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TLK
06-25-2006, 05:06 PM
For the four of five that care.....


Champ Car, IRL nearing merger
Leaders' power-sharing deal may reunite series after 10-year split.

By Curt Cavin and Steve Ballard
[email protected]

RICHMOND, Va. -- The two leaders of open-wheel auto racing have reached an ownership sharing agreement, signaling the biggest development yet in their efforts to put aside a decade of friction and reunite their series.

Indy Racing League founder and CEO Tony George and Champ Car World Series co-owner Kevin Kalkhoven say many details of a proposal remain to be worked out, including how the two sides would resolve disagreements. But one of the first moves toward a merger could involve drivers from both series competing at next year's Indianapolis 500.

"We've agreed conceptually (to share ownership), yes," George said from Richmond International Raceway, which was hosting the IRL's SunTrust Indy Challenge on Saturday night. "Now we have to agree on how we would go about resolving differences that might come up. It may or may not involve an individual."

The two auto racing bodies split in 1996 when George, the chief executive officer of Indianapolis Motor Speedway, started the IRL series as an alternative to CART, Champ Car's predecessor. Both the IRL and Champ Car are based in Indianapolis.

The latest round of talks between George and Kalkhoven began in December during a chance meeting at an all-star race in Paris. The two last met in person the week after the Indianapolis 500.

One of the key issues at stake in their talks is how they would get past disagreements. They've discussed appointing someone who could break ties when necessary. Individuals who could fit that bill include former Indianapolis 500 winners Mario Andretti and Rick Mears. Andretti, the 1969 race winner, has been one of the IRL's strongest critics. Mears, a four-time 500 winner, is a driver coach and consultant for the IRL and with one of its top teams, Penske Racing.

George and Kalkhoven understand what's at stake. The sport has lost considerable ground to NASCAR in the past decade, with television ratings, sponsorship support and event attendance falling significantly, affecting even the once-bulletproof 500.

"This is good; it's what we need," longtime team owner Roger Penske said. "It can't do anything but help."

A merger of the two series most likely would happen a piece at a time rather than all at once, Kalkhoven said.

Both series are on the verge of announcing their race schedules for 2007, and the IRL's is being set up with a compromise in mind.

League President Brian Barnhart said there will be a handful of race
weekends, including two in April, when the IRL and Champ Car could be at the same event.

Since the IRL and Champ Car are set up to use different types of cars and engines, each could hold races on different days -- one on Saturday, another on Sunday.

"Maybe the (unification) process starts with (the IRL) running on Saturday in Long Beach (Calif.) and (Champ Car) running on Saturday in St. Petersburg (Fla.)," Kalkhoven said from Cleveland, where Champ Car will hold a race today. "It could be a whole world of things."

George said he and Kalkhoven have discussed plans to bring the Champ Car teams to the Indianapolis 500 next year, although details have not been finalized.

Kalkhoven said Champ Car will unveil its new Panoz chassis for 2007 at the San Jose (Calif.) Grand Prix in late July, and the car will be used in a unified series in some form.

"You don't throw away that kind of development," Kalkhoven said. "It will be extremely economic to operate."

The IRL is in its fourth year with its cars and plans to use them again next season. Its teams probably could not afford to switch for 2007, but they could for the following year.

Honda, which supplies engines to the IRL, has been among the most active in seeking a merger, with its U.S.-based racing director, Robert Clarke, attending last week's Champ Car race in Portland, Ore.

Derrick Walker, who owns a Champ Car team, expects a unified series to have something for everyone -- and everyone figures to lose something they've come to like about their series.

"You may lose your favorite car or your favorite engine or your favorite racetrack," Walker said. "But I think everybody realizes that."

George and Kalkhoven are frustrated that the complex nature of merging two companies has been slow. They had hoped to have an announcement by the end of the month; that now seems unlikely.

But there is no deadline, Kalkhoven said.

Said George: "There are still a lot of things yet to be fully developed, and it's not going to get any better by talking about it in the media. But I think we'll be able to agree on how we'll develop this business as one entity as we go forward."

Kalkhoven said he is optimistic a merger will occur, but he can see why similar attempts in the past have failed.

"You go into either paddock, and everybody wants to see it done," he said. "The fact it hasn't been done in 10 years is indicative of how difficult it is."

