Tuesday, April 21, 2015

J.W. von Goethe and the Ever-Esoteric Indycar

There have been several treatises written by many much more skilled than I dealing with the sturm und drang surrounding Indycar and it's TV ratings (which is oft used by media and advertising folks to indicate its relative popularity in our culture, and, in some cases, to indicate relative worth in the commercial marketplace) so I shall not attempt to add to it.

Oh, wait. I already have. Back in 2012, here. Another one of quality by our long lost comrade in Indycar arms, Pressdog, can be read here. Read those in your free time later. For now, just understand that we've covered much of this ground before, and reference the continually, relatively small TV ratings outside the Indy 500 as a backdrop to this post.

Today's Indycar Word of the Day is: Esoteric


esoteric adjective es·o·ter·ic \ˌe-sə-ˈter-ik, -ˈte-rik\

1 a : designed for or understood by the specially initiated alone (a body of esoteric legal doctrine — B. N. Cardozo)
   b : requiring or exhibiting knowledge that is restricted to a small group (esoteric terminology); broadly, difficult to understand (esoteric subjects)
2 a : limited to a small circle (in esoteric pursuits)
   b : private, confidential (an esoteric purpose)
3 : of special, rare, or unusual interest (esoteric building materials)


For this writer, attempting to express ideas through words are typically a source fun and 'esoteric' is among the most enjoyable for me to throw out in conversation or print. Regardless, I find this word especially useful to frame what I saw as a very good race at Long Beach last weekend. 
For a sport that is already quite esoteric, to continually heap upon the negative comparisons to the glorious past of 50 (or even 25 years ago) serves no good.

You may think you're doing the sport a great service, but you're not. It is pure folly and unfairly shackles the sport to something it cannot possibly be. It reminds me of a younger sibling who becomes a freshman in high school, only to continually suffer the unfair comparisons by possibly more glorious elder siblings' friends and teachers. To have these comparisons and judgements awaiting you, before you have a chance to develop your own identity, would be highly infuriating. Perhaps you were just such a sibling and can identify with this feeling, but I digress...
My point to all this can be summed up by a quote I came across yesterday attributed to Johann Wolfgang von Goethe - influential writer, statesman, and all-round free-thinker from late-1700s/early-1800s Germany. The english translation of his quote is,
"the hardest thing to see is what is in front of your eyes"

What is currently (and has been for a few years) in front of our eyes is the gilding of a new group of Indycar legends. 
Yet nobody seems to care.
Scott Dixon scored his 36th career win in Indycar at Long Beach last weekend, surpassing the golden-era legend Bobby Unser, and moving to 5th all-time, a full year quicker and in 17 less starts that 'Uncle Bobby'.  
Let that sink in for a bit.
I'm not going to attempt arguments which bring in subjective comparisons based on the sport or vehicle history - only the hardest, most basic statistics. We can certainly view them all through the lens of their time but I find it increasingly hard to say one era is better than another based on conditions of the time. Liars figure and figures lie, correct?
We are in a time when new legends such as Scott Dixon, Helio Castroneves, Sebastien Bourdais recently retireds Dario Franchitti and Paul Tracy, ALL are in the top 15 in career wins.
These drivers, some of whom are permanently gone from the cockpit, or likely soon to be, are legends in their own right, yet most often we only hear and celebrate the voices of those who continually lob mortars at the sport's façade, quite unfairly damaging this current generation of legends. The worst thing, the absolute WORST we do as fans is depreciate their status.
(c) Jeff Gritchen - OC Register
I'm making an concerted effort to eliminate the unfair comparisons with the sport's past. The drivers of today are legends in their own right, living in the shadows of the sport's earlier legends, yet they've earned the right to be treated as such. 
The subdued congratulations from TK and Helio on Sunday, seemed akin to a knowing nod that despite the weight of golden-era legends and their esoteric, nostalgic fans before them, they do understand their place in the sport's pantheon.
If only more Indycar fans did as well.



Tuesday, April 14, 2015

The Middle of The Road

"the middle of the road, is no private cul-de-sac..."
- Chryssie Hynde, The Pretenders

As my tens of readers may or may not have noticed, there was no post last Tuesday. Due to a much-needed and enjoyable vacation week, I elected to enjoy my day at the beach and pool rather than stuff more content of questionable quality on the internet.

I found that, even on vacation, Indycar is never far from my mind. Road-tripping for 19 hours with my family to the sunny climes of Gulf-coast Florida, allows for copious driving time and the mind will wander, although auto-racing and Indycar is naturally very close to the surface.

