Rock Legends George Thorogood & The Destroyers To Headline Miller Lite Carb Day Concert May 24 at IMS 

From IMS. I guess Taylor Swift was busy that day.


 Special Guest Gin Blossoms To Open; Full Day of Entertainment Includes Kid Quill

INDIANAPOLIS (Tuesday, March 19, 2024) – George Thorogood & The Destroyers, who have been rocking together for more than five decades, will headline the Miller Lite Carb Day Concert on Friday, May 24 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway as part of a full day of on- and off-track action and entertainment.
George Thorogood & The Destroyers will be joined by special guest Gin Blossoms, who will open the show. The Carb Day concert gates will open at 2 p.m. this year, allowing for additional entertainment, including Indianapolis recording artist Kid Quill.Tickets are on sale now at IMS.com, by calling 317-492-6700 or by visiting the IMS Ticket Office at the IMS Administration Building.
All general admission, concert pit and VIP Deck concert tickets include admission to the concert and to on-track activities that day at IMS, which include the final practice for the 108th Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge and the INDYCAR Pit Stop Challenge.
“Carb Day is the unofficial start to summer and the kickoff to race weekend for many of our fans; they take the day off from work and spend it at IMS,” IMS President J. Douglas Boles said. “From on-track action like the final practice and Pit Stop Challenge to hip DJs and cool rock concerts, it’s a day like no other at the Racing Capital of the World. George Thorogood & The Destroyers, as well as Gin Blossoms and Kid Quill, are a great addition to a full day of entertainment.”
George Thorogood & The Destroyers got their start on a small bandstand in Lane Hall at The University of Delaware on the evening of Dec. 1, 1973. Though the three-piece band – consisting of a guitarist, a drummer and their rhythm guitarist – had barely rehearsed, guitarist George Thorogood and drummer Jeff Simon had been bashing out covers of songs they loved – including “No Particular Place To Go,” “Madison Blues” and “One Bourbon, One Scotch, One Beer” – in suburban Wilmington, Delaware, basements since they were teens.
The Lane Hall audience was wary at first.
“Then it was like somebody flipped a switch,” Simon said. “Everybody hit the dance floor all at once.”
Five decades, 15 million albums and more than 8,000 performances later, few bands can still rock the house like George Thorogood & Destroyers. And for Thorogood, Simon, and longtime Destroyers Bill Blough, Jim Suhler and Buddy Leach, their Bad All Over The World – 50 Years of Rock Tour is a celebration like no other.Gin Blossoms have undoubtedly left their mark on the rock music map. The Grammy-nominated band’s fusion of melodic rock, pop, folk and country elements has helped pave the way for the modern rock of today.
Boasting record sales of over 10 million, fans around the world are very familiar with Gin Blossoms’ five-time platinum breakthrough album, “New Miserable Experience,” containing gems like “Until I Fall Away,” “Found Out About You,” “Hey Jealousy” and “Allison Road.”Those hit tracks were followed by the Empire Records platinum soundtrack hit, “Til I Hear It From You.”
In 1996, the singles “Follow You Down” and “As Long As It Matters” hit the radio again in a huge way, making their “Congratulations I’m Sorry” record another platinum success. Their latest release, 2018’s “Mixed Reality,” shares that same timeless feel, packed with 15 songs.
Kid Quill’s sound is a hybrid of hip-hop, pop and alternative. He has grown a core fan base from touring throughout the early stages of his career. Over recent years, he’s performed at festivals such as Firefly, Electric Forest, Breakaway and Lollapalooza, where he broke the record for highest attendance at the BMI Stage.
As an independent artist, Kid Quill has amassed more than 200 million streams, became a global ambassador for the Indiana Pacers and was selected for Soundcloud’s First On Soundcloud Class of 2021. He will release new music leading up to his highly anticipated upcoming album scheduled for spring 2024.
Miller Lite Carb Day general admission tickets start at just $45. A limited number of concert pit package upgrades that include general admission are available for $75. A very limited supply of exclusive VIP platform tickets also is available for $275, including concert pit access, snacks, two complimentary drinks and dedicated bars.
Ticket prices will increase as the concert draws closer, so fans are encouraged to buy now.
The 108th Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge is scheduled for Sunday, May 26. Tickets are on sale at IMS.com or by calling or visiting the IMS Ticket Office.

