IndianaOpenWheel.com Sprint Car & Midget Racing Forum
Forgot Password?

Reply  Indiana Open Wheel > Indiana Open Wheel Forum > 11 things promoters must do...
Thread Tools
6/16/14, 6:12 PM   #11
Re: 11 things promoters must do...
Johnhunt
Johnhunt is offline
Member

Race Count Last Year: 22
Join Date: Jul 2009
Posts: 193
 

For the younger crowd (I'm 33, I like to think I'm sort of in that category) the biggest thing a track can do is #4 - move the show along. There are so many entertainment options that many people don't want to spend 6 hours anywhere doing anything. In essence, the tracks in Indiana that Sprint Week visits has many of these points working already. We're pretty spoiled in Indiana.
 
1 member likes this post: racenut69
6/16/14, 7:27 PM   #12
HARFprez
HARFprez is offline
Senior Member

Race Count This Year: 3
Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 1,231
 

#10, for all us guys out here who try to get their better half to go to the races with them, you can't imagine how important this point is. Most of the fairer sex don't really look forward to dropping trou in a soggy outhouse.
 
1 member likes this post: racenut69
6/16/14, 9:45 PM   #13
Re: 11 things promoters must do...
mc/rider
mc/rider is offline
Senior Member

Race Count This Year: 42
Join Date: Jan 2013
Posts: 11,362
 

Two ambulances
__________________
When in doubt Gas It
 
1 member likes this post: racenut69
6/16/14, 11:00 PM   #14
Re: 11 things promoters must do...
illiNOISE
illiNOISE is offline
Senior Member

Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 890
 

Quote:
Originally Posted by Bill Gardner View Post
9. BIGGIE: Do you have a villain yet? If not, forget the kids. They MUST have a good guy/bad guy, and if you don’t, the kids are gone mentally…Just forget them. That is what makes every Monster Truck Show, cartoon, etc. work: A VILLIAN!
I work with kids, so, yes, I understand where he is coming from on this. But deliberately creating drama that doesn't already exist is just stirring up a hornet's nest. Dumbing down the sport with a "WWE" mentality might get a few more fans. But if it casts doubt on the credibility of the sport, is that what we want?
 
5 members like this post: captrat, fish, Phylo82, team3521, The Old Coyote
6/17/14, 8:15 PM   #15
snoopy
snoopy is offline
Member

Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 173
 

Growing up in northen Indiana I remember at Fort Wayne just about every driver had a nickname. I remember those names more than cars or numbers.
Don't like villans and gimmicks. Read about how Andy Granitelli packed soldier field.
Yea you young fans the bears stadium filled for stock cars and midgets.
 
6/17/14, 8:36 PM   #16
Re: 11 things promoters must do...
Jonr
Jonr is offline
Senior Member

Join Date: Sep 2008
Posts: 1,723
 

Several of these are my biggest pet peeves and I am glad to see that someone wrote them down.

The races need to start on time and stop on time. The show needs to move along, and it should be the rare exception that I see a tractor farming your track. No one has ever paid to watch trackers farm a track.

Four classes of cars. (that look different) One of our local tracks now has a A mods, B mods and now E mods. How will a new fan every get excited about these classes when it takes a trained eye to spot the difference. (if you can)

I don't know anyone who wants to go to a Dust track instead of a dirt track. Both of my boys have bad allergies, and if the track is dusty, it will be months before I can talk them into going back with me.

I also agree with a clean facility that you can be proud of. There is a track near my home that is littered with broken down trucks throughout the pits. It's nickname is Stanford and Son Speedway.

I also agree with the villain concept, and if you are paying attention it is easy to create without going WWE. Find two drivers who don't particularly like each other. (pretty easy at a weekly track) Once you have the two drivers that don't like each other simply play them off of each other. A good announcer can make a rivalry between drivers in half a season if he knows what they are doing. All it takes is a couple of good sound bites, or a couple of bad slide jobs, or in modified country a good engine claim and it is on.
 
6/17/14, 10:04 PM   #17
Re: 11 things promoters must do...
SWScaleChassis
SWScaleChassis is offline
Member

Join Date: May 2014
Posts: 186
 

Solid list! As for the flips, Yeah, it makes fans oogle. But I for one, never want to see a car get outta shape and upside down. It costs money, adds work to the crew, puts the driver in a bad spot.. Anyways, Flips arent anything to promote. Everyone knows that usually, on a regular night, you're gonna see one get upside down. I believe this is enough to draw the 'fans' who like to see that kind of thing.

As for Rivalries.. Somebody get on facebook, look up Lancaster Speedway in South Carolina, read and enjoy.. The fans post more than the drivers and the promoters; rooting, cheering, booing, hating, etc. That place has been around a while and has a rivairy in just about every division. Sections in the stands dedicated to "Baker Nation" or "Timbo Nation". Its all stock cars, and latemodels, but still. Drive around the town, and see the decals on the trucks, hear people talking about the races on Tuesday.. Its a good gig for the fans, and Timbo and Baker love it as well. They sell shirts and hear the fans cheer. Awesome.

As for moving the show along, I completely agree. As well as the big shows and their weekly classes. It always confuses me when I listen to a DirtVision show and hear John Gibson hand it off for the Hornet Main event.. If you got big hitters in the pits who hauled, chances are you have folks in the stands who hauled too. Cater to them just like the big teams.

-Justin
 
1 member likes this post: LocalYokel
6/18/14, 1:14 AM   #18
i love dirt track racing
i love dirt track racing is offline
Senior Member

Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 20,387
 

I will say it again pack the place with a 2 our 3 day show and with all the campers and hotels sold out in your town and folks are saying what is going on that speedway will say wow they must have something neat going on and that might bring in some new racing fans.
 
6/18/14, 8:05 PM   #19
Great Scott
Great Scott is offline
Senior Member

Race Count This Year: 48
Race Count Last Year: 63
Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 740
 

Starting on time is the biggest thing to me. Promoters typically have control starting on time. Starting hot laps on time to me does not mean time to start getting heat in the motors or using race cars to start packing the track. Starting hot laps at the advertised time means pushing cars off and dropping the green flag. If you start late the show is likely to run longer than it should have. Sometimes shows just run long due to on track issues but just start at the advertised time.
 
3 members like this post: jim goerge, Mud Packer, Task Force
Reply Indiana Open Wheel > Indiana Open Wheel Forum > 11 things promoters must do...





All times are GMT -4. The time now is 3:19 PM.


Make IndianaOpenWheel.com your homepage
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2026, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
© 2005-2026 IndianaOpenWheel.com
Mobile VersionLinks: Dave Merritt - Chris Pedersen - Carey Fox - Carey Akin - Joe Bennett - Brandon Murray - Dave Roach - John DaDalt - Racin; With D.O. - Jackslash Media