ISF (Offline)
#21
10/29/12 12:21 PM
The two of our most beloved racing entities, USAC Silver Crown Championship Dirt Cars and Indy Car racing, appear to be on very shaky terrain.
If they turn Indy Car racing back into an owner run primarily non-oval series I swear I will be through with rear engined, American sanctioned open wheel racing.
They ruined it once with the inception of CART, and then they tried to revive it with the IRL, but in reality they nearly killed it, and now this.
Someone please tell me who I should blame all of this on? Was it USAC back in the late 1970's? Was it Penske & Co. through the CART years? Was it Tony George for trying to revive open wheel oval racing and American drivers? And now this, who do we blame this on?
I've got my opinions, but they are just that, opinions. I'm just a fan with no insight of the inner workings of these colossal failures. But, if I can see the drastic decline of the sport the powers that be sure as he!! do, too.
I'm sorry for the rant guys, but this stuff has been making me very sad for 30 years now and it seems to very seldom take a turn for the better over that time.
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.
3 Likes:
Gregg, I Miss Manzy, Modocer 57
Mud Packer (Offline)
#23
10/29/12 12:37 PM
Originally Posted by DAD:
All family owned business tend to fail after the death of the founder. Honest Dad himself

Somehow or another this seems like another of your remarks thrown out there without any basis to back it up. I work for a third generation, family owned business. In addition to being successful for over 80 years we also see many other second and third generation companies that are still in the marketplace doing business. If your comment had any validity to it, no company would make it past the original ownership. Where do you get your facts & figures?
Mike
Be nice to people on the way up. You might need them on the way down. Jimmy Durante
2 Likes:
DAD, I Miss Manzy
bigmojo5
#26
10/29/12 1:17 PM
"The demise of Indy Car racing has been evolving since Brabham brought Cooper climax,"
I disagree. The 1960s and 1970s were a period of great growth in championship auto racing.
The demise of Indy Car racing, and USAC, has been evolving with the death of Tony Hulman, the creation of CART, the creation of the World of Outlaw Sprint Series, and the plane crash that killed most of the top leadership of USAC. This perfect storm of events in just a couple of years took advantage of the long-standing arrogance of those involved with USAC and the Speedway. They were kings of the world but quickly found themselves dethroned.
Without any of those four events, the resulting changes of the last 30 some years would not have been possible. Two -- CART and WoO -- took advantage of the other two.
8 Likes:
DAD, duel, Honest-Sam, I Miss Manzy, mtek56, ronmil, short track scott, Will Shunk
Mud Packer (Offline)
#27
10/29/12 1:26 PM
Originally Posted by bigmojo5:
"The demise of Indy Car racing has been evolving since Brabham brought Cooper climax,"
I disagree. The 1960s and 1970s were a period of great growth in championship auto racing.
The demise of Indy Car racing, and USAC, has been evolving with the death of Tony Hulman, the creation of CART, the creation of the World of Outlaw Sprint Series, and the plane crash that killed most of the top leadership of USAC. This perfect storm of events in just a couple of years took advantage of the long-standing arrogance of those involved with USAC and the Speedway. They were kings of the world but quickly found themselves dethroned.
Without any of those four events, the resulting changes of the last 30 some years would not have been possible. Two -- CART and WoO -- took advantage of the other two.
Agreed!
Mike
Be nice to people on the way up. You might need them on the way down. Jimmy Durante