind of a consulting way. He was very happy. Couldn't have been better I don't think.

Now we come to Iowa. Looks like the weather's going to be good. Cross our fingers. Usually there's rain at some point over this weekend, but it doesn't look like it this time around. Two races around here is going to be tough.

All in all, I think it's been great the way everybody has been able to work together. Mark and his staff, Roger's staff, of course Jay. Everything has been pretty smooth. Getting in and out of the tracks has been pretty easy, frankly. Everybody has been very well-prepared so that every morning when you come in, the testing, it's pretty seamless.

Obviously for me, we're hoping this is going to be a good, strong race for RLL. As I say, I think more than anything, I think everybody feels this way, it's just good to be racing again.

THE MODERATOR: We're going to open it up now to media questions.

Q. Michael, when you said four to five thousand fans this weekend, do you mean for each race, not a cumulative number over both races?

MICHAEL MONTRI: Yeah, that's correct. That's correct. Per day.

Q. Mark, I know with this race being a race with grandstands, having fans in the grandstands, how on a little bit smaller scale will you maybe use this weekend to try and test out how to have fans at a venue on a much bigger scale for the Indy 500?

MARK MILES: It helps, of course. The more experience we have, the better we get. Although I really do think we started strong even in many of these procedures with the paddock back in Texas.

There's so many ways to think about it. But first we got to take care of the competitors, the paddock, the crews, the media, the broadcast talent and production guys, everybody that's a part of making INDYCAR go.

I think they're all doing great. I think they have the right attitude. You might have thought it would wane over time, but constantly there's conversations, discussions about how important it is that we follow these procedures, that we wear masks, which is right here, I'm the only one in the room, otherwise it would be on. We show up week after week before, during Indianapolis, and for the rest of the year with everybody able to get on track. That's important.

In terms of the fans and more kind of a grandstand environment, while there is camping, we'll learn from that, too. But the scale is different. What I think Michael is doing is working hand in glove with the officials in Iowa and the area there. Their standards are for them. What happens in Indianapolis, Indiana, is still being dialed in, but will probably be somewhat different.

But the basics are the same: we want to test everybody when they come in, meaning screen for temperature and any other symptoms; we want to make sure everybody has PPE, masks, hand sanitizer and the like; we want to make sure everybody is standing apart in lines, everything from merch sales to food concessions is done differently so it's as safe as it can possibly be. On and on and on.

The things you check off are very, very similar. There may be a little bit more in Indianapolis. I'm sure we'll be talking about that in more detail before long. But it's all learning. It's a journey.

You know what I think is happening is society is trying to define a new normal. There is probably a point in time when we thought in Indiana stage five is normal, we're back completely. Now I think nobody has a clue when stage five happens.

What we're trying to do is figure out what a new normal looks like so that we can continue to operate, continue to do that in the most responsible, safest way, and take care of our fans and communities. That's what we're all about. I think Michael and the team are doing that in Iowa. You can be sure we're all over it for Indianapolis.

Q. It's been a week and a half since you got your 500 fan survey back. What were some of the biggest takeaways you took from those responses?

MARK MILES: I'm not going to get into the detail. We didn't actually survey fans. We wrote to our ticket customers and asked them if they wanted to keep tickets and how many. We got very specific results. We now have a better handle on how many of the people who had already bought tickets wanted to keep and use those tickets, who wanted credit, and the like.

We'll be going through the details of that before long. But it was a really helpful process that informs a lot of the specifics we'll get into soon.

Q. Mark, as we go through each week with spectators, as numbers come in on how things are in terms of whether anybody got sick, anybody didn't, if the numbers are positive, can we increase the access a little bit more, add a few more fans maybe down the road?

MARK MILES: First of all, we, like other sports, have to operate locally even if the series is national and international. What drives how we approach things is in Iowa the governor, Michael, the mayor of Newton, the local officials, they've met with them, they've talked with them, worked out a protocol that makes sense according to the situation on the ground there, which would be different in Ohio and different in Indianapolis, wherever we race.

It's not like it just builds on itself as a whole. It's really the parts, where we race, the local conditions there that determine the procedures.

Q. Bobby, generally this race would be real big for you marketing-wise. You'd be entertaining clients from the north side of Chicago, Michael Lanigan from the south side. You have to scale that back because you can't really have as much hospitality, some of the things you sell for sponsorships. How different is that from a team owner's perspective?

BOBBY RAHAL: We've done a lot of Zoom calls with our sponsors, clients. We've tried to frankly enhance the value above and beyond what was promised. Obviously in our case, knock on wood, all of our sponsors have been super understanding, patient, willing to change races. As Long Beach gets canceled, they went to Elkhart last week, that wasn't on the original calendar for them, yet they were willing to do that. We've been very fortunate.

Of course, many of the sponsors that we have are under no travel or nominal travel policies, as are their customers. Even though a lot of our sponsors are B to B, where they do a lot of the entertaining of their clients, it hasn't created too much of a problem yet.

Certainly we had people at Elkhart because we could, and it was beneficial for sure. Obviously Indy, at least the plan seems to be we'll be able to have some of our tickets for hospitality and what have you. Indy, whether it's in May or August, it's still the big race, right?

As I say, in the end we've worked hard to provide more value for our sponsors. They've been understanding. We're all in this together, is kind of everybody's attitude. As I said earlier, everybody is happy to be racing.

Of course, the competitiveness of the team has been pretty strong this year even though the results... Had a good race going at Elkhart with Graham in the first race, looking good, had a problem. At least we're running up front.

I think all of that combined I'd say has softened the blow. So far, knock on wood, everybody has been great. As we continue to race more, that issue becomes less and less of one.

Q. Mark, how did the Iowa qualifying procedure kind of come into play? Bobby, what do you think about it? How is the team preparing for it?

BOBBY RAHAL: Well, I mean, yeah, this was kind of brought up a couple weeks ago, I believe. The whole deal is to try to in these compressed weekends give the teams time in between these events, whether it's practice, qualifying or the race. I think it's a good idea.

We need that extra time. We've been lucky, frankly, maybe the whole field has been pretty lucky, that nobody has lost out. Look at Elkhart, Sunday morning practice and -- Sunday morning qualifying, Sunday morning race, there wasn't much time between those two.

If this opens things up a bit to give everybody the time if you need it, you've got it, that's great. In the end, especially at a track like Iowa, I'm not saying you can start anywhere and win, but if you've got a really good-handling car on a hot racetrack, you can come from behind. Qualifying is probably not as critical as you would see at Elkhart or a road course.

It's the same for everybody, so we'll just do the best we can.

MARK MILES: I would just say Bobby's answer really answers the question from my perspective, too. We obviously needed to economize on time, give space, time to the teams as we could. From our perspective, I'd say thank you to Bobby. What he said is representative of what I think generally teams are saying, that they understand. Everybody is being cooperative, kind of pulling from the same oar.

Q. Mark, how impressed have you been with the rookie field so far this season? Particularly going into the weekend with the doubleheader in Iowa, what are you expecting from the rookie field?

MARK MILES: Yeah, if I had a crystal ball, I'd just quit and go use my meager capital in another way, I suppose (smiling).

Look, I think there are great expectations for these rookies generally. I thought last weekend we saw that they can live up to that. It was really exciting. Some great passing, great racing. They could run in the front. That's really exciting. It's a whole 'nother plot line I think for INDYCAR racing that fans are appreciating.

At Iowa, I don't know. We'll see. I don't see anybody who's laying back and taking it easy. I think it's going to be great racing all up and down the grid. Bobby already kind of said of course it matters where you start but it kind of doesn't. They'll have every opportunity to be in the hunt.

I sure couldn't predict what the results will be.

Q. Bobby, with the condensed schedule this weekend, do you kind of change your approach to the weekend or is it business as usual?

BOBBY RAHAL: Yeah, I don't think so. I think it's business as usual. Obviously we've got to unload well out of the trailer because you have so little time. But I think we don't look at this in any different way than we would normally. Yes, you have less track time, more races, what have you. We've had reasonable setups here over the last several years. I think hopefully we'll do the same.

