Posts Tagged ‘ Honda ’

Indianapolis Motor Speedway Historian Donald Davidson has been the expert on the history of the Racing Capital of the World since he arrived in Central Indiana in the mid-1960s. Now 2010 Auto Racing Hall of Fame inductee Davidson is answering your questions periodically in this blog!

Q: Is there any truth that the late Ayrton Senna had a test run with Penske at the Speedway, back in November 1993?

Michael Brucker Jr. via email

A: Senna did in fact test with Penske, but it was the week of Christmas 1992 and it took place at Firebird Raceway (a road course) in Phoenix, rather than IMS. The situation was that Senna was not at all happy with his current lot in Formula One and was undecided as to whether or not to stay with McLaren (which he did), especially in view of the fact that Honda would not be returning for 1993. Largely through the efforts of fellow Brazilian Emerson Fittipaldi, Senna showed up at Firebird, and under Emmo’s tutelage, took a number laps in a Marlboro-liveried Penske car.

Not surprisingly, everyone involved was extremely impressed with his runs, and Emmo pushed for Senna to come on as teammate to Paul Tracy and himself, Rick Mears having just announced his retirement at the Penske Christmas party a couple of weeks earlier. There are several minutes of footage of that day available on YouTube, including an interview (in Portuguese) conducted with Senna and Emmo during which time Senna comes over as even a little bashful, the two of them clearly having great affection for each other.

With Nigel Mansell already confirmed as joining Mario Andretti at Newman/Haas and Nelson Piquet expected to return with John Menard (which he did), Emmo was fantasizing that there could be at least five World Champions at Indianapolis in 1993. There would only be four. The next step was to get Senna on an oval, which never happened, and it wasn’t before he was re-signed with McLaren for another year of F1.

In the meantime, longtime Penske engineer Chuck Sprague, who had been somewhat apprehensive as what Senna might be like to work with, was absolutely amazed that he showed up at Firebird as the lone passenger in Fittipaldi’s rental car. No handlers, no entourage, just himself. He was extremely polite, very complimentary about the car and gave tons of feedback after very few laps.

The following day, Senna accompanied the team over for a test on the other side of town at PIR’s oval with Fittipaldi and Tracy, and he paid plenty of attention but declined to take any laps. He shook hands with everyone involved when he left and a year later, Chuck was flabbergasted to receive a Senna Christmas card.

Q: I recently visited a signage business in Indianapolis, located at the southern tip of a road called Gasoline Alley. When I looked at the map, although there are northern sections of this road that bear other names, it might have originally led right up to the track itself? So is there a historical connection between the lower stretch of this road and the track?

Mel Francis, Oconomowoc, Wis.

A: We know it well, and we’ll hazard a guess that the signage business you visited was Freelance Lettering. Prior to 1985—the year in which that stretch was officially re-named Gasoline Alley—it had always been Roena Street. It did cause some confusion at the time—and since—one having to specify precisely which “Gasoline Alley” was being referenced, that of course, having been the nickname applied to the Garage Area at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway a mile to the north as far back as the 1920s.  And yes, it did lead directly to IMS until quite recently, in spite of it going by three different names during the 1.5-mile trip.

We can remember when the Roena stretch (from Vermont Street down to where it dead-ends into Rockville Road) was pretty much out in the country, much of it being occupied by row upon row of fruits and vegetables and several large greenhouses. The sweeping left- and right-hander just south of Vermont Street where Bob East and Steve Lewis had their operation for several years used to be lined with so much foliage overgrowth that to drive through there was almost as if one was travelling through a winding carwash with the brushes on but no water! That’s all gone now.

A longtime “500″ crew member named Charlie Patterson purchased some property along Roena in 1978, with a view to relocating his driveshaft business there, but after clearing out a bunch of shrubbery, one thing led to another. He began purchasing more and more property and pretty soon was putting up buildings for the purpose of housing race teams, accessory companies and a variety of racing-related businesses. It has been a height of activity for the last 30-odd years, and at the risk of leaving somebody out, we recall at various times over the years Bignotti-Cotter being down there, along with Vince Granatelli, Ron Hemelgarn, Newman/Haas, Riley & Scott, Chris Paulsen’s C & R Racing, several drag racing teams, including Don “The Snake” Prudhomme’s, Herb Porter’s HP Performance (now Speedway Engines run by Rick Long), Rick Hendrick’s IMSA GTP team, Dan Gurney, Jud Phillips, Tony Bettenhausen, PacWest, Jackie Howerton, Steve Lewis and Bob East, Alex Morales and Johnny Capels, Elouisa Garza, Mike Fanning, Frank Weiss, Donnie Ray Everett, Jeff Sinden and Joe Kennedy, Gordon Barrett, Bob Lazier, Adrian Fernandez, Pagan Racing (with John Barnes), HVM Racing (driver Simona de Silvestro), J. J. Yeley, Steve Long, Dan Drinan, Jason Leffler, Bud Kaeding, Joe Devin, Gambler, Earl’s Supply, Van’s Metalcraft and countless others. Over this last winter, Hinchman Uniforms moved in there.

