
Originally Posted by
E1pix
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Not sorry if I see no parallel between a Porsche Super 90 and RSK compared to early SS cars like Saab 99s, Pintos, Vegas, and others with stock exhaust, squealing tires, and laughably-low speeds.
Most of those cars ran rings around the TR3s and MG's of the same era - the original Miata (now 30+ years old) was a starship compared to all of us who owned British Sports Cars (not to mention the 240Z)
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The “Here and Now” is a direct result of decades of horrible, inexcusable, ego- and power-driven decisions made by board members who are simply incapable of moving forward by LISTENING.
The new, competing sanctioning bodies would have likely never existed had SCCA been diligent in *respecting the input of its member-customers* — instead of continuing the circular file response to those providing input *while paying* for the Club’s very existence.
Or if the members would have been satisfied with the limited classes in the 1970’s. Most of the classes came from member demand. Some of the problem was caused by the SCCA and catering to its internal classes, but most was outside influences.
Would track rental be affordable if fans were allowed in?
No - the tracks gave up on that as after the 70's, people did not turn out for amateur road racing. Whether NASCAR, Football or other sports, road racing will never return to the popularity of the 60's and 70's.
You know, that pesky bunch that turn into drivers, sponsors, owners, workers, etc.?
That was then - this is now - many kids do not even have a license, much less want to compete in auto racing. Street cars are too complicated and hard to work on today. Electric cars will be the future - not just as soon as some think. We are living in the digital age and all that that changes.
What exact steps have been taken to replace all at the track who will age out? Anything?
"Club" tracks are being built by the dozens, and most are not capable of supporting racing, if only from a paddock space consideration. That is the new model.
When a SKUSA National kart race draws in 800 karts, many who go up to Indycar and virtually none to SCCA, is that dismissed and excused, or justified as being “lower-level and insignificant?”
No one goes from karts to Indycar. All top forms of racing are now closed shops due to charters and field size limitations. Right now the biggest feeder of drivers for Indycar is wealthy Europeans and South Americans who have been shut out of F1 - and will be that way for the next 10 years. Most of those running F4 and similar series are wasting their money unless their last name is that of an existing pro racer.
59 years after my first race, we finally bought a Vee in 2022, and were all-in — literally willing to trade a property to retire in to do it. Who does that to realize a dream, then sees the light, and sells?
Don’t know what you bought, but we have 50+ cars running in the NE, races that rival some Majors.
Vintage is still going strong. If you bought to just go to the Runoffs, you still have Majors races. (and the new rules may have made it cheaper - intended or not.)
Some team infrastructure concerns intervened, so we drove 5,000 miles roundtrip to the VIR Runoffs to find alternatives. We were there for nine days, two of maybe fifty people total who weren’t participants. We had three or so other “fans” camped near us, but only Friday and Saturday— one whom we’d invited. Road Atlanta routinely had twenty or thirty thousand fans, and Mid-Ohio big numbers, too… where did they all go?
IndyCar used to get 100,000 fans to a race. Nascar 125K. Now Indycar and Nascar is hurting and they have to have concerts to bring people in. If Indy car gets 30k they are happy. It is not just us. Why go to the track when you can watch it on a big screen TV.
In my longtime group of lifetime racer friends since the ‘70s sits at least 30 (Edited, with more thought it’s closer to 100) National Championships. Around a dozen of them still race in their sixties to eighties, but not one at the Runoffs. They’ve all answered why they don’t.
I think only 1 or 2 out of those 30 could finish in the top half of the field. If you were in your 30’s and still running SCCA in the 1980’s you were considered old and a hanger on. Unless you were Paul Newman and had a Bob Sharp car. Or Harvey Templeton. (forgive me Dan Carmichael - you were an exception)
Most of what we heard from members at VIR, and in threads here, is wits-end frustration in new equipment demands that are expensive in the least, if not downright corrupt in only benefitting the providers.
In 1979, if someone said - you guys are crazy - we need to go back 40 years to 1939 - that's when racing was better - we would have laughed in their face. There are golden ages and we were very lucky to be in one. In the meantime we complain, threaten to leave and don’t, and keep making the same excuses. When Carly Simon sang “These are the good old days”, they might not be OUR good old days, but must we begrudge others?
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