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Minardi Team USA (it's official)
Comments
CART/CC isn't not what it once was, circa '90's vintage but the heritage is there and the plan, I believe is to return to that level of prominence.
Forza, don't know if it was carried live but James Hinchcliffe and Jeremy Shaw called the races for Eurosport last year. At the very least you can for a small fee, like $4 a month or $29 per year, sign up for live coverage via the internet at the CC website with your choice of camera, trackside and onboard from any car with a camera and live car to pit radio from every car. I subscribe and think it's worth every penny, especially if you miss a race.
[Edited on 19-12-06 by dst]
They've been good but it's not been a walk in the park.
[Edited on 19-12-06 by dst]
I can't get very worked up about Minardi USA but I wish them all the best and will follow the results. Jos? Dear God!
CART cars are better than IRL but that's not saying much. I am far more interested in F3 and GP2.
Mansell did great things for CART but come on, the ONLY genuine champion? I'd say that every champion they've had has been a genuine champion of the series, which is all they've ever claimed but I'll play your game - Rick Mears and Mario Andretti were every bit the driver and champion Mansell was and that's not slighting Mansell. Unser Jr. kicked Mansell up and down in '94 what does that make him?
Forgot to address this - The Indy 500, which will and has existed with or without the IRL. Without getting too deep into split BS, CART/CC has been successful, the IRL never has. If ovals brought more people- I assure you CC would be running them. Look at the IRL's attendence at MIS, Fontana and Phoenix, it's so good they don't race at 2 of those and the other is shaky. There's plenty of other examples as well. At this point in time in the US, oval racing draws more only people if it's stock cars doing the racing. The only oval open wheel race that still really draws is the I500. There are some respectable IRL events outside the 500 but nothing like even a Busch race.
Apart from the roads, sanitation, education, law & order; what have the Romans ever done for us? Nuffing!
We're just going to have to disagree here, I came back here to get away from the Great American Open Wheel War.
He has just been announced as the 2nd testdriver for BMW
GP2: for me it provides the best pure racing. Whisper it, the graduates to F1 find the senior, computerised cars easier to drive. GP2 in the past couple of years has had some epic overtaking and new aero tweaks for 2007 will make set-up even more critical.
He has just been announced as the 2nd testdriver for BMW [/quote]
I know, but I was referring to him having raced some GPs for Jordan. After that he went to USA.
Last season and next season he will be racing in GP2.
everybody: :D:D
It's good to see there are now 2 Minardi teams in the world, both hopefully offering that same blend of passion, dedication, 110% effort and openess that we've been used to when they were in F1.
Champ Car may not be on the best of footings at the moment, but is on the upward trend again after very nearly dying in 2003. As its distanced itself from ovals (Stoddart mistakenly said the series goes to ovals- it did in 2006, but not in 2007, I believe), the IRL is now in a perilous descent (which is annoying as Dan Wheldon is a top Brit driver there and probably the best on an oval).
NASCAR is like baseball- big in the US, not cared about in the rest of the world. In Britain, a much-preferred form of racing is banger racing round 500 metre slippery ovals. The standard of the racing, and the standards of the drivers are more or less the same, except in Britain they race for five laps, not 500 (what kind of mad series races for 500 laps anyway?!).
Champ Car is getting a little stronger now, and Minardi are right to enter it, the same way they are right to help out in GP2, another fine racing series.
F1? Pah, Renault and Ferrari aside, have you seen a more boring looking grid? Red, orange, white and black uniform blandness.
Let's face it, Europe, and in some cases Australia tend to follow a 'brand' name first, and a driver second, whilst the US is predominantly the opposite. Since NASCAR's really only cater for the American market (Chevrolet, Ford, Dodge, Toyota and their particular US models) it gives Europeans and Australians nothing to cheer for. On the other hand, given NASCAR's fantastically close racing and the drivers immense skills if NASCAR's where using Falcons and Commodores (in Australia) or 3 Series and X Types (in Europe) then I wouldn't doubt there would be a huge following for this form of motorsport worldwide.
After all, it is far more entertaining than ANYTHING open-wheel racing currently has on offer.