For many years, as you suggest, the journey from IMS down to Gasoline Alley was a direct route, specifically Polco Street running from West 16th Street south to West 10th Street, followed by Grande Avenue from 10th to Vermont Street and finally Roena/Gasoline Alley down to Rockville Road where it dead-ends. Polco and Grande have retained their names, but the very handy direct route to IMS did come to an end a few months ago when the Town of Speedway closed a portion of Grande Avenue in a transaction made with Allison Transmission.

The name Polco, by the way, has an Allison connection. Now approximately 100 years old, the name is derived from using five letters out of “Prest-O-Lite Company,” the firm underwritten in 1904 by Carl Fisher and Jim Allison for about $5,000 and then sold in 1917 to Union Carbide for $9 million!

My racing weekend could be summed up by one sentence: I didn’t see that coming.

Denny Hamlin surrendering a padded lead in the Chase for the Sprint Cup in the final laps at Phoenix due to bad fuel mileage? I didn’t see that coming. Sebastian Vettel becoming just the second driver in Formula One history to rally from third in the standings to the World Championship in the final race of the season? I didn’t see that coming.

It was one of those weekends why we dig this sport. The unexpected happened, which is one of the most appealing aspects of motor racing.

Here are the facts after the Kobalt Tools 500 Sunday at Phoenix: Hamlin leads four-time reigning champion Jimmie Johnson by 15 points entering the season finale this Sunday at Homestead-Miami Speedway. 2003 Brickyard 400 winner Kevin Harvick is third, 46 points behind. It’s the closest three-way Chase with one race remaining.

Mike Ford

Muzzle the mouth or walk the walk, Mike.

Now to the opinions. It might be a good idea for Hamlin’s crew chief, Mike Ford, to keep a low profile heading into South Florida this week. Ford crowed after the Texas race Nov. 7 that crew chief Chad Knaus may have lost a fifth consecutive title for Johnson by essentially firing Johnson’s crew mid-race and replacing it with the crew of Hendrick teammate Jeff Gordon.

Karma bites, Mike. Johnson finished fifth at Phoenix after he went the distance on fuel. Hamlin scrambled to finish 12th, despite leading most of the race, after pitting for a splash of fuel late in the race. Knaus calculated the gas gamble correctly; Ford didn’t gamble and lost.

The end result was that Hamlin is rattled. He ripped his team after the race by saying, “Like I said, I did my job.” Not exactly a rousing vote of confidence or rallying of the beleaguered troops by a wise veteran. More of the impetuous Denny we thought had grown up. And at just the wrong time.

Johnson has Hamlin on the ropes, and he’s talking a bit of the smack of a man who knows it.

Hamlin pledges a pedal-to-the-metal approach at Homestead. He’s going to need it, as there are only two guaranteed routes to the championship for him, either winning the race or finishing second and leading the most laps.

My money still remains on Johnson to hoist the Cup for the fifth straight year. Who is your pick, and why?

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Have you ever played poker and held a hand you know can’t be topped? Just sat there quietly while everyone else showed their cards and then blew them away with your straight flush or four of a kind?

That’s how I felt while reviewing the Interwebs today before writing this edition of Splash And Go. I knew it would be highly unlikely that I’d find anything in NASCAR, MotoGP, Formula One or anywhere else in racing that would top the seismic impact of THE news of the day in worldwide motorsport on a date that will be circled in red for a long, long time in INDYCAR annals: Chevrolet is returning to the IZOD IndyCar Series as an engine manufacturer starting in 2012.

Bowtie

The Bowtie is back, baby!

The Bowtie is back. Roll that off your tongue as many times as you’d like, open-wheel racing fans. Manufacturer competition is back in IndyCar, and Chevy’s return to take on Honda hopefully will tip another fence-sitter or two among car manufacturers into the IZOD IndyCar Series as an engine builder.

