Originally Posted by aussiemidgetfan:
I was horrified when they adopted a specification car. I am totally against these sort of regulations, and frankly the Panoz was a dog. It was built to an incredibly poor budget and it showed.
Am I supposed to be worried, afraid, upset, disappointed, mad, irrationally disturbed or offended?
Get involved? I am involved in Australian openwheel circuit racing. I know how these things work. I also know that drivers in racing are often there on their marketability (ie the "hot" female syndrome-Danica is not hot) or their budget. It is very rare that drivers are there on talent, and a look at the IRL grid (and some of the CCWS transfers) will show a lot of these drivers and few there on talent.
FWIW, There never was a specification CART car. There never was a specification CART engine. These were phased in by the recent inept management of CCWS.
And I can promise you I have no problem with female racers. I was a proud supporter of Laura Poorter and am active in my support of Samantha Reid and Leanne Tander (front runners in their classes of Australian Formula 3-both of whom I know), Simona de Silvestro (she won the Formula Atlantic race the other day), Cyndie Allemann and Katherine Legge.
Ok, understand this. There is not a major racing series on the planet that is not a "spec" series. "Spec" stands for specification. They all have specifications. Even your Aussie crappy formula series have specs.That's what formula is - specifications. Sprints, midgets, Silver Crown, IndyCar, Nascar. They are all a spec series. No specs = no rules, and the cost for racing escalates to the point of nobody being able to afford it.
Listen kid. when you try to argue a point with David and Dwight on here, you are fighting a losing battle. They've forgotten more about racing then you'll EVER know. I respect them more than most other posters on here for their racing wisdom and common sense.
And why do you bring up CART again? It's gone FOREVER. Forget it and move on.
If you think everybody in IndyCar buys a ride, then you haven't heard Tony Kanaan's story. He quit school at 13 when his father died to support his family. Swept floors in a kart factory just to be around racing. And waited for his big break. He worked hard to make his way to the top. True he didn't come from the USA and didn't run short tracks, but this guy is a real racer, love him or hate him.
Please, stop trying to state your opinion as fact. Most around here don't buy it.:moon: