Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Well, this is a strange time in the series. Here I am, sitting outside on a beautiful day in Holland, coming off a successful inaugural Zolder race and about to embark on a very successful Assen race this weekend. Coming off Bruno Junquiera giving Dale Coyne a podium in what of the great drives he’s had. I have spent a lot of time with my colleagues and have gotten to know a lot of them more than ever. Not to mention the bunch of emails with regards to the “Foreign Champ Car race contest” I received, most of them with complimentary words on my work*. Also in the last couple of days, I have heard more than a few potentially very good things for the series. I could honestly feel a lot of momentum within the series. And then we hear about the Phoenix situation. I know nothing more than you do, except that a lot of people here are, naturally, very upset with the situation. I don’t know who’s to blame, I don’t know the nitty gritty of the situation, except that it just became very difficult to cheerlead for the series. Very difficult.

There is no sugar coating this. While it doesn’t signal the end of the series or anything dramatic like that, it certainly doesn’t look good. Things just got a lot harder for anybody who works for the series or who is constantly defending it. If Phoenix is canceled, it’s a darn shame for Champ Car. Especially after all the legal battles with NASCAR that Champ Car won. It beat the 800-pound guerilla and now it doesn’t appear the event will take place.


There is little you and I can do about the situation except continue to enjoy the racing. The racing is good. Best in the world. Assen is going to be great. It’s a fast track and with the Power to Pass button, should make for some exciting racing. We now have (it appears) three races left to watch the master at work. Three races left to watch Bourdais do things in a Champ Car that shouldn’t be. And while I haven’t done the math at this time, I suppose he can win his 4th Vanderbilt Cup this weekend. One of the great accomplishments in motorsports and in sports in general, something that should not be overshadowed by any politics. We are watching the future in Graham Rahal. 3 podiums in the last 4 races since the kid and his MediZone team refocused.

After Zolder, two things happened. First, they gave Katherine Legge Bruno’s engineer and that relationship appeared to work instantly, as she was able to keep pace with Bruno. The second is that it appears Tom Brown was able to help Forsythe dramatically and Tracy would have likely been on the podium if he hadn’t broken the differential early in the race. Very positive signs for Assen, as the racing should be even better if you include Forsythe as a threat.


And this is all we can do for now. We can get up early on Sunday and watch another exciting Champ Car race. We can argue and debate as to how good Bourdais actually is. We can debate and argue as to who will get that number 1 seat next year. We can argue and debate as to which car was the best ever or the nicest looking. These are things we can do and let the chips fall where they may. I’m going to continue to make silly, irreverent videos for champcar.ws and hope that they make you smile.

4 Comments:

At 10:10 AM EDT , Anonymous Anonymous said...

How much do people associate the fact that sometimes team owners have control over series logistaical matters unrelated to thier team? Does this make Jensen the blacksheep in the paddock, it seems no one knew but him? Is that why it wasn't announced until the Atlantic season was over? If that is true, does the sucessful return of Las Vegas cancel any of that ill will?

 
At 8:07 PM EDT , Blogger Unknown said...

This comment has been removed by the author.

 
At 11:35 AM EDT , Anonymous Anonymous said...

Eric,

Perhaps you can relay this message over to Champcar communications management. The problem lately is, there isn't any kind of comments or any kind of public announcement from Champcar. I'm a die hard fan of champcar and I'm stuck with Champcar through all its trials and tribulations.

The problem is when nothing comes out of an organization, speculation from outsiders takes the front page. When there is no countering that the negatives spread by outsiders seems to be the fact.

Champcar can atleast counter the negatives by starting to announce a calendar, the usual driver interviews after every race, the areas they may be opening up in the car for competition to the teams thing of that nature, so it looks towards the future and paints a positive picture of an organization

When there is a constant stream of information coming out of an organization it appears that it is heading somewhere. Instead there is no iota of any kind of information or announcement and not even countering of any kind of negative appearing in the press or internet. When nothing of that sort comes out of an organization it looks like the organization is disorganized, have no clue and looks very incompetent. Champcar needs to counter any kind of criticism and start make lot of positive announcements and keep churning lot of info like new team announcement,sponsorships etc.

 
At 7:36 AM EDT , Blogger Eric Gagnon said...

hey S,

very well written and I agree 100 percent. When something like Phoenix happens, the series needs to face it full on, take their beatings and counter with positive news. Even a minor positive announcement right now would do world of goods. Hopefully in the coming weeks we can hear of such announcements.

 

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

<< Home