It’s impossible to overestimate how huge this announcement is for the IZOD IndyCar Series. Competition. An iconic American manufacturer with deep, successful roots in IndyCar racing. Penske Racing as Chevy’s first customer. And most importantly, a validation from the colossus known as General Motors that the technical package created for 2012 by the ICONIC committee is attractive to auto manufacturers.

This wasn’t just a home run or a knockout. This was Reggie Jackson taking Dock Ellis more than 500 feet deep and out of Tiger Stadium in the 1971 All-Star Game. This was Manny Pacquiao transporting Ricky Hatton into la-la land with one left hook in the second round.

This was big. But the announcement was important for more than just engine competition. Chevy officials also indicated they are interested in building an aero package, a significant development.

If Chevy builds aero kits for the new Dallara Safety Cell, can Honda be far behind? After all, if Chevy builds a very efficient aero kit, will Honda want cars powered by its engine to wear Chevy clothing? I think not. Lotus has expressed interest in building an aero kit, and you have to figure Dallara will offer one, too.

So we have at least two engines and at least three body kits — with Honda as a probable fourth — for 2012. The series still has plenty of hurdles to jump, but rays from that proverbial light toward the back of the tunnel are burning more brightly today.

Full compliments to INDYCAR CEO Randy Bernard, who listens and then gets things done. Full compliments to Roger Penske, whose influence, wisdom and business and racing wizardry got the IndyCar door re-opened with Chevy. Full compliments to the ICONIC committee, which was validated big-time today. Full compliments to Honda, which requested competition and welcomes it. And full compliments to Chevrolet and GM, which showed great vision to see IndyCar racing as a place for growth, relevant technological development and strong marketing of its passenger vehicles.

It’s a damn good day to be an IndyCar fan.

Judging by the feedback I received from the Nov. 8 edition of Splash And Go, it appears that the many dramatic subplots of the AAA 500 last Sunday weren’t enough to draw back those of you who have abandoned the NASCAR Chase for the Sprint Cup this fall. Your attitude seems to match that of Kyle Busch to the NASCAR official during his stop-and-go penalty for pit road speeding last Sunday at Texas — the big, fat middle finger.

NASCAR

Guess many of you feel the same way about the Chase, which is too bad.

That’s a shame, as no one is going to convince me this isn’t a compelling Chase. The top three drivers within 59 points. Two races to go. Forget about the COT. Forget about the Chase system.

Two races to go, 59 points separate the top three. If that’s not good enough for you, maybe Travis Pastrana can save NASCAR in your eyes.

Off my soap box and on to Phoenix.

Four-time reigning Sprint Cup champion Jimmie Johnson trails leader Denny Hamlin by 33 points after Hamlin won last Sunday at Texas. But there are few better places for a JJ rebound than Phoenix, as he has won the last three fall races at The Desert Mile.

Hamlin is hot, as he’s racing no differently during the Chase than he did during the “regular season” — the dude is driving to win. So anyone Chase naysayers complaining about conservative “points racing” better not point to Hamlin. Oh, sorry, I’m on that soap box again.

And what about Kevin Harvick? He’s 59 points behind leader Hamlin, and Mike Mulhern suggests it might be a must-win situation for Happy this Sunday at Phoenix.

It should be vewwwy interesting, as Elmer Fudd would say.

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Enough. Please. Stop.

Stop

Make it stop!

NASCAR is in the midst of its most exciting Chase for the Sprint Cup since the inaugural year of the format, 2004, when just 16 points separated champion Kurt Busch, second place Jimmie Johnson and third place Jeff Gordon at the end of the season. Yet the endless bleating, soul-searching and head-scratching continues about NASCAR in reverse gear.

Make no mistake: NASCAR has problems. Declining TV ratings and race attendance. Top teams struggling for sponsorship. Yet it’s still the most popular form of motorsports in America, by far. Every other series in the U.S. would love to have NASCAR’s “problems.”

But can we just focus on the racing for the next three weeks? There are three races remaining in what has been a compelling Chase for the Sprint Cup. Four-time reigning champion Jimmie Johnson leads Denny Hamlin by just 14 points and Kevin Harvick by 38.

It’s high-octane drama, yet from Tuesday through Thursday of every race week during the Chase — after the race reports and analysis are out of the way by Monday and before the race previews and coverage start Friday — all I read about on NASCAR blogs and websites are theories and speculation about the root cause of the great withering of NASCAR. Dustin Long, who I read daily and whose work I admire greatly, even wrote that the close Chase could be hurting NASCAR.

Say what?

Isn’t there a two-month offseason during which endless column inches and online bytes can be devoted to the Great NASCAR Decession? You know, when no actual racing is taking place?

