RacingNation.com

Chicagoland Attendance Knuckled By Bad Planning

Charlotte, NC (July 23rd, 2012) – Sometimes, you just have to shake
your head and wonder what NASCAR was thinking.

That surely was the case when attendance for both the NASCAR Camping
World Truck Series race Saturday and Sunday’s NASCAR Nationwide event
at Chicagoland were announced at 25,000 fans. Those are pretty paltry
numbers considering the massive Chicago market and makes you wonder
why fans stayed away in droves.

Here’s one theory.

A quick look at the schedule indicates that NASCAR didn’t do
Chicagoland Speedway any favors by scheduling a Nationwide race there
this past weekend – not when you consider that the division will make
it’s first-ever appearance at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway this
coming weekend.

Realistically, if I’m a Nationwide Series fan based in the Chicago
area, I’m headed for Indy this weekend and the NNS/Cup doubleheader at
the Brickyard – not buying tickets for an ARCA/Truck/Nationwide
tripleheader at Chicagoland Speedway this past weekend.

Ditto for the NASCAR races at Iowa Speedway in two weeks where I can
see action-packed K&N Pro Series and Nationwide events – and not the
snooze-fest that was the Nationwide race at Chicagoland Sunday
afternoon.

That kind of poor schedule planning by NASCAR all but doomed any hopes
of drawing big crowds at Chicagoland this weekend. Both the track and
its fans deserve better.

Chicago has deep racing roots hosting the first-ever auto race in the
United States on November 27, 1895. That day, six cars raced from
Chicago to Evanston and back with Frank Duryea winning the 10-hour
plus event. Duryea averaged a ‘blistering’ 7.3 miles per hour in
capturing the $2,000 first prize.

Since then, the Chicago metro area has played host to more than 40
different raceways, the most notable being Soldier Field (now home of
the Bears), O’Hare Speedway and Blue Island Raceway. Over the years,
Chicago area speedways hosted every kind of race event ranging from
‘Indy’ cars on the two-mile wood board Chicago Speedway (1917-1919) to
midget races at Joliet Speedway nearby the current Chicagoland
facility.

Today, Chicago area speedways such as Rockford, Grundy and Illiana are
all still hotbeds of stock car racing.

Fans didn’t show up at Chicagoland this past weekend because the
‘Windy City’ isn’t a racing town. In our opinion, the empty grandstand
was in large part a result of NASCAR’s bad planning.

That said, it will be interesting to see the head count at Chicagoland
this September when the track hosts the opening race of the 2012
NASCAR Sprint Cup championship ‘Chase.’

You would think the beginning of NASCAR’s ‘playoffs’ – as well as a
favorable National Football League schedule that has the Bears off
that weekend after playing a Thursday, September 13 game at Green Bay
– will help the gate at Chicagoland.

Throw in the annual pathetic state of the Chicago Cubs and the less
than likely playoff run of the Chicago White Sox, and NASCAR’s
championship opener should be at center stage commanding the attention
of the area’s ticket-buying public in September.

If not, it’s likely it never will.

Times Change –

One of my father’s favorite sayings was ‘the only thing you can count
on is things will change.”

That saying proved to be true again this past weekend when my nearly
four-year professional association with Max Gresham came to an end.

In short, Max is moving a different direction and I’m not part of it.
It’s something that happens in racing all the time and I understand it
completely. It’s not the first time I’ve experienced this and it
probably won’t be the last.

That said, I would be remiss if I didn’t thank the Gresham family for
all they have done for my family and me over the last four years.

My association with Max – and with Gresham Motorsports Park – has
produced some of the most memorable and rewarding events of my career.
Being part of a NASCAR K&N championship effort with Max last year and
having a hand in the rebirth in Gresham Motorsports Park will always
rank near the top of my racing thrills.

More importantly, those years produced a friendship with the Gresham
family – and dozens of people that I worked with through that
association – which will continue to last well beyond any professional
endeavor.

In closing the book on this chapter of my career, Gail and I would
like to wish Max all the best in whatever direction his career takes
him and continued good health and happiness to the entire Gresham
family.

Thanks for everything guys, it’s been a great ride.

Share Button