As I said, it's all about having a well-balanced car over the course of a long run, with the heat and everything else. I think we just have to make sure we have no issues because it's tough to recover from those issues in between the sessions.

Q. Michael, Roger Penske has expressed some interest in doubleheaders moving forward into 2021. I wonder what it would take for Iowa Speedway to be one of those? Along those lines, is there a sponsor on the horizon that could replace Iowa Corn?

MICHAEL MONTRI: A couple things. My day job is president of the Detroit Grand Prix. We're used to doubleheaders in Detroit. Certainly in Iowa for this weekend looking forward to the doubleheader.

Look, the schedule for next year obviously is a long way away. I think one thing about the community here, they're very, very excited to be having INDYCAR coming 14 years in a row now. A great racing community. Very supportive. I don't see any reason why certainly from a track standpoint that wouldn't work.

NASCAR is the owner of the facility here. Their team in the past has been in charge of getting sponsors, title sponsors. I'm representing INDYCAR here as the promoter. We were a little late to the game this year. Certainly if we have a similar arrangement next year, that will be the first priority.

Q. Bobby, from your perspective, would you like to see more doubleheaders next year in terms of how much of a workload it puts on your dedicated crew?

BOBBY RAHAL: I mean, I don't mind. If there was anything I would prefer to see is more time associated in terms of practice. I know the idea is to not run as much, minimize costs perhaps. Of course, I think because everything is so compressed, if you have a problem, if you got a crash in qualifying on Sunday at Elkhart Lake, you probably weren't going to make the race, even if it was repairable, because you just wouldn't have the time.

There's maybe ways you can solve that. For example, you're not allowed to have the spare car out of the trailer. You're not allowed to have the spare car with an engine in it. That could certainly offset those issues. But that obviously takes the engine manufacturer's approval for that. Obviously INDYCAR's as well.

I don't mind the two race per weekend. I only thing I would say is the teams face in a situation like that, for example, this weekend we have One Cure, which is our charitable organization with Colorado State University, the oncology program there at the veterinary hospital.

On Sunday we're introducing for the first time, to my knowledge the first time, our sponsor here, our client here is Hy-Vee, which is a large grocery store chain in 12 states here in the Midwest part of the country. That's exciting. There's a big Hy-Vee store in downtown Newton. That's exciting for us to welcome Hy-Vee to us and INDYCAR racing.

It is the One Cure car on Friday, then everybody has to work like heck to turn the livery around so it can be the Hy-Vee car on Saturday. That's a challenge for teams given the way the rules are right now. But if those rules were changed to allow that kind of thing, then it's no big deal. We'll see.

But I don't mind the concept of double races. Certainly Elkhart Lake is a track that can easily handle that. Mid-Ohio probably. I'm not sure of some of the others. I don't know if you'd want two races on a street race weekend, for example.

I mean, it does save costs, there's no question of that. Again, you have to drive value for our sponsors and opportunities for our sponsors. Somehow that would have to be all I think worked out.

MARK MILES: Let me elaborate a little bit from our perspective.

Bobby just said it's clear that it's efficient, efficient for a promoter who has a lot of costs already for just the one event. If you can do two and bring in more fans, that can make some economic sense. It's efficient for the team, even if it does create other strains for teams, along the lines that Bobby mentioned. It's efficient from a television point of view in terms of especially the production costs, again, kind of the operating and overhead for TV.

I think it's a mistake to think our objective is to see how many doubleheaders we can do. It's been a terrific way this year to fill in where we lost some races due to COVID, really didn't have an opportunity to reschedule them. But we have a lot of really great venues, a lot of great promoters. Accordingly I think we believe being in more markets where the races work is important to us.

I just don't want the idea that we're trying to see how many we can do to get misconstrued.

Q. Mark, on the logistics of a weekend like this, for the crews, are you going to have to limit when they can be in the garages? I could easily see Bobby's team might need a little more time Friday night. Are there constraints on that? How are you going to help the teams out? Say somebody crashes Friday night, they're going to need more than a couple hours to put that back together.

MARK MILES: To be honest, I'm going to see if Michael can help me with that. I know about move in, move out. As to any limitations on the hours in the garages, I frankly am not sure.

MICHAEL MONTRI: I can answer that. Obviously it's up to the INDYCAR officials, what they allow and when. I know under extenuating circumstances they have allowed a certain amount of time extra in the past. I know that is probably the case for Bobby's team like he talked about between Friday and Saturday night switching the livery around.

INDYCAR I think all the officials are really good working with all the teams. Obviously we want to make sure that every car available gets in the show, certainly every sponsor that can be represented gets to be represented.

Again, up to INDYCAR officials ultimately. I think they've been very good working with the teams on that front. Bobby might be able to comment on that a little bit more, as well.

BOBBY RAHAL: For sure, they have. They understand it. They get it. As I said in the beginning, the level of cooperation between the teams, the tracks, the series has been very, very good. Everybody has really been I think in lockstep as far as whatever it takes.

We have owners meetings. Everybody is in agreement. You got to do what you got to do. There's a lot of harmony I guess I would say or consistency in how everybody is approaching this thing. So everybody has been very flexible. If you need it, you got it. It's been good.

Q. Michael, what's the feeling on the ground there about the race weekend? Have you been out in the local community, I'm guessing not a lot? What is the local feeling there?

MICHAEL MONTRI: Yeah, I can tell you that when we first met with some of the local officials here on both the state and local level, the excitement for the race is palpable. They're very excited to get going again here in Iowa with the race this weekend. A lot of support from the community.

We've had a number of calls and meetings with local officials, the governor, Department of Public Health, everyone you can think of what you would want to touch in a situation like this. They've all been very, very supportive.

I think everybody remembers last year when all the fans in the stands stayed through the 2 a.m. checkered flag last year. Very passionate fans here. I know they're all excited to get going, and we're excited to be able to bring them INDYCAR this weekend.

Q. Mark, is there any new movement on an engine manufacturer coming into INDYCAR? If there is, would you be able to tell us who that may be?

MARK MILES: If there were, no (laughter). Look, my answer really hasn't changed. We continue to work on it. I think we're optimistic even under the kind of pandemic circumstances. It's proven hazardous to try to predict the course of those conversations.

We've said before, not to put any pressure on him, but if we had one person you'd like to take the reins to try to get that done, it would be Roger Penske and his team. I think we have reason to be optimistic, but I can't elaborate.

Q. Been hearing and reading a lot about Ferrari coming maybe potentially into INDYCAR. Is that something that you would like to see?

MARK MILES: Well, I think Ferrari is better than a great brand, right? It's a world class brand. It's about performance and racing. It is a global superstar as an organization. So yes, that would be terrific. I think race fans would love it.

But again, I don't mean to get over our skis on any particular possibility.

Q. [start 34:38 - Edmund Jenks - Motorsports Journal] The question concerns the phrase that we've all come to know as new normal, coming full circle from the beginning of the call. Bobby, the new normal actually is different for every template of experience that people have to deal with. This season in INDYCAR we have the Aeroscreen. I wanted to better understand the new normal as it relates to the Aeroscreen and having to adjust for it and what has that meant in the superspeedway, the road course and now looking into a small bullring type of racetrack.

BOBBY RAHAL: Well, I mean, all I can say is I think the Aeroscreen and the development of that, the work that Jay Frye and his guys did, the people that developed the screen, I don't think they could have done it any better.

Vision. I've talked to not just Graham but some other drivers. Night vision is very good. In fact, Spencer Pigot at Elkhart said you wouldn't even know it's there in terms of vision, the quality of your vision. You just kind of don't see it.

Obviously there's been some heating issues. It's kind of a little unfair to the screen, because every race we've had this year so far, other than Elkhart, was very, very hot. What was it, mid 90s at Indy. Texas it was 90s. It's been very hot.

I know they've improved the venting. Probably looking at other ways. Every driver I've spoken to, when you're on the track going, it's not a big deal. The big deal is when you get under yellow or when you get in the pits, you get all the heat.

I would say, I mean, this is a major component now. The performance obviously hasn't hurt the cars because the racing is just as good, the speeds are right there. It's a heck of a lot safer.

I can tell you when I saw Graham go off at Elkhart, I was really glad he had that screen on because it was looking like it could get pretty ugly for a while.