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Sorry for the late-evening version of Splash And Go, but I had to wait for the first practice results from Motegi. They’re in, and Will Power is on top of the time chart. His closest pursuer in the points, Dario Franchitti, was sixth.

It’s a strong statement of intent by Power, but it’s not like the guy has looked shabby at recent oval races at Chicagoland and Kentucky. Still, John Oreovicz of ESPN.com makes a really good point about Will: He’s never raced on the asphalt egg at Twin Ring Motegi.

Still, I think it’s only a matter of time until he earns his first oval victory in the IZOD IndyCar Series for Team Penske. Dario just hopes that time is next year.

I was stunned when I first saw the time sheet and noticed Takuma Sato was at the bottom, even beneath Milka Duno. Say it ain’t so at your home motor dojo, Taku-san. But then I read where Taku crashed after an oil line failure splurted oil on the tires, causing Sato to spin.

Good thing Taku is OK. It’s pretty safe to say that normal order will be restored, with Milka in the caboose. But you have to feel for Sato in front of his home crowd. And do you think KV Racing Technology has gold card credit status with Dallara for chassis repair yet this season?

While practice is underway at Motegi, it’s not too late to check out this humorous preview of the race at Pop Off Valve.

Danica Patrick

She's still an elite race driver, ladies and gents

Tony Johns of Pop Off Valve also takes on the white elephant in the room with the IZOD IndyCar Series, the future racing intent of 5-2, 100-pound Danica Patrick. Tony thinks IndyCar doesn’t need Danica anymore.

Sorry, Tony, but I beg to differ. Danica is the most popular driver in the series, has attracted countless fans of both genders to IndyCar and is a magnet for attention, good and bad. No one can force her to stay in the series if she wants to run NASCAR full time after her contract expires with Andretti Autosport, but to say the series doesn’t need her? That’s a big step off a very narrow ledge.

Johns brings up Danica’s relative lack of success — one victory in nearly six full seasons of IZOD IndyCar Series racing — and says her results don’t match her hype. Well, the stats don’t match the buzz for Dale Earnhardt Jr. in NASCAR Sprint Cup, either, but he remains the most popular driver in that series by about six ZIP codes.

Sports is a personality-driven entertainment business now. People follow personalities more than results. But results are still a factor, and Danica gets it done at the biggest race in the world, the Indianapolis 500. Five top-eight finishes in six career starts at the Brickyard. ‘Nuff said. She’s a plus for the series. Period.

On a final IndyCar note, it’s really heartening to see that Mike Conway is almost ready to climb back into the cockpit. This boggles my mind considering the ferocity of Mike’s wreck at Indy, but he’s trying to beat the clock to return to his Dreyer & Reinbold seat for the season finale Oct. 2 at Homestead. Dude’s a racer – what else can you say?

Hey, did you know the Chase starts this Sunday? THE CHASE! THE CHASE! I’m starting to sound like Herve Villechaize calling for the plane on “Fantasy Island.”

The always excellent Dustin Long analyzes what each of the 12 Chase drivers needs to do to hoist the big silver mug at Homestead. Mike Mulhern also takes a really interesting look at how a strong, candid relationship between drivers and crew chiefs, especially when the driver is a bubbling young volcano like Kyle Busch and Denny Hamlin, is vital during the Chase.

Mike Hembree at SPEEDtv.com wrote an interesting piece stating that sleepy, small Loudon is an odd place to conduct the first race of NASCAR’s postseason.

New England is a stronger racing bastion than one might think, and Nor’easter fans go especially nuts for the superb NASCAR Modified Tour, the most exciting division in NASCAR, in my opinion. But New England also is a pro stick-and-ball haven, with the Patriots, Celtics and Red Sox Nation inhaling most of the available media oxygen.

Still, that’s not stopping track president Jerry Gappens from beating the drum. Jerry is an Indiana native, so racing is in his veins. He also worked for the legendary promoter Humpy Wheeler at Charlotte Motor Speedway, so the guy clearly knows how to sell and connect with fans.

The new Grand Prix of Aragon is underway in MotoGP, and the Motorland Aragon is one trippy racetrack, as this photo feature at motomatters.com shows. There are so many blind entrances to corners that I think Ray Charles and Jose Feliciano designed the circuit.

Dani Pedrosa was quickest overall as MotoGP returned to two Friday practice sessions. Pedrosa has been en fuego since Indianapolis and was rewarded with a new two-year deal with Honda. It will be very interesting to see how the notoriously fickle Pedrosa and his attack-dog manager, Alberto Puig, get along with Australian hard-ass and sometimes chronic complainer Casey Stoner next season in the Repsol Honda garage. Expect little love lost between the two.