 

Sebring Weekend Thoughts

Life got in the way last week as I sent my 19 year old cat Gracie to the Rainbow Bridge. Two days later I left for Sebring and the 72nd running of the12 hour race. I needed this weekend badly.

Sebring was my first sports car endurance race, and it is my favorite. This feeling may be subject to change after Jaune.

I camped again with my friend George Butz and his crew. We had a great time. Thanks again, George.

Some random thoughts on the weekend:

My first impression upon arrival was that the place seemed rather crowded for Thursday. I had the same thought Friday and Saturday. I have never seen Sebring so packed. Theer was not room for another vehicle inside the track.

The track could use a couple of more video boards on the back side of the track.

9:40 am is awfully early to start a race. Not only does it make the morning rushed, it also deprives the fans of an hour of night racing. The early part of the race is fun, but when the sun goes down things get interesting.

It doesn’t seem to matter if someone is running away from the field, Sebring always seems to come through with a dramatic ending.

Derani Crash

The Pipo Derani crash was frightening. I was not in turn 9 at the time, but I went there later and talked to a couple of my friends who witnessed the accident. Tires were bouncing everywhere. Fortunately no spectators were injured. There is a walking path next to the track which fortunately was not busy at the time.

My friends said that track and IMSA officials appeared quickly and interviewed many fans about what they saw.

My friends are concerned that a catch fence may be erected at this spot, which would spoil a great view of one of the highest speed portions of the track.

My friend Shannon Roe took these photos of some the debris field left by the Cadillac. Thanks, Shannon.

The fan walking path is to the left of the fence on the bottom left.

The rest of the field did not seem to have anything for the 31 Cadillac. The Ganassi Cadillac was the only that could keep pace, and they ended up finishing second.

Another Great Day for Indycar Drivers

Colton Herta was a driver on the winning team from Wayne Taylor/Andretti Racing. Herta drove the penultimate shift, and put the car in position to win. Louis Delatraz finished the race with a brilliant drive.

Scott Dixon drove for the second place Cadillac team with teammate Sebastien Bourdais.

Kyle Kirkwood drove for the GTD Pro winning Vasser/Sullivan Lexus entry,

Romain Grosjean’s Lamborghini finished seventh overall in the team;s first IMSA race. Grosjean had a couple of nice stints for the team, who’s goal to just finish the race.

Romain Grosjean in the Lamborghini GTP.

Tomorrow begins coverage of the Thermal Indycar event. I have a lot of mixed feelings about this, which I will talk about as the week goes on,.

INDYCAR Set for Historic, Innovative Showcase at The Thermal Club

From Indycar

 The Thermal Club  $1 Million Challenge Rules To Feature Unique Format in Nationally Televised Spectacle