The only major lament I'd have from this trip is that, while spending a vast majority of four days driving out of the last nine, a vast majority of people simply do not know how or do not care to know how to act while driving on a major interstate highway (RANT ALERT). There is ONE very simple rule on interstates that would ease SO many traffic woes:


It was observed that a goodly many of drivers from such great states as Michigan, Ohio, and Indiana, seem to be keenly unaware of the laws of most every state in the union with regard to interstate driving. 

Perhaps they've not heard the cautionary words of Chryssie Hynde.


Perhaps they're unaware of the consequences of such actions.
Perhaps they simply do not care. 

Perhaps they're rude and unchivalrous with regard to road etiquette.
I find it quite an unseemly commentary on our society actually.

Regardless, it is in the middle of the road, where you do indeed see the darnedest things, and yes, it is no cul-de-sac. Seemingly safe and comforting to be in the middle farthest away from those scary edges of the known. U
nnecessary traffic snarls and semi-close calls belie that it's actually a treacherous place filled with danger. 

Just ask Kevin Cogan. 


Or Ryan Hunter-Reay.


I cannot say to this day, with the highest degree of certainty that Hunter-Reay or Cogan were totally to blame.  The preponderance of evidence seems weighted against them however and often the precise facts of the matter rarely count in the court of public opinion. Both did harm to their reputations as drivers and both did damage to the image of the sport to some degree.

Even the sport of Indycar itself shows a proclivity for the safety in the middle of the road with its oft-compromised decision-making and white-washing of the history of the sport.

Maybe I've just become more sensitive or tolerant of the realities of life. As I get older, the middle of the road isn't seen as a narrow balancing point but has come to represent a vast grey area that lies between the narrow lines of either extreme. For a great many days of our lives it is relatively safe there, but for the increasingly binary times in which we now live, for better or worse, it has come to represent a place lacking a sense of gravitas and especially at critical moments in time.  



Rick Mears' famous outside pass into turn one at Indy in 1991, en route to his fourth and final Indy 500 victory, was in no way considered middle of the road.  The fastest race speed he would turn that day going into one, taking the most extreme line possible with no guarantee of coming out the other side cleanly is an example of not compromising at precisely the right moment in time.  


And such is the stuff of legend.


Tuesday, March 31, 2015

The Power of Polls Compels You

It's Tuesday already?!  

I thought I just posted a few days ago and here I go again?

This dubious self-imposed return to blogging has brought with it a dubious self-imposed schedule for posting every Tuesday. Me and my big mouth will surely run out of new Indycar things to discuss before April is out.


One new development I'd like to highlight was an opportunity with which to be involved, that came along right before the start of the aerokit-era - The Indycar Power Poll.

In similar fashion as many sports, This Indycar Power Poll is to be a basic guide for understanding the current and past performance climate of the participants of the particular sport. I happily joined this band of miscreants these esteemed colleagues who with nothing better to do 
than to weigh in on the drivers performances directed their creative talents to provide fodder for words add value to our collective readerships. Those aformentioned colleagues, each with writers all and with a dedicated interest in the sport of Indycar are:

Dylan Reynolds openwheel33.com @openwh33l
Mike Joachim wfopenwheel.com @Mike_Joachim 

For other insight into the Indycar Power Poll, please visit those folks for their individual takes on this informal data and Indycar in general.

So just prior to the St. Pete race, we scrambled together a Pre-season Power Poll which, when our individual polls were compiled into an aggregate, looked something like this:

Preseason Rankings
Pos.
Driver
Points
1
Will Power
480
2
Scott Dixon
370
3
Simon Pagenaud
364
4
Juan Montoya
313
5
Tony Kanaan
299
6
Helio Castroneves
297
7
Ryan Hunter-Reay
283
8
Sebastien Bourdais
245
9
James Hinchcliffe
234
10
Josef Newgarden
198
11
Carlos Munoz
178
12
Marco Andretti
172
13
Graham Rahal
156
14
Charlie Kimball
148
15
Takuma Sato
146
16
Luca Filippi/Ed Carpenter
145
17
Stefano Coletti
143
18
Sage Karam
131
19
Jack Hawksworth
130
20
Simona De Silvestro
116
21
Gabby Chaves
90
22
James Jakes
89
23
Carlos Huertas
86
24
Francesco Dracone
62


As expected, we see some collective change following the Firestone GP at St. Pete