James Toseland

James Toseland: Don't hate me because I'm beautiful, baby

Speaking of unloved men in motorcycle racing, it seems like James Toseland has alienated another teammate. American Colin Edwards couldn’t stand Toseland after Toseland orchestrated a swap of his crew chief with Edwards’ before the start of the 2009 MotoGP season. The Texas Tornado got the last laugh, as he clicked better with his new crew chief, Guy Coulon, and kicked Toseland’s ass so thoroughly that the Brit lost his ride and dropped back to World Superbike.

Well, it appears that Toseland’s WSBK teammate, fellow Brit Cal Crutchlow, also doesn’t have Toseland on his Christmas card list this year, either. Crutchlow was asked if he sought Toseland’s advice on MotoGP in advance of jumping to MotoGP in 2011 with Toseland’s old team, Monster Yamaha Tech 3. Crutchlow dropped a hammer on Toseland with his answer!

I sure hope Edwards remains at Monster Yamaha Tech 3 next season. The verbal volleys coming from that garage will look like Volkswagen Beetle-sized shells being fired from the USS Missouri.

In a very classy move Thursday, Moto2 points leader Toni Elias suggested in the pre-event press conference at Aragon that the Michel Metraux Trophy, presented to the best privateer rider of the season in the Moto2 class, should be presented to Shoya Tomizawa, who was killed in a Moto2 racing crash Sept. 5 at Misano.

The trophy is awarded based on a vote of the Moto2 riders, and they unanimously agreed to posthumously award the Metraux Trophy to Tomi.  A very proper gesture from a solid, tight community of racers.

Formula One is off this weekend, but the news and rumors never stop in the “pinnacle of motorsport,” as Nigel Mansell used to call it.

Joe Saward writes that it makes little sense for Renault to dance with Kimi Raikkonen despite reports that the Kimster and the French team are courting for 2011. Joe also throws cold water on the rumors that Lotus will switch to Toyota engines, instead writing that the shadow of the once-colossus fronted by Colin Chapman and Jim Clark will switch to Renault engines in 2011.

Sorry, but if a Cosworth DFV isn’t in the back, it’s not a real Lotus regardless of the paint job or team name.

Finally, Michael Schumacher is excited about the first night race of his career at Singapore on Sept. 26. Be careful what you wish for, Weltmeister: The spotlights of Singapore only will more brightly illuminate both the decline of your career and a possibly ham-fisted, lethal attempt by you to stuff a faster driver into the numerous concrete barriers of the street circuit.

Colin Edwards

Colin Edwards leans into a corner at Aragon

Colin Edwards, a Houston native nicknamed “The Texas Tornado,” will offer candid insight about his performance, competitors and life in the exciting world of MotoGP motorcycle racing before every event in 2010 in “Tornado Warning.” It’s the third consecutive season in which Edwards will offer this exclusive insight for www.indianapolismotorspeedway.com.

Two-time World Superbike champion Edwards, 36, is in his eighth year of MotoGP competition, riding this season for Monster Yamaha Tech 3. Edwards and the rest of the MotoGP riders will continue the season Sunday, Sept. 19 at the Grand Prix of Aragon at Motorland Aragon (8 a.m. ET, Sept. 19, SPEED).

The colorful Edwards competed in the third annual Red Bull Indianapolis GP on Aug. 27-29 at IMS along with fellow American MotoGP stars Nicky Hayden and Ben Spies, and MotoGP superstars Valentino Rossi, Casey Stoner, Dani Pedrosa and Jorge Lorenzo.

Haven’t talked with you since before Indy. How are you doing?

I’m doing all right, man. Just hanging out, man. Motorhome. We’re in today. We’re in the middle of B.F.E. over here. It took almost three hours to get here from Barcelona airport. Just hanging out.

Have you ever been to this Aragon circuit before? Is it all new to you?

It’s all new to everybody. It’s a brand-new circuit. I think Valentino came here and tested a couple days ago on an R1. But for the rest of us, everybody, it’s brand new.

Have you walked the circuit or rode a bike around it to learn the characteristics?

Yeah, I did two laps today on a bicycle. It’s definitely got some elevation changes and some couple tight corners and straights. It looks pretty fun, to be honest with you. There’s definitely some technical aspects to it. It’s got tons of damn run-off, which sometimes is good, sometimes is bad. Good for safety, but for learning … I generally like to know where I can and can’t go.

