Track Talk: IndyCar Series

Season kicks off in sunny central Florida

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IndyCar Series driver Ryan Hunter-Reay celebrates after winning the 2012 Iowa Corn Indy 250 on June 23, 2012. Hunter-Reay will begin the defense of his 2012 IndyCar Series championship when the 2013 season begins on Sunday. (Daily News File Photo)

The IZOD IndyCar Series may be based in the Heartland of America, but it will be far from the still-wintry weather of Indiana when all the stars and cars of the nation’s premier open wheel racing series kick off their 2013 season in St. Petersburg, Fla., this weekend.

The Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg is essentially a huge street festival, annually drawing winter-weary fans to the summerlike climate of central Florida. Nestled alongside Tampa Bay, one of Florida’s most picturesque bodies of water, the 1.8-mile racecourse winds its way through city streets adjacent to St. Petersburg’s harbor and yacht club, and renders an upscale atmosphere for the IndyCar faithful.

Though it may seem an interesting choice for a season opener in a series that made famous such gritty open wheel racing legends as A.J. Foyt, Johnny Rutherford and Gordon Johncock, the St. Petersburg street race is clearly in keeping with the course set by IndyCar in recent seasons: Diversity of tracks, including seven temporary street circuits, three road courses and six ovals. 

In a break from tradition, the street circuits of Detroit, Houston and Toronto have scheduled back-to-back races on their respective event weekends. And three countries, the United States, Canada and Brazil, are represented in a western-hemisphere-trotting race schedule unlike any other series in the world.  

Among IndyCar purists, however, the oval tracks represent both the history of the series, as well as the heart and soul of the sport, and the continuation of a century-old tradition of Memorial Day weekends at the Greatest Spectacle in Racing, the Indianapolis 500. In keeping with those deep historic roots, the iconic 2.5-mile, three-corner Pocono (Pa.) Raceway will return to the IndyCar fold this year after a 23-year hiatus.

What was old is new again, and IndyCar has found ways and means to retain longtime fans, while attracting a whole new fan base to the sport with their revitalized schedule of events.

Other oval tracks on the 2013 schedule include the 1.5-mile “quad-oval” at Texas Motor Speedway, the storied, flat, one-mile fairgrounds oval in Milwaukee, the two-mile tri-oval at Auto Club Speedway in Fontana, Calif., and our own Iowa Speedway here in Newton.

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