02-08-2008, 04:35 PM
By Bruce Martin PA SportsTicker Contributing Editor
DAYTONA BEACH, Florida (Ticker) The long, bitter and divisive war between IndyCar Series and Champ Car that began in 1996 seems to have come to an end, PA SportsTicker has learned.
Gerry Forsythe and Kevin Kalkhoven of Champ Car are close to reaching an agreement with Indy Racing League founder Tony George to join forces.
The one hurdle that needs to be cleared is getting officials at Twin-Ring Motegi in Japan to move its race date from April to later in the season so that the Long Beach Grand Prix can be added to the IndyCar schedule.
George is expected to meet with officials in Japan on Monday to personally negotiate the move for the Japan race date, which is vital because that facility is owned by Honda, the sole engine supplier of IndyCar.
Reached for comment by PA SportsTicker, IndyCar vice president of public relations John Griffin remained hopeful a resolution could be reached.
"Meetings have and will continue to be ongoing but there are no set dates for a formal announcement," Griffin said from Indianapolis. "There's still some work to be done."
"It's as close as it's ever been to being together, but we don't know if we can get across the goal line," George told Robin Miller of SpeedTV.com on Thursday evening. "But no one is giving up yet."
Under terms of the agreement, any Champ Car team that agrees to compete on the full IndyCar schedule will get free Dallara chassis and Honda engines to assist in the transition from Champ Car, which uses a completely different engine/car formula.
All Champ Car teams that joined the IndyCar Series would also be eligible for the TEAMS program, which pays $1.2 million per car for full-time series participation in place of prize money.
The Champ Car circuit would cease to exist under the agreement.
In addition to adding the Long Beach Grand Prix to the schedule, IndyCar is expected add two more races off the Champ Car schedule - including Edmonton and Surfer's Paradise Australia.
The combined series could have as many as 24 cars participating for the full season. The IndyCar Series would be the sanctioning body for the combined series, with the 92nd Indianapolis 500 as the centerpiece event.
This ends one of the longest divisions in open wheel history.
When George announced plans on March 20, 1994, for a new IndyCar Series that would feature the Indianapolis 500 as its showcase event, it was met with bitter resistance from the CART series, which was the primary open-wheel racing series in North America.
Most of the cars that competed in the Indy 500 from 1979-1995 were CART teams but when the Indy Racing League opened for business in 1996, CART held steadfast to its opposition to the IRL and chose to hold its own race against the Indy 500.
That race was called the US500 and was held at Michigan International Speedway.
On that monumental day, only two CART teams decided to race at Indy Galles Racing and Walker Racing. The rest of that year's Indy field was comprised of teams that were part of the IRL.
A young driver named Tony Stewart started on the pole at Indy after his teammate, pole winner Scott Brayton, was killed in a crash in practice at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway the week before the race.
Buddy Lazier won a dramatic Indy 500 that day while Jimmy Vasser captured the US500 at Michigan. A crowd estimated at 400,000 fans was at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway and another 110,000 fans filled Michigan International Speedway, meaning more than one-half million spectators attended an IndyCar race that day.
Since then, however, crowds dropped dramatically for virtually all open-wheel races involving the two series.
Stewart went on to win the IRL title in 1997 and eventually left the series after the 1998 season to compete full-time in NASCAR beginning in 1999. Stewart later won NASCAR Cup titles in 2002 and 2005.
CART became a public series and continued to survive while the IRL plodded along in the early years. CART eventually went bankrupt after the 2002 season.
George tried to purchase CART's assets in bankruptcy court but was thwarted when a U.S. District Court Judge in Indianapolis accepted a smaller offer from Kalkhoven, Forsythe and Paul Gentilozzi.
The three men created the Champ Car Series, which included many of the former CART teams. But some of the best teams from CART, including Team Penske, Target/Chip Ganassi and the old Team Green - which became Andretti Green Racing - left for the IRL. Other team owners such as Bobby Rahal and Adrian Fernandez would follow.
Kalkhoven, a wealthy Australian businessman, kept Champ Car afloat before he started talking to George about reconciliation in January 2006. Initial efforts for unification failed but George quietly worked behind the scenes to finally convince the Champ Car hierarchy to come to a resolution.
After many failed attempts, it appears perseverance has paid off.
Kalkhoven was optimistic in comments he made to Miller.
"Both sides want this to happen very much and we're working on it," Kalkhoven told Miller.