Does it remind you of any track you’ve rode before?

Oh, man, just going around it on a bicycle, I can’t say. There’s definitely some elevation changes such as like Laguna or Brno. There’s definitely some elevation, uphill, downhill, but no real long climbs. It’s all just kind of in a short area. You’re going uphill, and the next thing you know, you’re going downhill. It’s pretty cool.

How is the bike running? You had tire problems on Race Day at Indy, but Misano seemed better.

It’s still not the fastest bike out there, but we had it set up pretty good. We started really getting the handle on the setup at Brno. Obviously, Indy was not the best race on the planet for us. Misano was OK. We got out there, but I just couldn’t stay with those guys that were up front. Here there are definitely going to be some long, uphill climbs … Well, not long, but some short uphills that lead on to the straightaways. So I don’t know; we’ll wait and see.

When you come to a new circuit for everyone, can that level the playing field? Or is everyone’s engineering expertise so good that the top riders prevail anyways?

The top guys are still going to be the top guys. Ben (Spies) rode from me from Barcelona to here, so we had three hours of just B.S.-ing in the car. I was thinking the other day, if you could say anybody had a slight advantage right off the bat, it would probably would be Ben for the fact that he’s spent the last year and a half, basically every track he goes to, he’s got his brain set in that mode that he has to learn, has to learn the track. He’s never been to some of these tracks still. The rest of us, we’ve been to all of these tracks. We just show up. You really don’t have to walk around the track or ride around the track before you get on it. You just know it. You know where the brake markers are, whereas his brain is just wired for the moment where it just has to learn everything rapidly. It’s been so long since we’ve had to do that. I would say it seems like a slight advantage at the moment.

Is Ben the fifth alien now? Has he entered that class yet?

I don’t know. That’s hard to say. I would like to say 100 percent, absolutely, yes, but at the moment I don’t think he’s on the equipment at the moment to be able to make that step. I think once he gets in the factory team next year, I think that next step will be there, for sure.

But what he’s doing with what he has is pretty mind-boggling, don’t you think? It seems every week he’s going quicker and quicker, and you know the bike he’s on.

Oh, yeah, absolutely. I say definitely he’s young and hungry, and he’s riding the shit out of it. I think to be classified in that fifth alien group, I mean, he is, he’s riding good. I would like to see him on a bit better bike to really know that he can beat those guys regularly.

Any news or update on what you’re doing next year?

Still not 100 percent, but I think we should figure it out this weekend. Obviously, everybody would like me to stay here. I’d like to stay here. We just got a couple things we’ve got to tidy up. I think we should know something this weekend.

It’s been a tough couple of weeks for everyone in motorcycle racing, especially you. How have you been holding up, and how do you carry on through tough times like this?

I mean, you know, hell, it’s a … (exhale) … shit, dude, it’s just jacked up. They say time heals all wounds, which it does. But at the end of the day, he was just a friend. He wasn’t family, or anything. But going back from early days, I’ve had quite a few guys that passed away doing exactly this. Starting with Larry Schwarzbach back in ’92 and Nagai, my teammate in ’95. Hell, I saw him; I was right behind him when that happened. You got Michael Paquay in, I think, ’98 or ’99, I think, was a teammate of mine at Castrol Honda, passed away at Monza. Kato. I’ve had a few guys I’ve seen or I’ve been close to, and it’s just kind of the business. It doesn’t happen that often. It puts you on the ground and makes you realize that … I mean, hell, I could step out of the bus here and trip and bust my head into the next motorhome, and if I hit it right, lights out, so. Life is life. Sometimes it sucks, but at the end of the day, time’s up, time’s up. Shit, man, I don’t know how else to put it.

The mentality of racers, it’s a risk you accept, and you do it because you love it. Does something like this ever cause you to step back and analyze your commitment to the game, your love for the sport?

I think it’s never affected me to the point to where you step back and go: “Whoa, man, this is so dangerous. This is crazy. I don’t even know why we’re doing this.” You don’t say that. It’s just not your mentality. Hell, for the last 33 years, however long I’ve been riding motorcycles, you know the risk. You don’t ever step back and go: “Wow, this is crazy. Why am I doing this?” You just say, “OK.” Died doing what he loved to do. You can’t ask any more than that. At least the guys that passed away, they didn’t grow old and die from f*cking prostate cancer and some screwed-up shit and suffer. They were doing what they wanted to do. So you just have to look at it that way.