INDIANAPOLIS (Thursday, March 14, 2024) – One of the most unique race weekends in the history of the NTT INDYCAR SERIES will take place March 22-24 at the picturesque The Thermal Club near Palm Springs, California.
Located at the base of the Santa Rosa Mountains, just down the road from the world’s premier entertainment market of Los Angeles, The Thermal Club $1 Million Challenge event weekend includes a crucial two-day Open Test, group qualifying sessions, two heat races and a 12-car “all-star” race with $1.756 million at stake – the largest purse for an INDYCAR SERIES race outside of the Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge.
The NTT INDYCAR SERIES non-points paying The Thermal Club $1 Million Challenge is the first non-championship INDYCAR SERIES race since the Nikon Indy 300 in 2008 at Surfers Paradise, Australia.
The Thermal Club also is opening its gates to a few thousand guests as it hosts a public event for the first time. Spectators will include members of The Thermal Club – a private, world-class facility featuring an expansive 490-acre property known as the ultimate destination for driving-minded celebrities, corporate executives and motorsports enthusiasts.
“This will be an incredible new event for the NTT INDYCAR SERIES,” Penske Entertainment Corp. President & CEO Mark Miles said. “The unique format and record-setting purse will bring extra energy and drama to a competition set against a scenic and compelling backdrop. We can’t wait for viewers across the country to tune in on NBC and look forward to an amazing weekend with Tim Rogers and his team at The Thermal Club.”
At a draw party, Thursday, March 21, The Thermal Club members will be paired with the 27 full-time teams scheduled to test and compete Friday, March 22-Sunday, March 24. Members will be embedded with their respective teams with immersive integration, including – but not limited to – team meetings, driver question-and-answer sessions, racecraft instruction and tips, and use of premium, authentic race team gear. A previously announced sharing of total prize money between paired members and drivers who finish in the top five will not occur but will not impact the purse total for drivers and teams.
Announced earlier, the total driver and team portion of prize money for The Thermal Club $1 Million Challenge:Total: $1.756 million (Largest purse in INDYCAR SERIES history outside of Indy 500)First Place: $500,000Second Place: $350,000Third Place: $250,000Fourth Place: $100,000Fifth Place: $50,000Sixth through 27th Place: $23,000 each.
“The Thermal Club will be a phenomenal setting for the paddock, and a record purse only adds to how special this weekend will be,” INDYCAR President Jay Frye said. “It is a unique and challenging knockout format that will test the drivers and teams in new ways and bring out the best of both. The facility was a perfect backdrop for the Open Test last year, and we look forward to adding this layer of excitement and competition.”
The Thermal Club $1 Million Challenge Qualifying
The Thursday, March 21 draw party also will include a random draw to divide the field into two groups. Each group for qualifying, which starts at 8 p.m. ET Saturday, March 23, receives a 12-minute qualifying session on the 17-turn, 3.067-mile layout to determine the starting order of their respective heat race the following day.For the first time in a NTT INDYCAR SERIES qualifying session, push-to-pass will be available to the drivers, with each driver receiving 40 seconds.Timing of the session begins at the declaration of the green flag, with timing stopping at the first red flag condition for each group but not for subsequent red conditions.
The Thermal Club $1 Million Challenge Heat Races
Two NTT INDYCAR SERIES heat races at 12:30 p.m. ET Sunday, March 24 will determine the 12-car field for The Thermal Club $1 Million Challenge. It is the first time since 2013 (Iowa Speedway) that heat racing has been featured in the INDYCAR SERIES.Each heat race will consist of 10 laps or be timed at 20 minutes. Laps under full course yellow will not count; however, the race clock will continue. A lap is deemed complete when the leader crosses the start-finish line. The cars’ position on track will be determined by the last timeline crossed on track at the moment of the full course yellow condition.A new set of Firestone Firehawk tires will be allotted for the heat races. Pit stops for emergency service only will be allowed. Tires used during qualifying will be the only approved replacement tire(s) and must be approved by INDYCAR. A car making an adjustment not deemed emergency in nature will be disqualified.As in qualifying, cars will receive 40 seconds of push-to-pass in each race.
The Thermal Club $1 Million Challenge
The top six advancing cars from each heat race will make up the 12-car field for The Thermal Club $1 Million Challenge. The pole position and odd number starting positions are determined by the heat race winner, with the fastest time from qualifications occupying the pole and the remainder of that heat race line up in positions 3, 5, 7, 9 and 11.The final will consist of 20 laps divided into two 10-lap sprint segments with a 10-minute “halftime” break following the completion of Lap 10.
During the break, all cars will return to their pit boxes and only allowed to:
Add Shell 100% Renewable Race Fuel
Adjust front and rear wing angles and wickers
Adjust tire pressureAttend to the driverAll rules from the heat races will apply except:A time limit shall not apply.40 seconds of push-to-pass will be reset after the “halftime” break.During the second 10-lap segment, should a full course yellow occur, the cars’ actual position on track will determine the restart lineup.Tires used during the heat race will be the replacement tire for the final, if needed and approved by INDYCAR.Additional rules of The Thermal Club $1 Million Challenge are available here.
Peacock will provide coverage of the NTT INDYCAR SERIES Open Test from The Thermal Club from noon-2 p.m. ET and 5-8 p.m. Friday, March 22.
The INDYCAR Radio Network will supplement Peacock with Open Test coverage from noon-2 p.m. ET and 4-6 p.m. Saturday, March 23, followed by coverage of The Thermal Club $1 Million Challenge qualifying beginning at 8 p.m. ET.
Coverage of The Thermal Club $1 Million Challenge begins at 12:30 p.m. ET Sunday, March 24 on NBC broadcast television, Peacock and the INDYCAR Radio Network. 
 
 
 

Iconic Blue Envelopes Containing Indy 500 Tickets Mailed to Fans across Globe

One of the three best days of the year!

