The Niagara Falls Review

Danica gets her own Lego statue

- BARRY WILNER

NEW YORK — When Danica Patrick drives her final race in the Indy 500 on Sunday, she’ll certainly be the only competitor with a Lego statue in her image.

While that won’t help her win IndyCar’s biggest race, it does speak to Patrick’s popularity. Maybe she wasn’t a rousing success behind the wheel in open wheels or NASCAR, but she has made an impact that reaches far beyond the ovals and road courses she raced.

“I think that it is a really unique and cool memory to have. Does anyone else have a Lego portrait, and full life-size?” she said Tuesday in Times Square when the statue, in full race suit, was revealed.

“I feel like I have been so fortunate in my career, so many great fans, great sponsors, so many opportunit­ies, so many great successes. When you are reminded of that in a way like when having your own Lego sculpture of yourself, it gives you a little bit of perspectiv­e.”

The proper perspectiv­e in evaluating Patrick’s career isn’t about Legos or wins. It’s about a legacy built on opportunit­y for anyone and everyone.

“I think that the better framework of that idea is that when a family is at the track or a family is at home watching the race and they see me,” she said, “and maybe their kid is confused or (asks) ‘Is that a girl out there?’ It gives them a good conversati­on point to tell them that anything is possible.

“I think it is great, regardless of saying being a race car driver or being something else, it is a good conversati­on to have on both sides — whether it’s a girl doing something in a guy’s world, or a guy doing something in a girl’s world.”

Auto racing at the highest level clearly is a man’s world. Patrick made inroads not with victories but with her mere presence in elite events. When she starts seventh Sunday at Indy, she will have gone full circle, with one last chance to replicate her only win at the top level of either series, in Japan in 2008.

Patrick drove in one race this year, the Daytona 500, finishing 35th after getting into a wreck. Now comes Indy.

“It is a great way to kind of honour where I have been, to be able to have one last go, to be able to thank the fans, to be there,” Patrick said. “There is a famous thing in racing called ‘The Double,’ when you do the Indy 500 and Coke 600 on the same day. My double is doing Daytona and the Indy 500 because I have been able to be lucky enough to race in both series full time. To finish up where it all started 13 years ago, lucky No. 13, is really cool.”

 ?? BEBETO MATTHEWS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Danica Patrick, left, poses with a life-size Lego statue creation of herself in New York on Tuesday. Lego master builder Chris Steininger says it took him 200 hours to build, using under 15,000 pieces and 13 colours.
BEBETO MATTHEWS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Danica Patrick, left, poses with a life-size Lego statue creation of herself in New York on Tuesday. Lego master builder Chris Steininger says it took him 200 hours to build, using under 15,000 pieces and 13 colours.

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