Andi Hauser host of WISH-TV‘s Indy Style, went back to the school this weekend…Schwantz Motorcycle Riding School!  Fun fact: Hauser is a huge motorcycle enthusiast- therefore, getting  the chance to learn from motorcycle racer Kevin Schwantz was an opportunity she could not pass up. Schwantz is a Grand Prix World Champion and has amassed 25 Grand Prix wins, 21 lap records, 29 pole positions and the 1993 World Championship.

Andi Hauser from WISH-TV's Indy Style

Andi Hauser in Stylish Leathers

Today, Hauser traded in her personal bright yellow Ducati motorcycle, to test drive Schwantz’s classroom fleet of Michelin shod Honda CBR600RRs and Suzuki GSX-R600sa. I caught Hauser in between track sessions, to ask how it was going. She said, “I’m having a blast!”

Hauser was even decked out in sassy leathers–now that’s Indy Style to the extreme! The stylish Hauser posed for a quick picture before hitting the books…I mean, track. Who knew going back to school would be so bada**!

This weekend, Schwantz School was hosted at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway August 21st and the 22nd.

Schwantz School

Schwantz Motorcycle Riding School this way!

Only the best win at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Just look at the winners of the Indy 500 since 2005: Wheldon, Hornish, Franchitti, Dixon, Castroneves. All IZOD IndyCar Series champions except Helio, and he’s won Indy three times. Same with the Brickyard 400: Stewart, Johnson and McMurray. All Sprint Cup champions except Jamie Mac, and he has won the Daytona 500.

MotoGP is no different. Seven-time MotoGP World Champion Valentino Rossi won the inaugural Red Bull Indianapolis GP in 2008, and Jorge Lorenzo — who is almost a shoo-in to win the title this year barring disaster or injury — won last year.

But there’s also an interesting trend that has developed over the first two years of the MotoGP race at IMS: Dark horses emerge.

There has been at least one surprise among the riders standing on the famous circular podium at Indy in 2008 and 2009, and there’s no reason why it can’t happen again this year.

Nicky Hayden

Nicky Hayden on the IMS podium in 2009

In 2008, American Nicky Hayden finished second. What’s so surprising about that, you say? After all, the Kentucky Kid has been America’s best rider in the World Championship for the last eight seasons. He beat Rossi to the world title in 2006.

Yeah, yeah: I get it. But Nicky’s runner-up finish during the “hurricane race” in September 2008 still could be classified as a surprise. He had been struggling in what was his final season with Repsol Honda leading into Indy, with no podiums and just three top-five finishes in the first 13 races of the season.

But buoyed by his home crowd, Nicky led 12 laps before finishing second for his first podium finish since August 2007. It also didn’t hurt that the wind and driving rain delivered to the track by the remnants of Hurricane Ike caused the bikes to slip and slide all over the IMS course, which favored Nicky’s sublime bike-handling skills cultivated by years of power-sliding flat-track racing on dirt tracks across America.

Last year, it’s arguable that winner Lorenzo was the only one of the top three finishers who was expected to be on the podium. Alex De Angelis finished second, and let’s face it: Only diehard motorcycle racing fans knew of Alex De Angelis before the red lights turned off to start this race.

Hayden finished third for his second consecutive Red Bull Indianapolis GP podium finish, a feat matched only by Lorenzo in the race’s two-year history. Nicky was struggling mightily in his first season with Ducati entering Indy, with a fifth-place finish his best effort in the first 11 races.

Yet once again, Hayden enjoyed the taste of home cookin’ and came through for his throngs of fans at IMS.

So if this trend continues, who are the candidates to make a surprise appearance spraying champagne in the shadow of the IMS Pagoda around 4 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 29?

First, let’s eliminate the four “aliens,” as MotoGP rider Marco Melandri coined them last year. It will be no surprise if Lorenzo, Rossi, Dani Pedrosa or Casey Stoner finish in the top three. They’re clearly the four best riders in the world, all on factory bikes. So scratch them from the list.

Honestly, would it be a massive surprise if Ben Spies finished in the top three? I don’t think so. Elbowz qualified second and finished fourth at the Czech Grand Prix on Aug. 15 at Brno. He already has a podium finish this season as the top rookie in MotoGP and is challenging Hayden as the top American rider in the standings.

I also don’t think it would qualify as a shock if Nicky finished on the podium for a third straight year. Look at his track record at Indy. ‘Nuff said. Plus he has four fourth-place finishes in 2010 during a resurgent season on his Ducati.

