So the teams are now expect to run the Champ Cars they've just bought and haven't tested at one race and run the IRL cars they need to buy and test for the other races? Sounds like a really great cost saving plan that will appeal to teams
That's precisely my point, the teams have the new car that they're only going to use for one race, they still have to setup and test it, which is inevitably going to run into a 7 figure bill. At the same time they've got to go through the same process with the new IRL car they've ordered.
Its a disasterous situation now, this hasnt been a 'merger', CCWS has simply been forced to die! There really needs to be some major changes to IRL before it becomes a half decent attempt at American Open wheel racing, a new chassis needs to be developed, preferrably allowing the teams to quite extensively customise their cars, more roadcourses need to be implemented, such as those over here (Brands Hatch, Assen etc), and also standing starts and racing in the rain (on roadcourses only ofcourse!).
IMO the so called 'merger' couldnt have come at a worse time, if it had happened back in 2003 when Champ car wasnt doing so well, it wouldnt have been sad to se Champ Car go, but CCWS was just becoming a half decent series.
I read somewhere that the new deal also included a clause that would prevent former CCWS heads from starting up a new series, too. Doesn't sound legal to me, and it also really pisses me off.
It's the same car as last year, they probably just need to oil them up. I will watch this race as a hilarious end to the past decade... Perhaps in another 10 years we can go racing again.
Tony George said in an interview he wants to keep the calendar mostly ovals... which is crap~
this is not good for the fans nor was it good for the sport... CCWS was starting to really become a "world series" in terms of drivers and circuits used, what it needed was more exposure...
at least CCWS was considered by Red Bull to be perfect to dump their extra drivers that ain't young anymore~ now they've no where to go~
Some rumours said new car could be finished by 2010.
I didn't follow CCWS, but I thought it's was getting to be interesting series. I thought too that CCWS was the stronger one, at least in competition wise? Wasn't it close to bankruptcy? IRL then again had Tony George's millions...
CCWS was a better series competition wise. IRL's racing was closer but that was only because it was on ovals and as far as oval races goes IRL's competition was pretty weak. But CCWS was close to bankruptcy as I was told so this was probably inevitable.
I've always hated IRL racing tbh. Only 1-3 cars in position for the lead? Boo. Nothing compared to NASCAR/ARCA/USAR's 20+ fighting for one position. Might as well have raced on road courses. At least that would have kept it interesting
Indy car also have road coruse before, it only got oval race now because there are 2 top class formula race(IRL & CCWS) in U.S., CCWS race in road coruse & street, so IRL race in Oval, it make they can have a different market.
Than, don't try to think that oval race is a silly things, any very simple action will changh to very difficle when you driving faster than 350km/h & there is just 0.5m between you & another car.
get the history straight, it was called CART... then split into Champcar (which later becomes CCWS), and IRL~
IRL also have a couple of road/street courses on its calendar, namely Watkin Glens and St Petersburg~ (does it still race on Infenion~?)
Open wheel oval racing is silly, there've been a few absoblutely dreadful and terrible deaths in recent years, one of which doesn't find its way on TV because it was way too sick to be shown on TV...
If this new IRL doesn't take off and Tony George continues to pretend it's a great series, then ALMS might be a serious winner. Or then NASCAR gets even stronger.
Teams will have already started winter rebuilds and modifications to their cars by the time the merger was confirmed. So the usual pre-season testing is necessary on both cars.