The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

‘This is his Mona Lisa’: Penske adds golden touch to iconic Indy

- By Jenna Fryer

INDIANAPOL­IS — The purists can relax: Roger Penske did not remove troughs from the men’s bathrooms at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway.

He replaced them, of course, with the shiniest, sleekest basins on the urinal market, thus preserving one of the speedway’s treasured if unusual features while still insisting every inch of the facility be brought up to Penske code. It’s been six months since Penske completed his purchase of the 111-year-old national landmark, a fixer-upper that he has already lavished with some $15 million worth of improvemen­ts.

“It’s like you just bought a Ferrari,” said Penske, “but it was rained on.”

Penske gave The Associated Press a two-hour tour of the speedway this week, showing off with dizzying detail the new landscapin­g, paved lots, planted trees, picnic tables, widened pedestrian paths, hand dryers in every bathroom, improved sight lines, pressure-washed buildings, freshly painted signs and LED monitors everywhere. There is not a lone piece de resistance; Penske is equally proud of every change, including a 104-by-20-foot video board on the Pagoda, a lift in the winner’s circle to raise the winning car and, of course, those old-school troughs.

Two days before the speedway opened for a historic NASCAR-IndyCar doublehead­er, the 83-year-old Penske was pushing a car onto the lift as he quadruple-checked

IndyCar Grand Prix at Indianapol­is, noon, NBC its functional­ity. He went through another dry run of the lift, ensuring it lined up perfectly for post-race celebratio­ns and alerting an employee to some manufactur­er stickers he wanted removed lest the public see anything short of a Penske perfect production.

“This is his life’s work,” said Chip Ganassi, a longtime rival car owner. “The way he talks about the place, the energy in his voice over every element — this is his Mona Lisa.”

Penske, for the record, is a billionair­e transporta­tion titan with a record 18 Indianapol­is 500 victories. He has powerhouse teams in both NASCAR and IndyCar, but the latter is now even more of a beloved project. When Tony George approached him last September to inform him the Hulman family was looking to sell the famous speedway, Penske pounced on the oncein-a-lifetime opportunit­y.

The deal was finalized in six weeks, and he got the keys — he literally has a set of keys that opens doors inside the speedway — the first week of January. He was quickly climbing through the grandstand­s in a freezing Indiana rain as he personally inspected his sprawling new property, one of the most famous sports venues in history.

Penske is meticulous, and every element of his operations reflects an immaculate and organized culture. When “The Captain” talks about sprucing up the speedway, he often references Augusta National, home of the Masters and a gold standard among golf tournament­s in terms of resources, presentati­on and hospitalit­y.

It is Penske’s expectatio­n that fans will view Indianapol­is Motor Speedway with the same level of admiration, awe and respect that Augusta receives.

“It’s my job. I’m not looking for a gold star or a blue ribbon; I just want to be sure the guests, the fans that come, ultimately when they can come, will have the experience that I hope they will,” Penske said. “I want to take Indianapol­is Motor Speedway to the next level.”

He envisions three IndyCar races a season, a return of Formula One, a crown jewel sports car race and an improved NASCAR weekend that potentiall­y could see the Cup Series shift to the road course and away from the 2.5-mile oval.

The place looks brand new, and yet the work won’t stop anyime soon. Penske hopes to host 175,000 fans — half of capacity — for the reschedule­d Indianapol­is 500 next month, and he wants them to be wowed. There will be no fans this weekend, and even race teams are highly restricted on where they can go.

Mark Miles, the day-today head of the speedway, recalled that Penske executive Tim Cindric said “the place looks 25 years younger,” which Miles said is an understate­ment.

“It’s not just fresher and younger. There are areas that are just better,” Miles said. “The scale of the improvemen­ts, the comprehens­iveness of the improvemen­ts, is remarkable. But the one thing that is really going to blow people away is the new big board on the back of the Pagoda. The mayor’s office downtown can hear the audio system on that. We’re looking forward to being able to show these things off.”

FRIDAY, JULY 3 Cash 3 Midday: Cash 3 Evening: Cash 3 Night:

6-9-7 (Thursday) 3-8-3-9 4-3-6-9

Cash 4 Midday: Cash 4 Evening:

On the Web: 8-9-7 6-1-2

Cash 4 Night:

8-1-8-7 (Thursday)

Georgia Five Midday:

7-2-1-2-6

Georgia Five Evening:

0-0-9-9-0

07-08-11-2736 (Thursday)

Fantasy 5:

 ?? JENNA FRYER / AP ?? Roger Penske looks over the track Thursday at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway. He has spent six months transformi­ng the facility.
JENNA FRYER / AP Roger Penske looks over the track Thursday at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway. He has spent six months transformi­ng the facility.

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