Colin Edwards

Colin Edwards in 2009 at IMS

But the third American on the MotoGP grid, Colin Edwards, would qualify as a surprise if he stood on the podium. It has not been the best of seasons for the Texas Tornado on his satellite Monster Yamaha Tech 3 machine. He has has finished seventh in the last two races, his best efforts of the season.

Yet Colin has a solid chance at a strong finish at Indy. I talked with him this week for the upcoming installment of “Tornado Warning” at this blog, and he was pumped for Indy — and not just because it’s his home race. Colin said the team made a big breakthrough in setup during the test Aug. 16 in the Czech Republic.

Another dark horse — well, let’s call him a gray horse — is Andrea Dovizioso of the Repsol Honda Team. Dovi isn’t exactly a dark horse, as he is on a factory bike and has four podium finishes this season. But he always seems to be eclipsed in results and recognition by his teammate, Pedrosa.

Remember, though, that Dovi ran with the front-runners on a satellite Honda during the inaugural Red Bull Indianapolis GP before finishing fifth. He also showed superb bike-handling skills in the wet last year at Donington Park when he earned his only MotoGP win so far in a deluge. The long-range forecast doesn’t show rain on Race Day this year in Indy, but the ability to adjust to the different types of asphalt on the Indy road course definitely helps. Dovi can do that.

So keep an eye on the Texas Tornado and Dovi. It’s a safe bet they’re the leading candidates to be the surprise men on the podium this year at the Red Bull Indianapolis GP.

If you’re a MotoGP fan and want to know even more about the sport or if you’re a curious fan wanting to dip your toes into this wild two-wheeled world, this blog post is a fine place to start. Below are links to websites and social media for MotoGP, the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, and 2010 MotoGP teams and riders.

We hope this helps you learn even more about the exciting premier level of worldwide motorcycle racing as the MotoGP circus brings its exotic, 215-mph prototype motorcycles and charismatic, CRAZY riders to the Indianapolis Motor Speedway next week for the Red Bull Indianapolis GP on Aug. 27-29.

So ladies and gentlemen, start clicking your mouse or tapping your touchscreen and dive into the cool world of MotoGP!

MotoGP

•Official site: www.motogp.com

•Facebook: www.facebook.com/MotoGP

•Twitter: @officialmotogp

INDIANAPOLIS MOTOR SPEEDWAY

•Official site: www.indianapolismotorspeedway.com

•Facebook: www.facebook.com/indianapolismotorspeedway

•Twitter: @IndyTalk

TEAMS

Ducati Team (Casey Stoner, Nicky Hayden)

•Official site: www.ducati.com

•Facebook: www.facebook.com/Ducati

•Twitter: @ducatimotor

Fiat Yamaha Team (Valentino Rossi, Jorge Lorenzo)

•Official site: www.fiatyamahateam.it

•Facebook: www.facebook.com/fiatyamahateam

•Twitter: @fiatyamahateam

Interwetten Honda MotoGP (Hiroshi Aoyama)

•Official site: www.interwettenracing.com

•Facebook: www.facebook.com/hondaproracing

•Twitter: @hondaproracing

LCR Honda MotoGP (Randy De Puniet)

•Official site: www.lcr.mc

•Facebook: www.facebook.com/pages/Monte-Carlo-Monaco/LCR-Honda-MotoGP-Team/65683534043

•Twitter: @LCRHondaMotoGP

Monster Yamaha Tech 3 (Colin Edwards, Ben Spies)

•Official site: www.teamtech3.fr/2009

•Facebook: www.facebook.com/pages/Monster-Yamaha-Tech-3/114621875218067

Paginas Amarillas Aspar (Hector Barbera)

•Official site: www.teamaspar.net

•Twitter: @TeamAspar

Pramac Racing Team (Mika Kallio, Aleix Espargaro)

•Official site: www.pramacracing.com

•Facebook: www.facebook.com/pages/PRAMAC-RACING-TEAM-THE-GREEN-ENERGY-TEAM/377638343303

Repsol Honda Team (Dani Pedrosa, Andrea Dovizioso)

•Official site: world.honda.com/MotoGP

•Facebook: www.facebook.com/pages/Repsol-Honda-Team/21356130089

•Twitter: @hondaproracing

Rizla Suzuki MotoGP (Loris Capirossi, Alvaro Bautista)

•Official site: www.rizla-suzuki-motogp.co.uk

•Facebook: www.facebook.com/pages/Suzuki-MotoGP/108230575865489

San Carlo Honda Gresini (Marco Melandri, Marco Simoncelli)

•Official site: www.gresiniracing.com

•Facebook: www.facebook.com/hondaproracing

•Twitter: @hondaproracing

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