I think we got to be very pleased with it so far, and it's just going to get better.

Q. I've noticed RLL hasn't had too much of a problem doing setups on it. Your pace seems really strong.

BOBBY RAHAL: Well, yeah, so far so good, knock on wood. Like I say, I think there's concern, for sure, initially. But I think the development of it was very, very good. All the people that contributed to the development did a great job.

Q. Michael, could you elaborate, what is the appetite for racing right now in the state of Iowa?

MICHAEL MONTRI: I mean, again, from our initial meetings with everyone locally here, certainly in the city of Newton and at state level, they're all very excited. When you think about it, it's college football here in Iowa. I'm not sure that they're sure whether that's going to happen here. We might be the biggest professional sporting event they have here this year. We're looking forward to having it.

Grandstands again, because of the social distancing aspect, we're at a reduced number. Saturday the grandstand seats are completely sold out. Friday we have just a few tickets left. We've opened up some general admission seating on what we call the hill, so there will be some socially distanced general admission seating on the hill which is selling well. Then we have a couple public suites available where folks can buy individual seats.

Ticket sales for what we're allowed to do here under the current circumstances have been very good.

THE MODERATOR: I'd like to thank Mark, Michael and Bobby for their time today. We really appreciate it. Thank you to the media that has joined us.
[ht: FastScripts Transcript by ASAP Sports]

... notes from The EDJE





TAGS: Penske Entertainment, Iowa INDYCAR 250, Rahal Lanigan Letterman Racing, NTT INDYCAR SERIES, Two-Race Weekend, Mark Miles, Michael Montri, New Normal, Fans, The EDJE

Thursday, July 2, 2020

IMS Triple-Header & IMSA Daytona Has Team Penske's Attention July 4th Weekend

Tee shirt graphic from the first ever triple header race weekend held at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. The weekend features races by three racing series and two different sanctioning bodies - NTT INDYCAR & NASCAR. Image Credit: Edmund Jenks via IMS Store screengrab (2020)

IMS Triple-Header & IMSA Daytona Has Team Penske's Attention July 4th Weekend

After an extended interruption off-season, Motorsports and Motor Culture gets a boost over the 2020 July 4th Independence Day celebration weekend - sans fans, in the stands.

ZOOM presentation where the flow is regulated - Edmund Jenks asks a question of all drivers - Dane Cameron, Juan Pablo Montoya, Helio Castroneves, & Ricky Taylor - at 14:20 on the timeline.

ZOOM tile presentation - Will Power, Brad Keslowski, & Austin Cindric

WHAT:

Team Penske Zoom Media Conference Block – NASCAR, INDYCAR & IMSA Drivers

WHY:

The Fourth of July weekend promises to be a historic time in American motorsports with competition at two of the country’s most-iconic venues, Indianapolis Motor Speedway (IMS) and Daytona International Speedway. Team Penske is the only team with entries in each of the four series competing during the weekend, including the much-anticipated NASCAR/INDYCAR tripleheader at IMS.

WHO:

Brad Keselowski – driver of the No. 2 Discount Tire Ford Mustang - Winner of the 2018 Brickyard 400 / 2012 IMS NASCAR Xfinity Series Winner

Will Power – driver of the No. 12 Verizon Dallara/Chevrolet - Three-time GMR Grand Prix winner / 2018 Indianapolis 500 Winner

Austin Cindric – driver of the No. 22 Menards / Richmond Ford Mustang - Two-time NASCAR Xfinity Series road course winner

Dane Cameron – driver of the No. 6 Acura Team Penske ARX-05 DPi - Three-time IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Champion

Juan Pablo Montoya – driver of the No. 6 Acura Team Penske ARX-05 DPi - Current IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Champion / Two-time Indianapolis 500 winner

Helio Castroneves – driver of the No. 7 Acura Team Penske ARX-05 DPi - Three-time Indianapolis 500 winner

Ricky Taylor – driver of the No. 7 Acura Team Penske ARX-05 DPi - 2017 IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Champion / 2017 Rolex 24 and 12 Hours of Sebring winner








... notes from The EDJE




TAGS: Pennzoil 150 At The Brickyard, GMR Grand Prix, Big Machine Hand Sanitizer 499, IMSA Weathertech 240, Daytona, IMS, Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Penske Racing, Team Penske, The EDJE


Wednesday, July 1, 2020

Fare Ye Well, Dicken Wear

A likely pair. Tom Stahler and Dicken Wear on one of many a lively meal. Image Credit: Tom Stahler

Fare Ye Well, Dicken Wear
A tearful goodbye to a close friend 
By: Tom Stahler, Managing Editor of the ClassicCars.com Journal - Republished with permission - published originally on July 1, 2020

When I would introduce Dicken Wear to people, I would say, “You know ‘the most interesting man in the world’ (from the Dos Equis commercials)? He’s got nothing on this man. Meet Dicken.”

Dicken may have been one of the most influential characters in motorsports and the automobile business that you never heard of. Some of racing’s biggest stars in the last 30 years were part of his karting programs; his grandfather, J.S. Inskip was the American coachbuilder for Rolls Royce – and one of the founders of the Sports Car Club of America (SCCA); he took a group of Pixar animators on a trip on old Route 66 to inspire the backdrop for the Disney movie Cars.

Dicken - In Monterey, (from left) Dicken Wear, Johnny O’Connell, Tom Stahler. Image Credit: Tom Stahler

That’s just the tip of the iceberg. Anywhere you went with him, the insiders knew him and respected him. Dicken passed away on Father’s Day morning after an 18-month battle with prostate cancer. Many of us will miss him greatly. For those of you who didn’t know him, you probably would be attracted to his magnetic humor and outgoing nature.

His entire life was spent in the automotive and motorsports industry. For many years, he worked for his grandfather’s dealership which was the importer/distributor of many English makes — MG, Rolls-Royce, Aston-Martin, Austin-Healy, Iso-Rivolta and Iso-Griffith — in just about every position imaginable. When the family sold the dealership in 1977, he took over the family’s Motorsports Division and Racing Team: “The Original Competition Engineering Since 1954”

A night out during the Long Beach Grand Prix (LtoR) James Groth, an unknown gal, Dicken Wear, Tom Stahler. Image Credit: Tom Stahler

He has been a race team manager, race driver and mentor to many “stars to be” in karting. He was also a journalist. He founded the Motorsports Report, which will now continue under the leadership of veteran IndyCar and car culture editor, Edmund Jenks.

With Craig Breedlove, Mr. World Land Speed Record. Image Credit: Tom Stahler

So many great times. So many great stories. So many late-night drives. So many on-track experiences.


Once the last engine was switched off at Laguna Seca at the end of Monterey Car week, the tradition became to make the 20-mile trip north to Watsonville to the Fish House. Come for the fish, stay for the bananas foster (video above - Dicken Wear, Tom Stahler, Charlie Vogelheim, Edmund Jenks ... from a "head's up" message by Josh Farmer).

Tom Stahler, Dicken Wear, John Kraman. Image Credit: Tom Stahler

What I will remember most is a guy who always had time to talk, help and just be a friend.

I’m missing you already, Dicken.

... notes from The EDJE




TAGS: ClassicCars.com Journal, Dicken Wear, JS Inskip, The Motorsports Report, The Original Competition-Engineering, The EDJE

Sunday, June 28, 2020

Dicken Wear . . . Gettin'​ His Kicks On Route 66

How does one define a Dicken Wear? Neither easily nor shortly. A recognition of a friend and colleague who passed from this life a bit too quickly on Father's Day 2020. Image Credit: John Dinkel (2017)

Dicken Wear . . . Gettin'​ His Kicks On Route 66
By: John Dinkel, Contributor to the SAE's Automotive Engineering magazine - Republished with permission - published originally on June 24, 2020

So . . . how to define a Dicken Wear.  That’s the third thought that hit me after learning from friends back in the north country (the One that is North of Australia) that Dicken had passed away.

My first thought was that Dicken was in a far better place, free of the cancer that had wracked his body for the past two years, and, secondly, great sadness at the loss of a dear friend.

