NASCAR and The Brickyard; A Perfect Match
When stock cars first graced the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in 1992 for a Goodyear tire test, the hallowed grounds of the speedway were rocked with a sound never heard before. Drivers were excited as were crews, fans and dignitaries from the speedway and NASCAR alike. Every driver wanted to be able to say, “I was the first driver to turn cross the yard of bricks, in a stock car!”
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[/media-credit]The drivers were sent out onto the speedway in numerical order, and since there was no number one car, Rusty Wallace in his number two Penske Pontiac was the first car to hit the speedway. Thinking that the warm up lap was going to be an easy cruise, Wallace never expected to see a car catching him. “I looked up in my mirror and saw this black car getting closer” Wallace said. That car was none other than the late Dale Earnhardt Sr.
Earnhardt passed Wallace down the front stretch and right then and there, is where the stock car competitiveness began at Indianapolis.
In 1994, NASCAR graced the grounds once again, but only this time, there was a race taking place. On Saturday August 6, 1994, the tradition began with the Inaugural Brickyard 400. The race was filled with a record number of lead changes for the speedway at the time, and some of the most side by side battles at the speedway. The race was won by none other than a driver that called Indiana his home, Jeff Gordon.
While the win was special for Gordon, drivers like Dale Earnhardt Sr. and Tony Stewart, had some extra incentive placed on winning at the Brickyard.
Earnhardt, a seven time cup series champion, wanted nothing more than to be the first driver to roll into victory lane at Indianapolis in NASCAR. After a lap two pounding of the turn four wall, Earnhardt wanted to become the first “man” to win the Brickyard 400. When the second annual Brickyard 400 finally got underway, Earnhardt began to show what kind of driver he really ways. After a late race pit stop, then leader of the race, Rusty Wallace, had troubles on pit road due to cars in front of him and multiple scares with loose tires. Wallace tried desperately to get out first, but when he got to the backstretch, that black car that passed him back in 1992, was right there again, and just like that time, he blew right passed him.
Dale went on to claim the victory indeed becoming the first “man” to win the Brickyard 400.
Growing up in Indiana, Tony Stewart had always dreamed of winning the Indianapolis 500 in an Indy Car. Never in his wildest dreams did he think he would be racing at the Brickyard in a stock car. Stewart, who was one of the member of the Indy Car world who did not like stock cars coming to Indy, was in the middle of a successful Indy Car career when he was signed by Joe Gibbs Racing for 1999. Always being one of the favorites to win, Stewart placed even more pressure on himself. In 2005, that dream was finally a reality after holding off Kasey Kahne in a late race shootout to win his first Brickyard 400. Taking in the moment buy hanging on the fence, and grabbing a Coke from his family, Stewart had finally lived his lifelong dream of winning at the Brickyard.
Many other drivers have graced the checkered floor of victory lane in the Brickyard 400. Names such as; Elliott, Harvick, Jarrett, Johnson, Labonte and McMurray. Indianapolis is a place where the cream rise to the top more than any other racetrack on the NASCAR circuit. You cannot fluke your way into a good run here.
You must put the whole package together to be among the greats, as an Indianapolis winner.
With the vast amount of history the speedway brings, and how far the sport of NASCAR has come in just over sixty years, the two are a perfect match for each other. They both show the fruits and labors of the racing world over the years better than maybe any other combination out there.
While the racing may not be stellar by any standards, the element of winning at Indy is probably the most difficult. History takes center stage when you come to the Brickyard.
Will This Years Brickyard 400 Have Last Lap Drama Like In May?
Earlier this May we saw JR Hildebrand play the fuel strategy perfect. He had the Indianapolis 500 pretty much won and 2005 winner Dan Wheldon was well behind, but going into Turn 4 there was a lapped car and Hildebrand came into the turn way too fast and not to mention way too high and probably purposefully because this is the Indy 500 after all, you have to look sexy coming out of that last turn.
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[/media-credit]Unfortunately, the only thing sexy and probably painful about Hildebrand’s choice was his date with the wall. He almost won the race on two wheels, but he gave the win to Dan Wheldon, who had finished second two years in a row prior to this epic disaster.
In six days, NASCAR heads to the famed Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Jamie McMurray is the defending winner of this race, but he has been struggling mightily as of late and as careful as he is, he continues to be finding the wall or someone else. His teammate Juan “Flamboya” Montoya either runs well and wrecks, wrecks altogether, wrecks someone else, or barely squeezing in a Top-10 here and there. Both the Earnhardt-Ganassi cars sit 17th and 29th in the points respectively. The only way I see Montoya making the Chase is if he repeats at the Glen, but if that doesn’t happen, he’ll have to wait until 2012.
With that being said, there will not be a repeat winner at the Brickyard this season. The biggest shock we saw last year was how badly the 24 and the 48 finished. Those two finished 22nd and 23rd. It came as a bigger shock to Jeff Gordon, who had never finished outside the Top-10 at the Brickyard since his rocky 2000 season.
For my pick this weekend, I will have to go with Jeff Gordon to become the first man to ever win 5 races at the Brickyard. I know last year didn’t go as planned for the 24 team, but just look at how well they have been performing lately. Without the battery issues that plagued him at Loudon, I believe he would have at least finished in the Top 3.
For dark horses, you have to take a good look at the RCR cars. These guys came to Indy last year on a mission and it definitely showed with two of their three cars finishing inside the Top 5. Harvick finished 2nd and Bowyer 4th. Burton topped off a great weekend by finishing 6th. If a Hendrick car does not win this weekend, I bet someone from RCR will be hoisting the Brickyard 400 trophy.
I believe this race will come down to some last lap antics and it’s going to be hella exciting to watch. I hope I’m not disappointed.
What do you guys think? Email me at rosharppromotions@gmail.com to send me your thoughts or leave your comments here. Thank you.
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