Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Indy gears up for historic weekend

IndyCar, NASCAR put rift behind them

-

INDIANAPOL­IS — The once-frosty schism between the two biggest racing series in the United States has finally thawed and the result is a blockbuste­r event at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway — even without fans.

NASCAR’s elite Cup Series will share a venue with IndyCar on the same weekend for the first time, a doublehead­er convenient­ly forced by the frantic rescheduli­ng required by by the coronaviru­s pandemic. Even so, it is an important step in putting forth a united front for the sake of motorsport­s.

“We’re all racers. We want racing to be successful,” said Kevin Harvick, the current NASCAR points leader and a winner at the Brickyard last year. “I know it’s kind of had that stigma for a number of years there’s the IndyCar guys and there’s the NASCAR guys ... racers are racers. Everybody wants to see a good race and be part of a cool event.”

The fracture between the two leagues dates to at least 1954 when NASCAR founder Bill France Sr. was allegedly told by IMS security he’d been ordered to leave the speedway. France was already working on his own big race track, Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway, and he

vowed it would give Indianapol­is a run for its money.

The battle was on and neither side had any desire to build a working relationsh­ip. IndyCar, called CART in its heyday, dwarfed the Southern-based stock car series. But the open wheel racing split the mid 1990s in which Tony George created his own series gave NASCAR an opening to capitalize as CART and the Indy Racing League fractured its base. NASCAR exploded in popularity and blew past its bitter rival as the place to race.

As years passed and NASCAR became an annual staple at Indinapoli­s, the relationsh­ip between the two series has improved. Jay Frye, who spent decades working in NASCAR, is now president of IndyCar. Steve Phelps, just the fifth president in NASCAR history, has never held a longstandi­ng vendetta against the series.

Most important, though, is that motorsport­s titan Roger Penske now owns IndyCar and the speedway and has the juice to broker such a weekend. When the coronaviru­s pandemic blew holes in both series’ schedules, Penske plopped the IndyCar road course race originally scheduled for May on the shared weekend with NASCAR.

IndyCar will open the spectacle on Saturday with its second event of the season, then NASCAR’s second-tier Xfinity Series will make its debut later that day on the same road course. The Cup Series races Sunday on the 2.5-mile oval. COVID19 restrictio­ns mean IndyCar and NASCAR teams and drivers will not mingle, use different entry points at the speedway and work from different garages.

The inability to open the gates to spectators is the one downside to what is an otherwise monumental moment for both series.

“To me, that’s the unfortunat­e part, we don’t get to have fans in here,” Penske said. “But I went to Jim France and Steve Phelps and said, ‘Look, the Brickyard has not been able to be what you have hoped, and now that we run the series and the speedway, we can make the decisions and we can get this done and it will be good for everyone.’”

This new pairing could ultimately smooth the road ahead for an entire industry battling for attendance, television ratings and sponsorshi­p. NBC Sports is IndyCar’s broadcast partner and begins its portion of the NASCAR season this weekend. Sam Flood, executive producer and president of production, has tried to move away from head-to-head scheduling that forced viewers to choose which race to watch.

“We think it’s a really important crossover to have people watch racing ... to get people to sample different series, and you shouldn’t just be a NASCAR fan, you should be a racing fan,” Flood said. “I think this is a great celebratio­n of motorsport­s. The interest in motorsport­s is high. We just need people to watch each other’s forms of racing and grow the overall pool of racing fans.

“And that’s why this is so valuable, and that’s why we’re so lucky Roger stepped in here.”

Johnson has virus

Seven-time NASCAR champion Jimmie Johnson tested positive for the coronaviru­s and will miss the race Sunday at Indy. Johnson, 44, is the first driver in any NASCAR series to test positive and the news late Friday night cast a shadow over the historic NASCAR-IndyCar doublehead­er. There was no indication any races would be affected.

Hendrick Motorsport­s said Johnson will not return until he is cleared by a physician. He was tested earlier Friday after his wife, Chani, tested positive after experienci­ng allergy-like symptoms. Johnson is asymptomat­ic. Justin Allgaier will replace him in the No. 48 Chevrolet.

 ?? Associated Press photos ?? Indianapol­is Motor Speedway, site of one of the most storied races in the world, the Indianapol­is 500, left, and NASCAR’s Brickyard 400, right, will mark a first this weekend when it plays host to both series.
Associated Press photos Indianapol­is Motor Speedway, site of one of the most storied races in the world, the Indianapol­is 500, left, and NASCAR’s Brickyard 400, right, will mark a first this weekend when it plays host to both series.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States