Rumors of discord at Indianapolis Motor Speedway last week threatened to overshadow the biggest race of the year. |
The excitement over a strong Indianapolis 500 didn't last very long for IndyCar.
A
Wednesday report on Speed.com detailed an alleged revolt by several
team owners to oust IndyCar CEO Randy Bernard. Rumors of discord were
present at Indianapolis Motor Speedway last week, threatening to
overshadow the biggest race of the year.
The report claims
IndyCar founder Tony George and a handful of team owners are behind a
charge to have Bernard fired. Also listed were team owners John Barnes,
Kevin Kalkhoven, Michael Andretti and his father, Mario Andretti.
Michael Andretti immediately denounced the report on Twitter, calling it "sensationalism" and saying there "is no lynch mob!"
Before
Sunday's race, Bernard tried to defuse any controversy, and it seemed
to work as the race was generally regarded as one of the best in
history.
Only the focus now is not on the race, the decent
television rating or the need to build some momentum for the series.
Instead, it went back to business as usual as the owners seemed to pick
up right where they were before the race.
Bernard confirmed
the mounting speculation in his own tweet on Tuesday night, admitting
"it is true that an owner is calling others trying to get me fired. I
have had several owners confirm this."
Team owners have
been upset over several issues, most consistently the escalating costs
to field IndyCar's new car this season. The price tag is much higher
than what Bernard quoted, and money has been a sore spot since before
the season began.
But the angst has escalated of late,
particularly among the Chevrolet team owners. Chevy lost a pair of
appeals protesting a component of rival Honda's turbocharger, and the
anger spread to other manufacturers after IndyCar levied fines
throughout the garage that reached $300,000 for 19 infractions among 13
different teams.
"I've been involved now in racing for 28
months, and what I've seen is this unbelievable amount of passion to
win, desire to win, not only from drivers but mainly from team owners,"
Bernard said last weekend. "When a call is not made in their direction,
of course they're going to be upset."
Roger Penske, team
owner for the drivers who won the first four races of the season, was
initially not speaking to Bernard after the Honda rulings. But he met
with Bernard at Indy and insisted to the Associated Press that he's
supportive of the series, the CEO and not a part of any plot to have
Bernard ousted.
Andretti, meanwhile, has been one of the
most supportive owners in IndyCar this season. Besides his three
full-time entries, he fielded two more cars in the Indy 500 to help get
to the full 33-car field. He also fields entries in the Mazda Road to
Indy developmental series.
And he's stepped up as a
promoter this year to take over the races at Milwaukee and Baltimore,
which were both in danger of vanishing. He took over Milwaukee when
IndyCar needed a 16th race to complete its schedule, and stepped in at
Baltimore last month.
Still, the discord is nothing new for open-wheel racing, where infighting and power struggles have long plagued the series.
Bernard
inherited it all when he was hired to replace George, who was ousted by
his family after years of mounting costs. In just more than two years,
Bernard has brought renewed enthusiasm to IndyCar, reduced debt,
increased attendance and television ratings, introduced a new car and
brought in multiple engine manufacturers.
There's also some parity in IndyCar, despite the early dominance by Penske drivers.
The
Indy 500, which had a record 34 lead changes, featured big finishes for
small teams. Among them was Oriol Servia, who gave Dreyer &
Reinbold its best Indy result ever with a fourth-place finish. It was
the team's first race with a Chevrolet engine since it ditched Lotus in
early May.
Justin Wilson was seventh for Dale Coyne Racing,
and Alex Tagliani was 12th for Bryan Herta Autosport, which sat out of
last month's race at Brazil to regroup and defect from Lotus to Honda.
IndyCar's next race is on Sunday, the Detroit Belle Isle Grand Prix. It's the first major race in Detroit since 2008.
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