Originally Posted by Jonr:
I am somewhere in the middle. I am 47. I grew up in west Texas where we had a few sprint cars and a little more late models, but most of the time the races were either modifieds or stock cars. I didn't see my first real midget race until I was in me early 30's and instantly fell in love with them. I started trying to see more and more midget races, and I moved a couple of times for my job and each time the areas had good midget racing.
For my 40th birthday, my big gift was a race weekend for the Indy 500. I did all of my research and was excited to go see a bunch of different races at a bunch of new tracks. I was very excited to go watch the SC race at the Indy fairgrounds. It was my first time to see them race, and it was the first time for me to be a mile racetrack. I was going to be able to cross both of these off of my bucket list. As the night went on, I found myself caring less and less about the race. I thought the track was too big, the cars were two spread out, racing action was limited, and I found the cars to be a little boring. This was especially true since I had been going to more and more midget races.
So on the other thread, I stated that unless you grew up with SC races, it is hard to be a fan. Now, you have the background of my comment. I knew dirt track racing, I knew open wheel racing, I had fallen in love with midget racing, and was not impressed with SC races. Thus, when people talk about growing the SC racing, I shake my head. If it is difficult for a SC car to capture my attention, how is it going to capture the attention of someone who has never been before?
It is obvious that you didn't attend the Hoosier Hundred the past couple of years and definitely not the last 3 or 4 Ted Horn Memorial races at Du Quoin. Those races were as entertaining and exciting as any racing we attended all season. We attend several midget and sprint car (winged and wingless) races along with the Silver Crown races at Indy, Springfield, Du Quoin and Terre Haute. The Silver Crown races I mention hold their own in comparison to any we attend all season.
If wheel clacking bump and grind midgets or sprint cars on a 1/5 mile such as Macon is your only cup of tea then the mile races probably won't be as enticing. You won't see much of that in the longer races on the longer tracks, and for good reason. The Silver Crown cars are entering the corners at around 140 MPH in some cases and wheel clacking and bumping and grinding can easily get someone hurt. The mile tracks are a thinking man's finesse/momentum tracks.
The differences, obviously, are night and day. What many of us enjoy about the Silver Crown races, especially on the mile dirt tracks, is there is a myriad of things going on all at once. The 100 milers have a driver managing the lessening fuel load, changing track conditions, right rear tire management and adapting to the fast racing lines changing throughout the course of the 100 miles. All the time running as hard as tire wear and track conditions will allow and stoutly competing against the other drivers who are managing the same things. The bullrings are more mash the gas and contact, which is fine and exciting in it's own right.
It takes a degree of understanding and appreciation of all those things to fully enjoy most Silver Crown races. Slam bang bull ring racing is great and as enjoyable as any but the big cars on the big tracks are nuanced in completely different ways and to some, just as exciting.
Silver Crown Championship Dirt Cars properly driven on a one mile dirt track are classic poetry in motion. Using that analogy, Jack Hewitt is one of the greatest poets of all time.