From IMS:

  INDIANAPOLIS (Tuesday, March 12, 2024) – Indianapolis 500 fans will watch their mailboxes after the highly anticipated blue envelopes featuring Race Day tickets were mailed Tuesday, March 12 from the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Ticket Office.
AJ Foyt Racing’s Sting Ray Robb and Meyer Shank Racing’s Felix Rosenqvist (photo, left, right, with IMS President J. Douglas Boles) were on hand to assist with the initial mailing, which included shipments to all 50 U.S. states, the District of Columbia and 36 countries around the world as race fans eagerly await the 108th Running of the Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge on Sunday, May 26.
“This is really cool,” Robb said. “It’s the start of what we dream about during our offseason, and it feels like it’s becoming real as we approach the Month of May.
“It’s really cool to see physical tickets still going out to the fans because you see people who have been coming to the track for 50, 60, 70 years for the ‘500,’ and they probably still have some of those tickets laying around. We’re continuing that history here today.”
Rosenqvist and Robb also took time to write notes and signatures on a few envelopes, with Rosenqvist’s special messages going to ticket buyers from his native Sweden.
“It’s cool to give a little message to some select fans back home,” Rosenqvist said. “It gives you a perspective of what we are doing. It’s so cool that people are coming from all around the world to watch this race. It means so much to me. I actually live here in Indy now, and the Indy 500 is both the greatest race in the world and my home race, but the fact that people are coming from my home country to watch, it gives you an idea how big it is.”
It takes approximately nine weeks to package all pre-ordered tickets for mailing, from orders the day after the previous year’s race up to current orders. Hard work from employees in the Ticket Office and other Penske Entertainment Corp. departments ensures the ticketing process runs smoothly and on schedule
.A few facts and figures about this year’s initial ticket mailing:
Number of tickets sent: More than 190,000 items (includes 160,000 Indy 500 Race Day tickets, parking, qualification and practice tickets, concert tickets, etc.)
Number of blue envelopes sent: More than 26,000
Number of U.S. Postal Service trays to accommodate envelopes: More than 580
Weight of all ticket envelopes and trays in first mailing: More than 5,300 pounds
Hours needed to fill envelopes by hand: More than 800 person-hours.
Number of working days to package envelopes: 48
Number of Penske Entertainment employees who fill envelopes: 48
Number of states distributed: 50
Number of countries distributed: 36 (including United States)Federal postal inspectors came to IMS with a large truck for the first mailing.
Robb and Rosenqvist joined several IMS employees in helping to load the trucks.
Receiving an eagerly awaited blue envelope in the mail is a rite of spring for thousands of fans of “The Greatest Spectacle in Racing.” But why are the envelopes blue?
In the 1970s, Indianapolis 500 tickets were mailed in brown envelopes with the IMS return address in the upper left corner. In the 1980s, a heavier-stock, gray-colored envelope was introduced to mail the tickets, with just the IMS Post Office box number in the upper left corner. A computerized printer also was used for the first time in the 1980s to print ticket customers’ name and address on each envelope.
When the NASCAR Cup Series was added to the IMS schedule in 1994, the Ticket Office needed a way to distinguish between the envelopes containing tickets for the Indianapolis 500 and the annual NASCAR race, especially if the Postal Service returned the envelope as non-deliverable.
So, the IMS Ticket Office decided to color-code the ticket envelopes for each event. Indianapolis 500 ticket envelopes became blue, Brickyard Weekend envelopes became purple, GMR Grand Prix envelopes became green, and ticket envelopes for other IMS events use a variety of colors, including red, cream, gray and yellow.
Tickets for the 108th Running of the Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge on Sunday, May 26, the Sonsio Grand Prix on Saturday, May 11 and all other Month of May events are available at IMS.com/Tickets or via the IMS Ticket Office at 317-492-6700. 

Requiem

In memory of Steve Chicoine, who took life’s checkered flag in January. 2024.

At 12:30 last Friday afternoon a wall of bricks crushed me. I noticed my friend Brian, a photographer, in the media center at St. Petersburg. We hadn’t seen each other since Iast season. I walked over to his desk to say hello. The wall began shifting.

“You got my email about Steve?” he asked.

“No, what about him?” I had just talked to two other mutual friends about him who told he was coming to Indy for the 500.

“He passed away,” Brian said, and the wall tumbled on me.

Brian showed me the email he thought he had sent me the Sunday before. I never received it. A check through my inbox didn’t show it.

I Googled Steve’s obituary. The rest of the afternoon I felt like I was watching everything from afar. I was there but detached from everything. There was work to do, and it got completed in a perfunctory manner.

Indycar regular fans may know he is. He always wore a white hat and white shirt with tan or white slacks.

