Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Motorsport­s on display at Grand Prix of St. Petersburg

- By Matt Baker

ST. PETERSBURG — When cars take the track today for IndyCar’s season-opening Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg, the signs of motorsport­s’ North American popularity bump will be everywhere.

The 27 IndyCar entrants are the most in race history. The 19 cars in its top feeder series, Indy NXT, are its largest field here since 2009. The RV club sold out before track constructi­on formally began, and at least one driver, Jupiter’s Kyle Kirkwood, expects a record crowd.

“It’s kind of strange,” Kirkwood said, “because motorsport­s is now the coolest thing again.”

The evidence of racing’s recent rise is compelling:

IndyCar’s 2022 season was its most watched since 2016, with the Grand Prix delivering the largest total audience (1.44 million) of any season opener in 11 years.

Ratings were up 4% for NASCAR’s Cup Series, according the TV ratings website Sports Media Watch. Though viewership for last month’s Daytona 500 dipped, the share of TVs watching the race was its highest since 2016.

Formula One’s 2022 American viewership spiked 28% from the

record set in 2021. The inaugural Miami Grand Prix drew the largest average U.S. audience (2.583 million viewers) of any live Formula One broadcast ever, according to ESPN.

It’s not just the top series, either. January’s Rolex 24 at Daytona drew record crowds. Former IndyCar and NASCAR champion Tony Stewart said attendance at his dirt track, Ohio’s Eldora Speedway, was “amazing,” and the waiting list to buy a race-car trailer has stretched to two years.

“Out of COVID where everything was turned upside down, the motorsport­s industry somehow thrived out of it,” said Stewart,

who co-owns a NASCAR team and competes in the NHRA drag racing series. “The economics of it, I have no idea how it is all working out. But it is somehow.”

The easiest explanatio­n is that the hit Netflix documentar­y series “Formula 1: Drive to Survive” introduced motorsport­s to a new audience. Though some viewers were interested only in the drama, others were curious about racing and started watching.

“It gave us a breath of fresh air that was kind of needed,” Andretti Autosport driver Romain Grosjean said.

The fresh air filled IndyCar, too, in part because of Grosjean, a former Formula One driver and a memorable character in the Netflix series. It’s safe to assume that he was named IndyCar’s most popular driver in its 2022 fan survey based more on his Formula One roots than his 15th-place finish in points as a rookie.

NBC Sports analyst and former driver James Hinchcliff­e said series’ fans have always had overlap. That means Formula One’s boom became a boon for everyone else.

“I’m a firm believer the rising tide lifts all ships,” said Hinchcliff­e, the 2013 Grand Prix winner.

It helps that those ships can easily slip into other harbors. Seven-time NASCAR Cup champion Jimmie Johnson spent the last two seasons in IndyCar. Motocross and rally car champion Travis Pastrana raced in last month’s Daytona 500. So did Conor Daly, the first IndyCar mainstay to start “The Great American Race” in three decades.

It’s hard to quantify how much that cross-pollinatio­n helps, but Daly said he has never heard a fan who’s against it.

“Why would you not want one of your guys to go try to fight with some of the best in the world?” Daly said. “We’re always craving something different, something new to be entertaine­d by.”

 ?? STEVE NESIUS/AP ?? Scott McLaughlin drives the Dex Imaging Team Penske Chevrolet during last year’s Grand Prix of St. Petersburg. He won.
STEVE NESIUS/AP Scott McLaughlin drives the Dex Imaging Team Penske Chevrolet during last year’s Grand Prix of St. Petersburg. He won.

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