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7 Feb 2007, 20:44 (Ref:1835751) | #101 | ||
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Many people love to say how small Champ Car is with its races in North America and that no one cares. And to be fair the IRL as well of course but they don't have any other established non oval events yet and of course the Indy 500 doesn't count. My point being, A Denver Champ Car festival Grand Prix event maybe no news in New York, but to the whole city of Denver everyone talks about it and comes out in their numbers. Be it auto racing fans or not, street races are not as small as people say they are.
Take Long Beach for example, that's no doubt CC's current most famous event, everyone in the location knows of the event and it is still a big deal there. Such is Toronto, Edmonton, Surfers Paradise. Once the IRL has long and established street events it will be the same for them. |
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8 Feb 2007, 00:55 (Ref:1835884) | #102 | ||
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The IRL doesn't need long and established street events so much as they need more events in general to compliment the 500.
CC does not have that cornerstone event, although I would certainly agree that Surfer's could be and Long Beach should be that type of event for them. |
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"He's still a young guy and I always think, slightly morbidly, the last thing you learn is how to die and at the end of the day everybody learns every single day." - The Ever-Cheerfull Ron Dennis on Lewis Hamilton. |
8 Feb 2007, 01:11 (Ref:1835895) | #103 | |||||
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Maybe in the past it was all about the sportive aspects but let's face it, nowadays the former ethical and performance qualities take a back seat and sport is more and more about fun, thrill - and business... Quote:
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Maybe I'm wrong but I don't believe that the average fan is so much deeply involved in his favorite racing series: What he expects? First and foremost what we are all expecting - good action, competition, exciting overtaking and thrilling races. And off course a racing series should have some drivers signed where the fans can relate to... Rome was not built in a day - and to build up a racing series needs time and I also think that the CCWS is moving foreword... |
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8 Feb 2007, 01:56 (Ref:1835915) | #104 | |||
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Upon entry into the Bathurst 1000, it should be mandatory to view the compelling "Moffat - Man and the Mountain" film |
8 Feb 2007, 02:55 (Ref:1835932) | #105 | |
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Carsten, there's nothing wrong with the other bells and whistles and dancing bears at these street festivals. The question is, do people go for the "festival" in general or go as the fan base for a race? If it's the former, that's a whole different dimension in trying to get TV ratings up.
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8 Feb 2007, 05:04 (Ref:1835972) | #106 | |||
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Obviously at the moment CC has alot of event fans but needs to turn them into CC fans. Not a perfect situation but surely has a better chance than attracting new audiences than in front of 8 000 people at Laguna or Pheonix raceway |
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Upon entry into the Bathurst 1000, it should be mandatory to view the compelling "Moffat - Man and the Mountain" film |
8 Feb 2007, 09:48 (Ref:1836111) | #107 | ||||
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Champ Car does need to have that one race or several that make it Champ Car, and it has them, Long Beach, Surfers Paradise, Toronto, Cleveland etc.. |
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8 Feb 2007, 10:42 (Ref:1836162) | #108 | ||
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Geez.
The festival atmosphere is fine for those attending the race itself. This is not necessarily going to build TV as folks watching TV likely do not want to see Oswald the Racing Bear. They want to see Danica vs Vitor or PT vs whoever he is behind. The "rootedness" of a series, imho, is what causes someone in Altoona to tune in on a Sunday afternoon. The baseball analogy was a good one and both series would do well to have a set schedule rather than something with multiple dates written in sponge. That will help get the fan in Altoona continuing to tune in. Please re-read my post luke, I am simply saying that street races do not necessarily need to be long-term. We all know they are "new" to IRL and simply add to the venue mix. Saying IRL has "just the one" cornerstone event is like saying F1 is "just at Monaco" this weekend. No offense, but CC does not have a true cornerstone event. There are as I noted possibilities but if I walk up to someone here in Pittsburgh and say: "Long Beach" they might answer: "Is that where the Queen Mary is?" |
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"He's still a young guy and I always think, slightly morbidly, the last thing you learn is how to die and at the end of the day everybody learns every single day." - The Ever-Cheerfull Ron Dennis on Lewis Hamilton. |
8 Feb 2007, 12:25 (Ref:1836226) | #109 | |||
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All of the people I know who are also non racing fans throughout Australia know of the Surfers Paradise race. All of the people I know around toronto be it racing fans or not, know of the Molson Indy. Last edited by luke; 8 Feb 2007 at 12:28. |
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8 Feb 2007, 13:08 (Ref:1836261) | #110 | ||
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I hear what you are saying John but do you have an alternative for the current situation ?