Dicken behind the wheel of a Kidracer at the 2017 Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach. Image Credit: John Dinkel (2017)

Dicken was amazing.  I don’t know another person who had the knowledge and connections in motorsport that Dicken had.  And seemingly in every area and at every level of motorsport.  And these were not just casual acquaintances from chance meetings.  He literally knew and was friends with motorsports connections from go-karting to Formula 1.

Dicken hauled my Meyers Manx all the way from Arizona when I bought it. And yes, that is "Competition-Engineering.com" lettered on the engine-protection bumper. Image Credit: John Dinkel (2017)

But Dicken was much more than a storehouse of motorsports knowledge.  He was a genuinely nice guy.  You got a problem?  Dicken was there to help. I can count on the fingers of one hand the number of times I called Dicken, or he called me, when he wasn’t behind the wheel of a truck or a car . . . typically a BMW.  Someone needed a car or something hauled somewhere.

Question: Did Dicken ever NOT wear a car shirt? Image Credit: John Dinkel (2017)

About 10 years ago [2010], I posted the following words on Dicken’s Linkedin page that are as true today as they were then:

How do you define a Dicken Wear? 

Neither easily nor shortly. An East Coaster, from Road [sic] Island, with deep roots in the auto industry. His grandfather was a Duesey of an enthusiast who built Rolls-Royces and imported, distributed, or sold almost all English sports cars from the 1940s through the mid 1960s. Aston-Martin, Morris, MG, etc. In other words he Triumph-ed over adversity to live a live of Riley, but it was not an Austin-tacious lifestyle. 

Ditto his father. Dealerships, racing, fabrication . . . that’s a small microcosm of a Dicken Wear. 

Wanna design and build a go-kart track? That’s Dicken. Name a dozen top currents racers and more than a few probably attribute their success to Dicken. Formula Atlantic, IMSA, Grand-Am? Dicken has had his hands wrapped around all of them. SEMA, LBGP, PRI? Dicken will be hanging out. LA Auto Show, Grand National roadster Show? Yup, he’ll be there too. Ditto car museums. 

Write him a big enough check and he’ll design and build you a sports racer/track car/hot rod. And that’s not a complete fabrication! Right now he’s got a hot SEMA Dodge Challenger connected to his name. Dicken loves anything dealing with cars and car people. 

He owns more BMWs than most car dealers . . . and most of them need a little work. But they are fast and they handle. He also loves writing and shooting cars, following in the foot steps of one of his heros, Pete Lyons. 

I can’t think of anyone more fun to hang out with than Dicken Wear. Okay, Paris Hilton would probably get me “access” to a few more places than Dicken. Oh, and we have one other thing in common: We’re both pizza snobs! 

You owe it to yourself to know a bit more about this unique human being called Dicken Wear.  I suggest the following links as a start.

http://www.coachbuilt.com/bui/i/inskip/inskip.htm

http://www.competition-engineering.com/albums.html

http://www.the-motorsports-report.com

https://www.linkedin.com/in/dicken-wear-1b3a878/
ENDS

... notes from The EDJE




TAGS: Dicken Wear, Inskip, Competition-Engineering, Go-Karts, Rolls Royce, Motor Press Guild, SEMA, PAPA, AARWBA, ASRA, The Motorsports Report, The EDJE

Monday, June 8, 2020

Genesys 300 At Texas Motor Speedway Opens INDYCAR Season Without Fans In The Stands

"Please Come Back - I'm Ready" by Bill Patterson depicts the new Dallara with first season Red Bull Aeroscreen

Genesys 300 At Texas Motor Speedway Opens INDYCAR Season Without Fans In The Stands

The NTT INDYCAR SERIES got off to a late season start in a most grand and professional way. For the first-time ever, the season started the evening of June 6th, 2020 at a first-time venue for a season opener titled the Genesys 300 at Texas Motor Speedway - a high-banked mile and a half oval known for 214+mph speeds and close finishes. This event also featured a first-time where no one was allowed to pay money at a turn-style and sit in a seat to witness the competition on the track - in America? No concession's confectionery was allowed to be purchased because there were no fans.

Graham Rahal during the Genesys 300 at Texas Motor Speedway Saturday, June 6, 2020. Graham tracks along pitlane in his Aeroscreen modified Dallara racecar in oval trim as the field goes to restart without fans in the stands a Texas Motor Speedway. Image Credit: Chris Jones - NCIS (2020)

From the beginning, everyone knew this was going to be a high-stress affair ever since the nation went on a commercial lock-down, due to fears and concerns in readiness over the COVID-19 pandemic, beginning in March after the first major event cancellation was ordered by Austin Texas Mayor shut down the rites of late winter South By Southwest (SXSW) music and culture festival. Soon thereafter, the traditional season-opener through the streets of St. Petersburg, Florida followed suit setting off a chain of chaotic ripples throughout the potentials of a 2020 racing series season originally set a 17 races ending in September.


Adding insult to injury to this set-up of a natural disaster aided by Human decision-making and control, this was to be the very first season the NTT INDYCAR SERIES and Indianapolis Motor Speedway (IMS) was under the new leadership of Roger Penske, who had purchased the INDYCAR sanctioning body and the track from the Hulman & Co. who had been in control of both the unified series and the track since February, 2008. The IMS track and the INDY 500 event had never been under any other leadership than Hulman & Co. since the facility was purchased by Tony Hulman, November 14, 1945, re-setting the modern history of American motorsport.

Given the chaos created in this era of the hysteria and fear created by the illness and potential ending of life in a newly identified (first isolated and identified on January 7, 2020) virus infection from Wuhan, China, it is probably amazing that this first race of a recently confirmed 16 race 2020 NTT INDYCAR SERIES season (down from 17 races), ending in October at St. Petersburg, Florida, was actually held - fans or no fans.

With all of this as a backdrop, oops - adding that there was a 6 race 2-D gaming race series held in order to keep 3-D driver skills up and fan interest somewhat focused, but this effort, while better than nothing, left most fans with a very large void that real life, with real teamwork and the technology of cars on a dynamic physical forces track (masks, or no masks) could ever be matched in the cyber world.


Again, with all of this as a backdrop, oops - with a week's worth of Black Lives Matter violent protests (riots with property damage, deaths, and fires to 100s of buildings} - masks, or no masks by gatherings of people in very close shoulder to shoulder physical proximity without a Governmental concern of enforcement to their edicts on Social Distancing. As well as the fact that the Governor moved to a stage one open-up crowd strategy of 25% commercial capacity allowed for open air event environments for music and sporting events - whereas, the NTT INDYCAR SERIES and Texas Motor Speedway decided not to take advantage of for this first-time set of circumstances.

Lastly, again, with all of this as a back drop, the INDYCAR teams put on the event under a 30 some-odd page booklet of COVID-19 protocols including masks, pit crew behavior, number of people in a pit crew, TV interview set-ups and protocols, and etc.. One could sense the tension that was requisite above and beyond just racing in the first race of the season - what comes to mind was watching team owner of the winner of the race - Scott Dixon - Chip Ganassi, struggling to keep a mask properly displayed upon his face throughout the event.

Firestone Firehawk tires used during the race came from an interesting sets of background and understanding. First off, this Dallara had never turned laps while in race trim at full anger. This being the first race of the season with a new platform, created some guesswork by the professionals at Firestone. What they ended up with is that the Rightside/Outside tires were the testing tires used to match up with the new aerodynamic stresses and down-force presented with adding the Areoscreen to the body. The Leftside/Inside set of tires chosen were last year's INDY 500 tires figuring that they would be able to handle the Texas track heat (nearly 150F degrees at race time) and speeds of around 214 during Qualifications for the Genesys 300 at Texas Motor Speedway Saturday, June 6, 2020. Image Credit: Chris Owens - NICS (2020)

The whole of the teams, owners, drivers, emergency support staff, and the TV production crew at NBC put on a real professional event performed at the highest levels of standard and to anyone with a trained eye, not one foot was placed wrong throughout the event.

Were mistakes made? - YES, this is reality with real world consequences. No quick digital pitlane resets here.