Mike Spinelli
IIRS founder
DAYTONA BEACH, Florida (Ticker) The long, bitter and divisive war between IndyCar Series and Champ Car that began in 1996 seems to have come to an end, PA SportsTicker has learned.
Gerry Forsythe and Kevin Kalkhoven of Champ Car are close to reaching an agreement with Indy Racing League founder Tony George to join forces.
The one hurdle that needs to be cleared is getting officials at Twin-Ring Motegi in Japan to move its race date from April to later in the season so that the Long Beach Grand Prix can be added to the IndyCar schedule.
George is expected to meet with officials in Japan on Monday to personally negotiate the move for the Japan race date, which is vital because that facility is owned by Honda, the sole engine supplier of IndyCar.
Reached for comment by PA SportsTicker, IndyCar vice president of public relations John Griffin remained hopeful a resolution could be reached.
"Meetings have and will continue to be ongoing but there are no set dates for a formal announcement," Griffin said from Indianapolis. "There's still some work to be done."
"It's as close as it's ever been to being together, but we don't know if we can get across the goal line," George told Robin Miller of SpeedTV.com on Thursday evening. "But no one is giving up yet."
Under terms of the agreement, any Champ Car team that agrees to compete on the full IndyCar schedule will get free Dallara chassis and Honda engines to assist in the transition from Champ Car, which uses a completely different engine/car formula.
All Champ Car teams that joined the IndyCar Series would also be eligible for the TEAMS program, which pays $1.2 million per car for full-time series participation in place of prize money.
The Champ Car circuit would cease to exist under the agreement.
In addition to adding the Long Beach Grand Prix to the schedule, IndyCar is expected add two more races off the Champ Car schedule - including Edmonton and Surfer's Paradise Australia.
The combined series could have as many as 24 cars participating for the full season. The IndyCar Series would be the sanctioning body for the combined series, with the 92nd Indianapolis 500 as the centerpiece event.
This ends one of the longest divisions in open wheel history.
When George announced plans on March 20, 1994, for a new IndyCar Series that would feature the Indianapolis 500 as its showcase event, it was met with bitter resistance from the CART series, which was the primary open-wheel racing series in North America.
Most of the cars that competed in the Indy 500 from 1979-1995 were CART teams but when the Indy Racing League opened for business in 1996, CART held steadfast to its opposition to the IRL and chose to hold its own race against the Indy 500.
That race was called the US500 and was held at Michigan International Speedway.
On that monumental day, only two CART teams decided to race at Indy Galles Racing and Walker Racing. The rest of that year's Indy field was comprised of teams that were part of the IRL.
A young driver named Tony Stewart started on the pole at Indy after his teammate, pole winner Scott Brayton, was killed in a crash in practice at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway the week before the race.
Buddy Lazier won a dramatic Indy 500 that day while Jimmy Vasser captured the US500 at Michigan. A crowd estimated at 400,000 fans was at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway and another 110,000 fans filled Michigan International Speedway, meaning more than one-half million spectators attended an IndyCar race that day.
Since then, however, crowds dropped dramatically for virtually all open-wheel races involving the two series.
Stewart went on to win the IRL title in 1997 and eventually left the series after the 1998 season to compete full-time in NASCAR beginning in 1999. Stewart later won NASCAR Cup titles in 2002 and 2005.
CART became a public series and continued to survive while the IRL plodded along in the early years. CART eventually went bankrupt after the 2002 season.
George tried to purchase CART's assets in bankruptcy court but was thwarted when a U.S. District Court Judge in Indianapolis accepted a smaller offer from Kalkhoven, Forsythe and Paul Gentilozzi.
The three men created the Champ Car Series, which included many of the former CART teams. But some of the best teams from CART, including Team Penske, Target/Chip Ganassi and the old Team Green - which became Andretti Green Racing - left for the IRL. Other team owners such as Bobby Rahal and Adrian Fernandez would follow.
Kalkhoven, a wealthy Australian businessman, kept Champ Car afloat before he started talking to George about reconciliation in January 2006. Initial efforts for unification failed but George quietly worked behind the scenes to finally convince the Champ Car hierarchy to come to a resolution.
After many failed attempts, it appears perseverance has paid off.
Kalkhoven was optimistic in comments he made to Miller.
"Both sides want this to happen very much and we're working on it," Kalkhoven told Miller.
Mike Spinelli
IIRS founder
