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IRL following NASCAR’s track at Homestead

4 min read

HOMESTEAD (AP) – For seven years, the IndyCar series tried to woo fans to its season-opening race at Homestead-Miami Speedway. Nothing really worked. Half-empty stands were almost an annual guarantee.

“Our challenge has been putting a lot of people out there, quite frankly,” said Terry Angstadt, the president of IndyCar’s commercial division.

The answer, for the next two years anyway: Move IRL’s second most-important event behind the Indianapolis 500 to the end of the season at Homestead and see what happens.

If it’s a significant auto-racing series in North America, its champion is probably getting crowned at Homestead-Miami Speedway over the next six weeks. NASCAR seasons have ended at Homestead since 2002, and IRL will contest its finale there for the first time Saturday with hopes of laying the groundwork for even bigger season-ending events down the line.

It’s never been tried before, and officials have their fingers crossed.

“Two weeks ago, we’d already sold more tickets than we did for the previous season-opener,” Homestead-Miami Speedway president Curtis Gray said. “We’re way ahead in advance sales, and as we do more with the championship, working with the IRL and their sponsors, this is an event that can continue to grow and end the season the way a championship event should.”

The Indy Lights starts it off by ending its season Friday at Homestead, with the Grand Am finale taking place Saturday shortly before the IRL decides its champion among Scott Dixon, Dario Franchitti and Ryan Briscoe, all separated by eight points heading into the Indy 300.

NASCAR’s championship weekend – trucks, Nationwide and Sprint Cup series – is Nov. 20-22.

“Homestead is pretty well known already for the NASCAR finale, so it’s a huge thing for us,” said IRL driver Tony Kanaan, who lives in Miami. “There’s a buzz now. You can feel it. I don’t want to get my hopes up and think it’s going to be a huge success right away, but we’re building it, like NASCAR did here. No disrespect to any other track, but this is the best place to finish a season.”

Dixon, the points leader and defending IRL champion, acknowledged that moving Homestead from first to last on the schedule was “quite strange,” though not necessarily in a bad way.

“I think it’s a perfect scenario,” Dixon said. “It’s Florida, it’s Miami in October. It’s hot. Obviously it’s going to be a twilight race, which is even better. The cars look fantastic under the lights. The track always provides great racing. … I think it’s more of a team effort for whoever wins at Homestead. So I think there are lots of positives for it.”

Surrounded by farmland about 45 minutes south of downtown Miami, the city of Homestead couldn’t agree more.

Homestead is probably best known for two things: Deadly Hurricane Andrew, which ripped the city to shreds in 1992, and as the place where Jimmie Johnson, Tony Stewart, Kurt Busch and Matt Kenseth have hoisted NASCAR championship trophies.

France drug arrest: A grandson of NASCAR founder Bill France has been arrested on drug charges.

According to a Daytona Beach police report, J.C. France was arrested early Thursday morning on charges of possession of narcotics and driving under the influence. The report states that an officer found a small bag containing a “white cakelike substance” during a traffic stop.

France is the son of NASCAR board member Jim France and a driver in NASCAR’s Grand-Am Series. According to a statement from NASCAR spokesman Ramsey Poston, he has been indefinitely suspended from all competition.

Poston says France is being treated “like any other competitor.”

France posted $4,500 bond and was released from Volusia County jail Thursday.