Was any of this a distraction to the professionalism of staging a race with a whole new platform of race car with the added safety feature of an Aeroscreen which changed up potentials in tiree wear on a banked oval track with average speed of over 214mph between 23 of the 24 cars scheduled to take to the track for just under 300 miles of tire to tire, side-by-side racing? - NO, in fact this first race of a Penske owned professional racing series at the highest levels of professional challenge in motorsport anywhere in the world was beyond a phenomenal success.

As far as holding a race without fans in the stands, NBC for its part decided to broadcast the race on Saturday evening through its over-the-air general non-cable portal with a tremendous response.

Scott Dixon celebrates with his socially distanced/virtue-signalling team after winning the Genesys 300 at Texas Motor Speedway Saturday, June 6, 2020. Image Credit: Chris Owens NICS (2020)

This excerpted and edited from IndyStar -

Saturday's 2020 series Genesys 300 that served as the season-opener shown on NBC, IndyCar's first network broadcast in primetime in seven years, averaged 1.285 million viewers across the show, which aired from 8-10 p.m. Unsurprisingly, Indianapolis led all markets with a 4.36 household rating — meaning 4.36% of homes with TVs on during the broadcast were tuned into the race.

On a national scale (and excluding Indy 500s), it was the most-watched NBC-broadcast IndyCar race ever, surpassing last year's race at Road America (1.110 million viewers), and it became the series' most-watched race since the 2016 Dual at Detroit Race 2 (1.397 million on ABC).
[Reference Here]

Bravo to the NTT INDYCAR SERIES for a near perfect race under extremely un-perfect circumstances breaking a near 80 day lock-down of society as a whole.

RESULTS >>>

Next up? NTT INDYCAR SERIES race is the GMR Grand Prix on Saturday, July 4 on the road course at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

One can only hope that this race is attended with people on the grounds at IMS under these understandings: If one is sick and has a fever - report to a hospital or stay home. If one is in an identified vulnerable demographic and fearful - stay home. Outside of this, enter living life at one's own risk, with the exact-profitable-densities the retail establishments had, as if it were New Year's Day 2020!

Lookin' for FANS, not NO FANS come race day at IMS - home at Indiana, Wuhan Red Death be damned.

... notes from The EDJE




TAGS: NTT INDYCAR SERIES, COVID-19, Wuhan Virus, GMR Grand Prix, Genesys 300, Texas Motor Speedway, NO FANS, Masks, Social Distancing, Professionalism, Scott Dixon, Josef Newgarden, Simon Pagenaud, Penske Racing, Chip Ganassi Racing, The EDJE

Monday, April 20, 2020

NETCODE Meets Up With DIGITAL COURAGE - IndyCar iRacing Challenge & SRO's GT Rivals eSports

NTT IndyCar Series Dale Coyne Racing with Team Goh Rookie Alex Palou streaks toward the start/finish line in his No. 55 Dallara Honda during the Firestone 175 at Twin Ring Motegi, the fourth race in the INDYCAR iRacing Challenge. Image Credit: Chris Graythen (Getty Images) via NICS

NETCODE Meets Up With DIGITAL COURAGE - IndyCar iRacing Challenge & SRO's GT Rivals eSports

Let's be honest around here - digital racing is only racing for those with digits on the electronic messaging input virtual "steering wheel" and not much else.

Those who strive to remain connected to motor racing culture are left with the very inadequate yet colorful familiar impressions of a laser coded two-dimensional racing venue.

In recent successive weeks we were treated to event races, featuring truly professional drivers from IndyCar and IMSA/SRO Series, broadcast online or cable television from places like Watkins Glen, Barber Motorsports Park, Weathertech Raceway Laguna Seca, Super Speedway Michigan Raceway, Danika Patrick's favorite track outside of the United States Twin Ring Motegi, and a very international circuit in San Marino, Italy Misano World Circuit Marco Simoncelli.

When the headlights of big events go out, the passion for engines remains on. As in other important sports facilities, in addition to national and international competitions, Misano World Circuit opens its doors to "Misano Circuit Tour", the program that offers the opportunity to visit the circuit named after the great Marco Simoncelli. Image Credit: sporttravelworld.com

Almost sounds exciting, almost like a travelogue, doesn't it? Well, it is not.

Interesting? Yes - but not exciting.

The expressions of NETCODE and DIGITAL COURAGE are very real functional (or non-functional given one's point-of-view) and potentially the Achilles heel elements of a gaming presentation, in a replacement motor sports event, no matter how good the graphics and on-air talking head ,via ZOOM or Skype pop-up window, color might be.

DIGITAL COURAGE (first put forward in the IndyCar iRacing Challenge Round 1 from Watkins Glen by announcer Townsend Bell) is the recognition that no real consequence happens to a driver or the repair-ability of the car when a competitor becomes too aggressive at Race Start, or within the game other than some program template consequence.

If a digital colorful blob slides off the track due to a move that could be classified as DIGITAL COURAGE, instead of having the "track" come under a Full Course YELLOW (FCY), the colorful blob is simply placed back onto the Pit Stop area of the digital race track and a time assessment of having to wait x-seconds, then the competitor can proceed back onto the track "fully repaired" and resume the fray. This process brings forward just a bit of disconnect for the viewer as well as the competitor because the calculation for a consequence almost goes on completely missing.


NETCODE is technology disconnect of a different nature and can happen even if somehow there was an element of "skin-in-the-game" (like a fee in advance before competition starts in order to bring forward the concept of prize money).

Wikipedia defines NETCODE as a blanket term for anything that somehow relates to networking in online games; netcode is a term most commonly used by gamers when discussing synchronization issues between clients and servers. The actual elements of a game engine that can cause so-called "netcode issues" include, among other things, latency, lag compensation or the lack thereof, simulation errors, and network issues between the client and server that are completely out of the game's hands. Netcode as a term tends to be used only in the gaming community, as it is not recognized as an actual computer science term.

The net effect of a NETCODE issue - if this is an issue that remains localized to the individual competitor/driver - is the ultimate consequence of not being able to compete/play at all, making the experience for both fan and participant unsatisfactory in a way that seems more blasphemous than any real world non-compete definitive occurrence.

This NETCODE "bug" could pop-up at almost anytime in any game and is probably a bigger issue now that most neighborhoods across these United States are under a shelter-in-place order. Since everyone is at home all day, people are online so as to blunt the speed of the Internet as well as infections from a pandemic virus labelled COVID-19 ... which led to the broadcasting of these digital motorsports racing events in the first place. Otherwise ... who'd care?

Well...yesterday [at Weathertech Raceway Laguna Seca GT Rivals eSports] had some ups and downs! Qualified P2 and pitted from P2. Then after rejoining in P8 and running my strategy, lap traffic decided to race me hard and we had contact that caused a spin. Then after circulating with damage I was P7 and got collected by a driver who let his car roll down the track unattended... Which totalled my car. Thankfully I finished in the top 25 which gets me reinvited to the next event. Hopefully next race is a little cleaner! On another note, learning a lot with setup and what makes a quick car, but also what makes a long lasting car. So much goes into the preparation for these events and to be your own "engineer" against others with more "resources" is difficult. But boy does it feel good to be competitive! I thank my wife @bydanikoch for being understanding during the days leading to these events. Hahaha. Image & Caption Credit: iRacing via Kenton Koch FB Timeline

Another less than satisfactory DIGITAL COURAGE element observed during the SRO World Challenge GT Rivals eSports platform second race of IMSA and SRO Series sportcar drivers held at Misano World Circuit. The race, itself, was very hotly competitive throughout the field but especially up front between the top three podium positions.

A bit past half way through, former Southern Californian Kenton Koch, signed in to his purple metallic No. 59 BSport Racing Aston Martin V8 Vantage GT3 from North Carolina, was beginning to challenge for the lead with Sim racer Josh Staffin, when the race stewards assessed a Drive Through Penalty (from a passing incident that happened around 1:14:20) to Kenton.


This excerpted and edited from Sportscar 365 -

Sim Racer Staffin Wins GT Rivals Round in Misano
By: John Dagys - April 19, 2020

Staffin took his No. 230 Audi R8 LMS GT3 Evo to a 30.248-second win over the No. 90 DXDT Racing Mercedes-AMG GT3 of Kevin Boehm.

