Baltimore Sun Sunday

Drivers taking racing to the virtual track

IndyCar begins 6-week series of iRacing at ‘Watkins Glen’

- By Jenna Fryer

The walk to the starting grid for Tony Kanaan began in his Indianapol­is kitchen, through the foyer, past the trophy case, up the stairs, down the hall, through the master bedroom, master bathroom and finally into the closet.

That’s where the former Indianapol­is 500 winner tucked away Saturday to participat­e in a full day of iRacing on a simulator in the one place his wife will tolerate the rig. Kanaan participat­ed in two virtual races, a legends event won by three-time Indianapol­is 500 winner Dario Franchitti. Then he joined the first of a six-week series that launched Saturday to give IndyCar fans content during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

IndyCar followed the lead of NASCAR and other racing series in throwing together something — anything — to fill the void created when COVID-19 brought sports to a halt. IndyCar suspended the start of its season 48 hours before the March 15 opener in St. Petersburg, Fla., and on Thursday the Indianapol­is 500 was postponed until August.

NASCAR had a successful launch of its iRacing series last Sunday and it was the most-watched televised esports event ever with more than 900,000 viewers. IndyCar couldn’t get a television deal so its inaugural race was streamed online from virtual Watkins Glen Internatio­nal Speedway, the venue decided by fan vote.

YouTube streams from IndyCar and iRacing combined for about 45,000 viewers to watch a virtual race called by NBC Sports’ regular booth of Leigh Diffey, Townsend Bell and Paul Tracy. The invocation was done remotely, as was the National Anthem, sung by Blackhawks regular Jim Cornelison.

The field included NASCAR’s seven-time champion Jimmie Johnson, who made his iRacing debut last weekend in a stock car using SIM settings more suited for IndyCar or sports car. Johnson has been using his rig to prepare for potential races in other series upon his retirement from full-time racing at the end of the season. He was scheduled to test an IndyCar next month in Alabama but that’s been canceled amid the pandemic.

He wore a T-Shirt honoring late openwheel driver Greg Moore for his virtual IndyCar debut, which he streamed live on his social media channels. Most drivers tried to give viewers an inside look of their experience, including James Hinchcliff­e, the popular Canadian who played the part wearing a stereotypi­cal flannel shirt and Team Canada red hat with ear flaps. But a technical glitch stopped his his SIM before the green flag and Hinchcliff­e didn’t get to race, er, play, after all.

Much like NASCAR’s first event last week, the iRace had a wide range of talents because the younger drivers use iRacing as a training tool, while veterans are new to the gaming rage. Participat­ing in the series requires having the technology — which can be difficult to not only secure in a hurry, but also have installed in a drivers’ home during a lockdown — and the desire to be a good sport for fans starving for entertainm­ent.

Teams also viewed it as an opportunit­y to showcase their sponsors at a time there’s almost no way for promotion or activation. It was important to many organizati­ons to have their car and sponsor represente­d, which got Scott Speed a slot in Marco Andretti’s place when Andretti declined to participat­e.

Australian V8 SuperCars champion Scott McLaughlin entered the virtual event as one of four Team Penske drivers, but it is the closest he’ll get to a race now that his IndyCar debut has been put on hold. He was scheduled to run May 9 on the road course at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway but those plans were scrapped when the race was moved to July 4.

The race results were not surprising as the top iRacers led the way. Sage Karam, who turned 25 in March, won the race with no prior experience at Watkins Glen. Felix Rosenqvist, last year’s IndyCar top rookie, was second.

 ?? MICHAEL CONROY/AP ?? IndyCar driver Tony Kanaan uses his racing simulator in his home in Indianapol­is.
MICHAEL CONROY/AP IndyCar driver Tony Kanaan uses his racing simulator in his home in Indianapol­is.

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