After Round 1 - The Firestone GP - St. Petersburg, FL - @GPSTPETE
Pos. Driver Points Pos. Change
1 Will Power
900
2 Juan Montoya
703
Up 2
3 Simon Pagenaud
640
4 Tony Kanaan
599
Up 1
5 Scott Dixon
596
Down 3
6 Helio Castroneves
577
7 Ryan Hunter-Reay
497
8 Sebastien Bourdais
466
9 Josef Newgarden
372
Up 1
10 James Hinchcliffe
372
Down 1
11 Marco Andretti
343
Up 1
12 Graham Rahal
322
Up 1
13 Jack Hawksworth
319
Up 6
14 Luca Filippi/Ed Carpenter
299
Up 2
15 Takuma Sato
297
16 Carlos Munoz
295
Down 5
17 Charlie Kimball
281
Down 3
18 Stefano Coletti
280
Down 1
19 Sage Karam
230
Down 1
20 Simona De Silvestro
213
21 Gabby Chaves
182
22 James Jakes
165
23 Carlos Huertas
148
24 Francesco Dracone
117

Perhaps, I was expecting to see Will Power fall from the top spot which would have been harsh in my view.  His dominance over the entirety of the weekend was reduced only slightly by a minor bobble in the pits which cost him the top spot on the podium in my view.  Montoya had an impressive and inspired drive which now invites more attention to his position compared with a year ago.  Scott Dixon took a tumble down the ranking but much like Power's not really due to anything in his control.  Munoz, who had a very pedestrian day, tumbled the most from 11th to 16th.  Jack Hawksworth was a pleasant surprise for the Honda contingent, battling to 8th after falling to the back early for Lap 1 wing damage. Personally, I had Simon Pagenaud tumbling a bit more than the aggregate and Helio a bit higher here as well, largely due to the dominance of the Penske machines.

And a old, early-blog item is also returning as a regular feature - The Flags of Opinion.

Red Flags
- The Dumbest Question That Could Be Asked On Raceday: Please retire immediately the most tiresome and unnecessary part of the raceday experience just prior to the command, "Racefans, ARE YOU READY?". As noted on other blogs, this most tiresome and rhetorical of questions is more than overdue to disappear form the raceday experience.  Please, please, make it go away. 
- The Flying Debris: Yes, I am aware that on the ticket stub that I printed out (on my home printer at my own cost), there is a disclaimer that spectators assume all risks of being at such an event where things can and will go wrong and potentially become injurious to spectators. Thanks liability lawyers and insurance plans, we are aware, however if the object is to bring more people to your event and not less, containing race debris is of serious concern. Racing in America is already becoming marginalized and getting a skull fracture (or much worse) should be the least of our concerns.

Yellow Flags
- Driving judgement: More of it please. I understand you drivers are all eager to impress/do your best. Sometimes less is more. Cars that minimized contact generally finished higher than those that didn't. Mid-pack back is without question going to be a real scrap this season, with many drivers desperate to retain their driving privileges. Even 2nd place Will Power could have waited a handful of laps to better set-up his pass and possibly recover his only lost position of the weekend. 
- Confirmation Bias: Cheever has proclivities to opinions and will look for any shred of evidence to support his sometimes tone-deaf claims. Hearing his praise for Marco's driving was particularly off immediately following young Andretti's attempt to pass where there was no room. If we're one of the 400,000 worldwide TV viewers, we're already pretty astute to the Indycar environment already. Don't need additional opinion and commentary to help me interpret what I'm seeing, thank you.

Green Flags
- Aerokits: Yes, the certain scapegoat in each and every yellow flag situation this season that causes more than a two-lap delay in restart. Folks, it's like this, if drivers don't bang their cars together, there will be no yellows for contact or debris. The aerokits provide more driving and technical intrigue to this sport than we've seen in a very long time. I want to see how this season plays out. I'm a very strong proponent of the aerokit plan because it will force some much needed uncertainty in each event. Let's watch it playout over a season, not judge it based on one half of the first race.
- Intrigue: Oh, this word is an early contender to the be the most used noun in my blog this season. How will the aerokits perform? Can Honda beat Chevy? Can Penske be stopped? Will Simona survive in Indycar? Who will be a surprise winner this season? Will Honda dominate ovals the way Chevy dominates the streets? So much newness to it all and I'm more excited than I've been in many years. Lots of interesting bits to consider when everything isn't the same from garage to garage. Instead of marking time between my select few favorite races, I already can't wait for the next race. Hurray for excitement!

Yes, I'll say it again..

HURRAY FOR EXCITEMENT!