It came after incidents for both Bryan Heitkotter and Kenton Koch, who were in contention for the win in the 60-minute race.

Staffin, a 24-year-old from New Jersey, led every lap from pole.

Round 1 winner Heitkotter dropped from second to fifth in his Nissan GT-R NISMO GT3 after contact with the curb in Turn 6 that sent him into the wall with less than 25 minutes remaining.

The former Nissan GT Academy North America winner finished fifth.

Koch briefly assumed second after Heitkotter’s incident but was handed a drive-through penalty for contact, which he did not serve and was disqualified.
[Reference Here]

The race stewards assessed the drive through penalty and one supposes that Kenton did not agree, or wished to discuss this with the stewards. He drove on and went beyond the two (or three) lap grace period while challenging for the lead and ...

... B O O M, just like that (at around 1:21:00), his Aston Martin, which was the focus of the broadcast at the time, was proceeding down the front straight in anger, at full acceleration, then it was showed parked in pitlane with the broadcasters, who were caught out by surprise as well, left to explain that Kenton Koch was disqualified.

People watching this could all have suffered a whiplash. Very unnerving to the fan who was interested in the "driving" during the competition.

Sportscar driver and coach, Kenton Koch's virtual racing rig. Image Credit: Kenton Koch via FB Timeline

One can only imagine what was going on in Kenton Koch's mind, to the realtime imagining, the feeling that he was actually driving, in his very fast Aston Martin, while sitting in a room somewhere, then suddenly he sees a view of being absolutely stationary on a track pitlane somewhere in Italy.

This has to give the sensation of an electric SHOCK with no electricity while sitting in a chair, looking at screens, in a room somewhere in North Carolina.


In the IndyCar iRacing Challenge Round 4 FIRESTONE 175 @ Twin Ring Motegi run this last weekend, DIGITAL COURAGE was also on display, but the most noteworthy incident, which did not have an effect on the outcome, came directly at race's end. The race was won by Team Penske's Simon Pagenaud for the second weekend in a row, followed by digital rookie Chip Ganassi Racing's Scott Dixon, with lap leader Will Power filling out the podium.

Soon after crossing the Start/Finish line, and coming hard at full speed, Scott Dixon rear-ended Simon Pagenaud nearly disabling the digital Chevy Dallara he was in and throwing off the rear-wing and engine cover of his DXC sponsored platform.

What's worse, a now out-of-control Scott Dixon spins in front of a non-contesting Helio Castroneves who t-bones Dixon's Dallara and sails up into the fence to possibly deal Helio a digital career-ending catch-fence injury. Of course, this being digital where the most damaging thing to happen would be NETCODE because nothing is working out properly as planned or engaged, Helio Castroneves finished the race without one hair ever being out of place just like in reality.

This also left Simon to do his digital victory donuts in a very damaged looking car - not a pretty sight. Oh, but this did not stop Simon's wife Hailey, from popping the cork on a bottle of victory champagne. 

Post Race Communications UPDATE:

Turns out there is another element involved with this brave new world of truly Professional 3-D drivers compeating in a 2-D world and it is in-race communications. This can be termed as being an equal partner to NETCODE and it would be NOT-TOLD.

Take the situation that happened in last Sunday's virtual motor sports event put on by sportscar racing sanctioning SRO GT Rivals eSports from San Marino.

Kenton Koch was running in the top three positions for most of the race when  Bryan Heitkotter running in the second position in his Nissan GT-R GT3 behind Josh Staffin in his Audi R8 LMS GT3 Evo (who later went on to win). At around 2/3rds through the race Bryan Heitkotter had a miscue off of the track leaving Kenton in his BSPort Racing Aston Martin V8 Vantage GT3 to chase down the gaming leader Staffin. Koch's car seemed the better for late race action given that it was gaining on the P1 of Josh Staffin when the race stweards decided that Kenton Koch came too close to lapped traffic cars when passing them on the track and issued a DRIVE-THRU Penalty.

The problem resulted in Kenton Koch being DISQUALIFIED since Kenton was NOT-TOLD and his car was placed in pitlane.

In a post race communication, this is what Kenton Koch had to say via FB private messaging about the DQ.

"I actually never knew I had the penalty... Sorry to burst your bubble [in my imaginary story telling above]. I just never got a notification in my field of view and was focused on driving. I'm new to the game, so apparently I needed to have different boxes checked or something to get the correct notification."

So now there are three things competitors need to be aware of when racing in virtual 2-D:

DIGITAL COURAGE | NETCODE | NOT-TOLD
----
Last scatological thoughts on virtual motor sports racing events in relation to the everyday seriousness of living life and racing in reality:

2-D destroys the opportunity for awe.

2-D for too long creates the effect of numbness to the tactile effect and excitement of reality.

The longer this virtual shelter-in-place world goes on, hope deferred makes the heart grow sick.

In being a race fan watching digital racing, one begins to get the sensation of banging their head on a beam that's not even there.

... notes from The EDJE

Next Up?

IndyCar iRacing Challenge Rounds 5 & 6 ... the finale
The IndyCar iRacing Challenge returns on April 25 at Circuit of the Americas, and continues on May 2 with a non-NTT IndyCar Series track to be announced. For more information on iRacing and for special offers, visit www.iracing.com.

SRO GT Rivals eSports
GT Rivals Esports Invitational returns to action on Sunday, April 26th from the south of France at Paul Ricard. Tune-in on Twitch, YouTube, and Facebook for all the action.




TAGS: IndyCar iRacing Challenge, SRO World Challenge GT Rivals eSports, virtual, NET CODE, DIGITAL COURAGE, Simon Pagenaud, Kenton Koch, Aston Martin, Chevy Dallara, Team Penske, BSport Racing, The EDJE

Monday, March 30, 2020

Decisions Made, Digital Games Played

Sage Karam leads Felix Rosenqvist (complete with the 2020 season introduction of the Aeroscreen safety platform addition) and the rest of the field through the esses during the American Red Cross Grand Prix at Watkins Glen International, the first event of the planned 6-Race INDYCAR iRacing Challenge. Image Credit: Chris Graythen (Getty Images) via NTT IndyCar Series

Decisions Made, Digital Games Played

The Wuhan Virus | Chinese Virus | Coronavirus | COVID-19 pandemic has had its impact on just about everything in life, and living activity worldwide. In an effort to reduce the speed of the spread of this potential life-ending illness through human contact, it was determined that a policy of social distancing and human interaction through shelter-at-home "lockdown" requests all around, was the first best policy at protecting life of those who has not become infected.

Sports car racing team Marco Polo Motorsports got the 2020 GT4 America season off to a strong start last weekend at Circuit of the Americas in Austin Texas. The No. 71 KTM X-BOW secured podium finishes in both races with drivers Nicolai Elghanayan and Mads Siljehaug, putting them fourth in the GT4 America Silver Cup class championship standings. Due to pending homologation for the 2020 KTM X-BOW, the team reverted to running the 2019 KTM race car against a highly competitive field of sports cars. Image Credit: SRO GT4 America (2020)

What motorsports enthusiasts across the globe missed due to the timing of the advancement of this invisible scourge was the beginning of every professionally sanctioned season start to the 2020 championships - F1, WEC, NTT IndyCar (under its new stewardship as a Roger Penske led enterprise), NASCAR, and so on. About the only professional series race held, without the planned WEC participation, was the SRO Motorsports GT World Challenge America, GT4 America Sprint, SprintX, and TC America held at Circuit Of The Americas (COTA) the weekend of March 7-8, 2020.

This social distancing and human interaction through shelter-at-home "lockdown" requests wasn't going to end activity, especially since all had to place their motor culture based competitive passions on hold throughout the winter off-season. Fans and participants alike were not going to be held back from their desires to compete and watch competition by professionals each in their own disciplines.