Kalkhoven insisted that information such as this has been kept as quiet as possible for a reason.

"In a normal business situation, you'd be doing this in private instead of under the public gaze," he said. "You'd announce you were talking when you were done (with the deal)."

Craptacular
06-25-2006, 07:34 PM
Perhaps they can combine all their brainpower to figure out how to get through turn 1 at Cleveland.

TLK
06-25-2006, 07:46 PM
Perhaps they can combine all their brainpower to figure out how to get through turn 1 at Cleveland.
Well, ChampCar is batting .500 at having a major first lap crash this year.... did you expect anything else? The sad thing is that it is the stars of the series causing the wrecks and not the ride-buying rookies. :confused:

Dutch
06-26-2006, 10:01 AM
Judging by the popularity of this thread, I would say that open-wheel racing in the US has it's work cut out to draw the fans back. First thing is to stop competing with the NFL for viewership on Sunday afternoon.

Again, Job #1 is to push the schedule AWAY from football season. Nobody is going to watch the IRL/CART on a Sunday afternoon in September or October. Just give that time frame up and move it wholly into the spring and summer months. That was always the biggest killer for even CART back in the day. Just when the season was heating up most folks turned to watch the NFL. And don't try to schedule around the NFL, because nobody can watch TV all weekend, we schedule our time to watch football and then the rest of the weekend is hanging out with the family, running errands, doing yardwork, or our other hobbies.

Now, I know that the race experts and marketers will disagree with me (joe average fan) because they will say that racing is better than the NFL, or whatever, but the history is gone, the traditions are gone. Now is the time to just start from scratch, re-schedule the whole season and give people something to watch in the summer time. It's too perfect of a situation to ignore. But they will, like they always do, because how can the stupid television viewers possible know more than the handful of rich car owners? I love racing, I just can't stand the people in charge of it. And football dominates the Fall Sunday schedule on TV.

RendeR
06-26-2006, 10:54 AM
Anyone seen articles or comments about Danica Patrick and Marco Andretti looking to join the Toyota teams in nextel Cup next season? There was a real brief commentary on the pre-race show last week about the possibility.

Honestly, I see a number of things killing open wheel racing in this country:

Cost, the cost of putting those super high tech teams out on the track is astronomical, its bleeding the ownership dry.

Entertainment value: For the cost of a race weekend, its a very short event, normally 2-3 hours (in relation to say a 4-5 hour NASCAR event by comparison) people want more bang for their buck.

Boredom: This is a big one, the IRL had some good races one their ovals, but the road course stuff just doesn't sell well in the states, the lack of passing and terrible views of the track from fan seating areas is a killer. I went to Sonoma to watch NASCAR in 1991, and frankly, I'll never waste the money on a raod race again. Even living 3 hours from Watkins Glen, I just won't do it, you don't get enough exposure to the on track excitement. Road Courses and a real lack of passing on them is not a fan favorite.

Management, The whole schism between IRL and CART destroyed their sport and its entirely the series managements fault. They're a bunch of self important asshats. The teams should, to be honest, run them all over and find new people to rebuild the sport with.

I'm sure there are others, but these are the big ones.

Franklinnoble
06-26-2006, 11:16 AM
For the four of five that care.....

Yeah, that's the problem. Nobody cares anymore, because while these guys were showing the NHL how to screw up their league, NASCAR had their lunch.

rkmsuf
06-26-2006, 11:17 AM
Dick Trickle

Dutch
06-26-2006, 11:59 AM
Yeah, that's the problem. Nobody cares anymore, because while these guys were showing the NHL how to screw up their league, NASCAR had their lunch.

No, but thing we all have to remember is that Tony George is scum!!!! That will bring the fans back! Except, now they are together, guess they're gonna need to re-address that guys image, eh?

:)

hoosierdude
06-26-2006, 01:29 PM
I would say that the merger isn't coming soon, but pieces of it look to be addressed and agreed upon, the easy stuff , then the harder issues will be solved with a LOT more negotiation.

I would say you could see the 2007 Indy 500 with both groups there with the Honda setup for the IRL and the new setup being finalized for the CART series used. (Champ Car, oops)

So I would say this is just the start, but about.... 8 years too late to get a lot of the fans back. NASCAR has made their play and trumped both groups. Playing catchup will be very hard for open wheel. This story has a long way to go yet.