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Upon entry into the Bathurst 1000, it should be mandatory to view the compelling "Moffat - Man and the Mountain" film |
8 Feb 2007, 15:25 (Ref:1836394) | #111 | ||
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I don't think the cornerstone discussion is overstated. Take Nascar as an example. If they ditched Daytona, Bristol and Darlington there would still be a very successful series. What consequence is it if the casual person might not know the names of the less significant events? The point is to have a bunch of successful races. In the past "Molson Indy" whether it was Toronto or Vancouver ment Canadians were going to tune in and watch. Out of those people some of them enjoy it a lot and end up watching other races or attending the local race. So there was some geographical correlation in intersest of people in a race, but that's part of the reason why sanctioning bodies attempt to be strategic in the areas they stage races.
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9 Feb 2007, 00:22 (Ref:1836886) | #112 | ||
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Well D.R.T., you have been here a while and so you have seen many threads on some variation of "what my ideal schedule would look like."
I will try to answer in more general terms. I think that what has hurt both Series, is: 1) the general lack of stability in scheduling. Each year there are more/fewer races at the same/different venues. 2) perceived importance of the goal. NASCAR had "The Winston" for years and now it is the "Chase for the Cup." Everyone likes that competition for "the big prize." It creates buzz/interest. Look at the interest the "Triple Crown" used to get. Now it no longer exists. Nothing replaced it. 3) with no goal and no established "tour" then there is an over-reliance on the "entertainment" aspect of things to attract a crowd. Racing is secondary to the "festival atmosphere" they are seeking to create. Now I know these are nebulous things but what got me into racing was the racing. When I went to my first Cumberland National race at Nelso Ledges I wasn't thinking: "Wow! What a festival atmaosphere!" as I was standing in the rain watching PL Newman drive a really nice Datsun 510 into a bridge abutment. I was grooving on the sights and sounds. i think there are a lot of racing fans, who, if presented with a consistent product that provided good close racing would gravitate to watching a series and generating buzz. They would not need Oswald the Racing Bear nor would they need Derek Daly reminding them just how exciting this all is. As I started following various pro series, I was always interested in how the various teams would do when they got to Lime Rock vs Daytona. The fact that Lime Rock and Daytona were on the schedule year after year was part of the "rootedness" of things. USAC used to call their series "the Championship Trail" if I recall correctly. Now the "trail" seems to be more the meanderings of a group of race teams in need of a mass dose of Ritalin as they careen from one end of the country to the other with forays to Australia, Japan, Europe and wherever. The bottom line for me is that the races are something that "happen" and not part of a consistent, ongoing operation that has set goals and a sense of tradition where the present is built on the past. Change should be evolutionary, not a primary component of the raison d' eterre for the series in the first place. Last edited by JohnSSC; 9 Feb 2007 at 00:26. |
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"He's still a young guy and I always think, slightly morbidly, the last thing you learn is how to die and at the end of the day everybody learns every single day." - The Ever-Cheerfull Ron Dennis on Lewis Hamilton. |
16 Feb 2007, 10:54 (Ref:1843028) | #113 | ||
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according to pitstop.tv (a Belgian site), the race for Zolder has been rescheduled on demand of the FIA. apparently the race was to close to the Belgian GP.
Champcar race and 24 hr race have switched dates, so the new date for CC is 25th-26th august |
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