Enter ... the virtual life.

iRacing NASCAR race screenshot as displayed by The Vrege

This excerpted and edited from The Verge -

PRO DRIVERS ARE COMPETING WITH GAMERS AFTER F1 AND NASCAR CANCELED RACES
Virtual replacement races are drawing stars — and tons of eyeballs
By By Sean O'Kane@sokane1 Mar 22, 2020, 7:00am EDT

For many, the cancellation of major sporting events was the moment that made the coronavirus pandemic feel real for the first time. But while fans of baseball, basketball, soccer are left wondering when they’ll see players back in action, racing fans don’t have to wait — because many of their favorite drivers are already competing in online sim racing competitions that were spun up in the days since the first real world races were canceled.

The first few of these substitute sim races, held last weekend, were successful in ways that surprised even the organizers. Now, many of the people who put them on have spent the intervening week trying to figure out how to use that momentum to fill the gap left by real world racing, as fans around the world hole up at home in a collective attempt to slow the spread of a global virus.
----
The success of these first few replacement races was a testament to how far sim racing has come during the rise of esports (and the era of Twitch), but it also sheds light on a truth that a lot of motorsports fans have become familiar with: that a new age of competitive, virtual motorsports is already upon us.
----
Within minutes of those [season opening] races being canceled, people like TJ Majors started making phone calls and sending text messages.

Majors is the “spotter” for the #22 NASCAR team, meaning every Sunday during the season, he’s standing on the roof of the grandstands letting the driver know (via radio) what cars are around him, when it’s safe to change lanes, things like that. It’s no surprise, then, that he helped spin up a virtual replacement for the canceled Atlanta race. After all, it’s literally his job to be looking out for other people.
----
Majors called up iRacing’s executive vice president to get the green light. He started contacting NASCAR personalities, too, like Dale Earnhardt Jr. (who retired last year after suffering multiple concussions), rising star driver William Byron, and Chad Knaus, who was the crew chief for each of Jimmie Johnson’s seven championships.

Majors also called James Pike of Podium eSports, which puts on broadcast-quality productions of sim races. “I got the call from TJ on Friday afternoon, and he told us about the idea that they had put together,” Pike said in a phone call with The Verge. “He asked if we were interested in broadcasting the race, and I said, ‘are you kidding me? Dale Earnhardt, Jr. and all of those other drivers are going to be running in our race? Where do i sign?’”
----
“One of the funniest moments was [when fellow spotter Kevin Hamlin] calling me asking for a name of the race,” Majors said. He kept thinking about the movie The Replacements, so he suggested that, with a small tweak: “The Replacements 100,” a nod to the number of laps they would run.
----
One reason for the [virtual racing's] popularity, NASCAR driver Parker Kligerman said, is the similarity of the skillsets. “It’s the only esport that connects in such a parallel with the real world,” he explained. “The reason you see so many real-world drivers doing this all the time is it’s not only fun, but it literally in many ways can feel like I’m doing something that could be helping me as a real driver.”
----
Even Majors, who watches over a driver going 200 miles an hour every weekend, agrees to an extent. “Real racing requires an enormous amount of skill and bravery,” he said. “Sim racing is still incredibly difficult.”
[Reference Here]

As to anyone who might be skeptical as to the entertainment value to the fan who might be stuck at the issue of "skin-in-the-game" and the full team with pit stops experience, this will take just a bit of transposition - no matter how difficult SIM racing might actually be.

Josef Newgarden, Alexander Rossi, and Kyle Kirkwood go three-wide during the American Red Cross Grand Prix at Watkins Glen International, the first event of the INDYCAR iRacing Challenge. Image Credit: Chris Graythen (Getty Images) via NTT IndyCar Series

This excerpted and edited from Racer -

PRUETT: The eRevolution has to be televised

The numbers can’t be ignored. NASCAR, FOX Sports 1, and iRacing combined to generate a 0.53 Nielsen rating on Sunday, which equated to 903,000 viewers, by choosing to air stock car racing’s first live Esports event on cable television this year.

Even better, 297,000 of those who tuned in for the eNASCAR Pro Invitational iRacing Series skewed towards a younger demographic, with the coveted 18-49 range making up nearly one-third of the viewers. That’s roughly the size of the crowd that packs into the Indianapolis Motor Speedway for the Indy 500 each May, which is hailed as the largest single-day sporting event in the world.

One analyst reckons the broadcast was the most watched Esports event of all-time across North American airwaves, and that alone should have IndyCar, IMSA, Formula 1, and every other major series clamoring to have their upcoming Esports races featured on TV.

IMSA held its Sebring SuperSaturday iRacing event last weekend across its YouTube and Twitch channels, which combined to draw an average of 10,000 viewers or so through live streaming, and IndyCar is set to use the same online delivery outlets for its upcoming race on Saturday. Even with a significant spike over IMSA’s streaming numbers, IndyCar’s audience size will pale in comparison to NASCAR’s wildly successful e-visit to FS1.

The TV component has become a must-have item, and with most sports networks struggling to produce new content, the NBC/NBCSNs and ABC/ESPNs should have the ability to clear the decks and accommodate their various racing series.

And before we hammer IMSA and IndyCar for aiming low and offering nothing other than YouTube and Twitch, there are a few nuances to consider here.

Every racing series has prioritized finding new and younger fans, and venturing into gaming has been among the core strategies employed by most sanctioning bodies.
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But life in a coronavirus world is far from normal, and by sticking to the let’s-get-younger-by-streaming-with-Esports playbook, a massive amount of older fans get orphaned in the process. It makes the dual delivery methods chosen by NASCAR and FS1, with cable and streaming options presented to fans of every age, especially smart.
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With everything else in our lives seeming to change on an hourly basis, giving folks an eNASCAR race, on the day and time the series’ fans carve out to watch from their living room, was a welcome respite from an uncomfortable reality.
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As series and their teams search for ways to give sponsors value while the pause button has been pressed on live racing events, the 903,000/293,000 numbers from FS1 are guaranteed to spur action from the IndyCars and IMSAs.

Some digital artists who develop liveries for various teams have reported an increase in business since last weekend as everyone from professional drivers to auto manufacturers have commissioned iRacing liveries that replicate their real cars.
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“There’s the potential for something big here, that can last,” said IndyCar driver Conor Daly, whose passion for all forms of Esports is well-known. “I was watching the eNASCAR race on FOX, but I was also watching one of the driver’s Twitch feed because it was more of a personalized thing. The TV option was great, and they clearly advertised it enough, and the drivers tweeted it out, and people knew to tune in. And it worked.
[Reference Here]


The NTT INDYCAR Series effort was received very well by fans (IndyCar reports 600,000+ online) and driver participants alike. Nothing will ever replace real racing on real track, but the iRACE display over YouTube was very acceptable visually as well as on-track feel in competition.


This excerpted and edited post race comments from the inaugural INDYCAR iRace Challenge effort titled the American Red Cross Grand Prix and run on the virtual Watkins Glen International -

Most informative comment was made by Will Power:
Obviously we all want to get back in the real car, get back testing and all that, but in the meantime this is what we've got, and it's kind of amazing that you can get a bunch of drivers all in different places racing a race in cars that look exactly the same and doing about the same lap times, so it just shows you what technology -- how far technology has come in the last 20 years.

Second most interesting comment was contributed by Felix Rosenqvist:
I mean, my other one was only a steering wheel attached to the desk, so it was very -- like the most simple rig you can have, so I've made a big upgrade this winter because the off-season is so long.

I started to get bored, and I was thinking, what do I need to do to keep up with my driving, and I bought a really good setup here in the U.S., and yeah, it kind of came in handy. I got that in January, so I'm pretty happy I did all that, and I got some practice done the last couple of weeks. So yeah, it's good fun. It's a good way to get into the sport, as well, for young kids.

I really want to stress the point that you don't need a really expensive sim to be competitive. You know, there's plenty of guys out there iRacing who they finish top three in really, really tough races and they only have basically what I had before, just a steering wheel on a desk.

INDYCAR iRacing Challenge News Conference
Saturday March 28, 2020 - Press Conference
Sage Karam - Dreyer & Reinbold Racing
Felix Rosenqvist - Chip Ganassi Racing
Will Power - Team Penske

LEIGH DIFFEY: Hi, folks. Hope you've enjoyed the inaugural iRacing INDYCAR Challenge, the American Red Cross Grand Prix of Watkins Glen. I think sort of the first one out, it was very enjoyable, and I think that we can call it a success. And we need to congratulate the top three in the race, starting with the race winner from Dreyer & Reinbold Racing, Sage Karam.