I first met Steve here in St. Pete in 2013. I can’t recall how we started talking, but we recognized ourselves in each other- two IndyCar nerds hanging out together. A walk out to the spot where we met, on the plaza in front of the Dali Museum, cleared my head a bit.

Steve was a regular at St. Pete and Indianapolis. Occasionally he would go to Detroit after the 500 and then go to other nearby races if his schedule allowed before going home to New Hampshire.

After he graduated from the University of Massachusetts, Steve served in the Army for two years, then worked as an animal inspector for the US Department of Agriculture.

Steve went to every race on the schedule one season, something I tried to do a couple of years ago.

There are two stories we always laughed about. Before the race one year in St. Pete, we were standing in the empty paddock in front of Bobby Rahal’s team tent. Fans were walking by heading to their seats.

“Bobby! I’m a big fan! Nice to meet you!” He shook Steve’s hand and walked away smiling.

We looked at each and then burst out laughing. As you can see from the photo, Steve looks nothing like the bald heavy Bobby Rahal.

In Detroit one year, I was invited to wave the green flag to start qualifying. I’m up in the starter’s stand, green flag in hand, and someone shouts from the grandstand behind me.

“What the heck are doing up there?’

I turned around to see Steve, smiling.

I will miss Steve, and the races may be a little less fun for a while. But I know he is at peace.

Heck, he gets to watch his favorite, Ted Horn, Vuky, Justin, and Dan race on that big track in the sky.

Slow Thoughts-Grand Prix of St. Petersburg

Photo by Kyle McInnes

First, I want to welcome Kyle Mcinnes to The Pit Window team. Kyle will be this site’s photographer for the majority of races this season.

I’m back home at a functional computer. Here are just a few thoughts on yesterday’s Indycar race. Not the greatest race ever, but at least the season is underway.

Formula 1 style races happen, and Sunday was one of those times. Josef Newgarden did have the best car by far, and Chevrolet had the dominant engine. Team Penske has served notice that they are back at full strength.

Alex Palou now has 18 consecutive races where he has finished no worse than eighth place. He had to work hard for yesterday’s sixth place finish, starting 13th, in a race where passing was at a premium.

Scott Dixon, Palou’s teammate, had a rare day ending the race outside the top five. he still grabbed a top 10 spot, but it was strange not hearing his name all day.

Is St. Pete becoming Scott McLaughlin’s track? Yes, Newgarden won his third career race in the season opener, tying Helio castroneves for the most at the track, but in McLaughlin’s three years at the street course, he has a pole, a first and at third. In 2023 he was in contention for a second straight victory before tangling with Romain Grosjean.

Kyffin Simpson drove a clean, steady race. The rookie driving for Chip Ganassi Racing came from 23rd to end the day in 14th place. Simpson made some very nice passes in a race where there was little passing. I had some concerns about his moving up to Indycar this season, but those worries were put to rest yesterday.

Pietro Fittipaldi, while not an Indycar rookie, drove in his first Indycar race in six years. he did an admirable job, improving 11 spots. Fittipaldi made several nice passes in turn 1.

MSR Rising?

Felix Rosenqvist may be just what Meyer Shank Racing needed. The Swedish driver needed a home where he was welcome, and MSR needed younger drivers.

Rosenqvist nearly grabbed the pole for the race, only to be edged out by Newgarden’s last qualifying lap. He hung in the top five most of the day, and finished seventh after a pit stop issue on his second stop.

I think Felix is going to have a really good year on his new team.

Fuel Saving Races

Sunday became a fuel saving race as soon as everyone got through the first lap cleanly. The field got strung out quickly, and if Marcus Armstrong had not hit the turn 10 wall on lap 27, there may not have been a hint of drama all day.

I don’t think there is much the series can do to discourage fuel saving tactics except allow larger fuel tanks, which is a bad idea for many reasons, or shorten the races, also not a good idea.

Tomorrow I will have a weekend wrap up focusing more on the event with more photos.

Newgarden Leads Chevy Sweep of St. Pete

Photo by Kyle McInnes

Josef Newgarden dominated the Indycar season opener in the Grand Prix of St Petersburg this afternoon.

The race was a much tidier affair than last year’s event., with just three scattered yellows which were cleaned up quickly.

Chevrolet took the first four spots. Pato O’Ward was second, and Newgarden’s teammates, Scott McLaughlin and Will Power, finished third and fourth.

I will gave more thoughts on the race tomorrow.

Thanks for following this weekend.