Sage, you're no newcomer to this form of racing. I think it was something like your 144th iRacing road course win, so congratulations. Nice way to come out and start 2020 that way. By the way, if you didn't know, there's going to be a donation made to the American Red Cross in your name, and you're also going to get a ring and a custom trophy from Jostens, so a couple of extra bonuses there for you on a job really well done today.

You had a victory of just over three and a half seconds, and from pole to Victory Lane you looked pretty much in control the whole way. Was that the case?

SAGE KARAM: I'd like to say yeah, but no, it wasn't totally in control the whole way. Had a few moments for sure, especially late in the race, had a lapper spin right in front of me and nearly lost it all there. But no, it was good. I was really worried about qualifying because Will was basically doing qual sims for the past week like every day all day, and I thought he was going to be hard to beat for pole. I didn't really have a perfect lap. It was a pretty good one, but when I saw his first lap, I thought, I think he's going to be able to get me here.

But I don't know if he like went off on his second or whatever, but --

WILL POWER: Yeah, I did.

SAGE KARAM: I wasn't too confident, and then when I just knew I had it, I was like, all right, this is going to make life a little bit easier hopefully. But it seemed like Felix found some speed today where he was able to run really, really good race pace. I was really banking on my race pace to be my strong suit, and when I saw Felix was not going anywhere and not falling back, I was getting kind of worried. I was hoping I could get a little bit of a gap and kind of cruise, but I basically had to push basically the whole race.

Yeah, it was cool to get Wix up front and Dreyer & Reinbold Racing and it means a lot to those guys, and during this time where we can't really do much, it's great to be able to get the sponsors out and the teams out and be able to give the fans and the media something to cover and watch and have some fun.

LEIGH DIFFEY: It was a lot of fun for myself and Townsend Bell and Paul Tracy. Because you've been involved with iRacing for so long, what was your big picture view of it? Typically you would be racing fans, other racers, members of the public. Now you're in here against your INDYCAR peers. How was it in your view and in your mind?

SAGE KARAM: Yeah, no, it was a lot of fun. I'm looking forward to the rest of them. It's kind of cool, you've got like a complete mixed bag. You've got guys who literally just signed up for iRacing this week, and then you've got guys that have been there forever, since like 2007, like me. You know, it's pretty cool to see and try and help out everybody and get them fully up to speed, and I think it was really awesome to see the amount of time and prep that every driver put into it.

It was almost every single day, all hours of the day for the past week of drivers just in the rooms, doing laps. Even though some guys were new to it, nobody wanted to be that guy that just was out there just cruising around. We're all competitors. We all want to do our best. We all want to win, and it was really impressive to see everybody grab it by the horns and get after it. Big hats off to INDYCAR, big hats off to the drivers, all the teams, everybody who made it happen. It was a really cool event, and I really hope the fans enjoyed it.

Felix Rosenqvist sails up the hill toward Turn 3 during the American Red Cross Grand Prix at Watkins Glen International, the first event of the INDYCAR iRacing Challenge. The cars are sporting the new Aeroscreen and full sponsorship badging making all to feel a bit more serious - great track graphics from iRace. Image Credit: Chris Graythen (Getty Images) via NTT IndyCar Series

LEIGH DIFFEY: Congratulations on the win. To second place now from Chip Ganassi Racing, Felix Rosenqvist. You had a very kind of parallel race and similar race to the one that Sage had and you got pretty close to him there towards the end. Did you ever think you may have had something for him?

FELIX ROSENQVIST: I think by just based on pure pace, I didn't really have what it took. I think we did similar lap times, but whenever I got closer, it seemed like Sage was able to react and go a bit faster. So I was kind of hoping for the lapping part to be my advantage, but there were some cars flying and stuff, and every time I thought Sage was collected, he seemed to get through all of them.

In these races you can never really -- you have to do all the laps until the finish because you never know when -- it's very easy to make a mistake on your own or to get together with someone. It's pretty hard to race closely.

But yeah, I think I was also really impressed with the effort that everyone put in and how well it came together. I actually had a look at the TV just to see how it looked, and the cars look amazing and the track and everything almost looks like real. It was cool to see my NTT Data car there, as well. Yeah, in these times it was nice to do something for the fans and for ourselves. We're competitors, and we don't want to sit around all the time just waiting, so yeah, good fun.

LEIGH DIFFEY: Just listening to a couple of things you said there, was there a few times it was a bit wild? Was it a bit of a wild ride?

FELIX ROSENQVIST: I mean, my race was pretty smooth. I think Sage had more -- he had more things going on when he lapped other cars, but he never lost any time, so yeah, it was hard to make any advantage doing that. My race was -- I never really had any battle with anyone, just the lapped cars, but I just blew my Push-to-Pass trying to get around people quick, and I think Sage kind of did the same thing.

Will was behind us, so his gap was also kind of static, so he had some quick laps, as well, so he was pretty fast, and I don't know what happened in the beginning, but he had like a 10-second gap to us already from the beginning, so hopefully next time he can get into the fight a bit more, as well.

LEIGH DIFFEY: There will be more questions coming from fellow members of the media here shortly. To third place, Will Power, Team Penske. You've got this ridiculous top-5 finishing percentage on iRacing. I think it's almost nearly half the races you've run you've finished in the top 5 on iRacing road courses. You continued that streak today. How was your race?

WILL POWER: Yeah, it was pretty good. I didn't know that I actually had that many top 5s in iRacing. Every time I do it, I always bloody crash out. But yeah, it was fun. I kind of was really cautious on the first lap and lost a couple positions, and then got stuck behind a couple people and Felix and Sage were able to check out, and once I cleared those guys through a pit stop sequence, it got a little longer. The gap kind of just maintained. They'd catch traffic, I'd close a little and then I'd get that traffic and it would open up again. Yeah, just tried to focus on not making mistakes, and yeah, it was enjoyable.

It was actually not very eventful for me. I kind of kept out of trouble and didn't have cars really spinning in front of me or anything. It was a pretty straightforward race. It would have been nice to have a restart or something close up with those guys, but that may have been bad for everyone watching because maybe the top four would have taken each other out, who knows.

LEIGH DIFFEY: I can't let you go without asking about this: What is this (pointing to mustache)? Is that just boredom?

WILL POWER: Yeah, it is. It's a 30-day lockdown regardless, so by the time the 30 days is up this thing is going to be gone. I might keep it, man. Nigel Mansell has never been the same since he shaved his mustache. All the great things he did with a mustache, he looked tougher; he shaved it off, it just looks weird. So maybe this is to stay.

Continued Press Conference Questions & Answers 
At Motorsports Journal Podcast Above


Needless to say, for most motor racing fans, this is a brave new world without the actual sound and feel of engines. That said, when one is watching real drivers who we have witnessed doing their magic on the track with actual skin-in-the-game, this digital game, oddly, has a place.

Just to keep a level of fan interest and sponsorship up during the off season, a virtual race a couple of times a month with the actual drivers who raced the previous season, as well as drivers who have been advancing up the ranks in advancing feeder series, could put on a scheduled display with post race interviews performed by the on-season broadcast professionals, which can serve for the training and enjoyment to all who participate - fan and driver alike.

The second of six events will be held Saturday, April 4, on the Barber Motorsports Park permanent road course. The event will be held at 4 p.m. ET and streamed through INDYCAR.com while INDYCAR's YouTube and Facebook platforms as well as iRacing's Twitch will serve as additional outlets for viewing.

Future events will be held weekly each Saturday through May 2 at the following sites: a "Driver's Choice" track (April 11), "Random Draw" track (April 18), Circuit of The Americas (April 25) and a non-INDYCAR "Dream" track (May 2).

... notes from The EDJE


Keep Calm | Wash Hands & Wear Gloves | Bump Elbows Or Shoes


TAGS: Coronavirus, IndyCar, iRacing, Esports, IMSA, IndyCar, Formula 1, NASCAR, American Red Cross, Grand Prix, INDYCAR iRacing Challenge, The EDJE