Drivers expect fun, full house at
Iowa Speedway series debut
Send a link to a friend
[June 15, 2024]
Iowa Speedway gets its turn in the NASCAR Cup Series
spotlight for the first time in Sunday night's Iowa Corn 350 Powered
by Ethanol, and the prevailing feeling is that the inaugural event
in the top series will reward fans with an eyeful and earful of
excitement.
An earful would be just about right for the corn-themed state.
When NASCAR has branched out to new markets, the results have been
generally fantastic, especially at the beginning, though some tracks
fizzled out and are no longer listed as "present" when roll is
called on the Cup Series' schedule.
Speedways in Kansas, Texas, Las Vegas and near St. Louis have made
it work and do well in front of good crowds, while others in
Chicago, California, Kentucky and Wisconsin had obstacles that
couldn't be overcome and ultimately came to pit road and loaded up
for the final time.
However, motorsports fans in the Midwest have deep roots and are
plentiful. They show up in droves to harvest the bounty of tracks
throughout the region, whether it is in a series governed by NASCAR,
IndyCar, ARCA, or even the old K&N -- including Iowa Speedway.
"I think what's exciting for me about (Iowa) is I remember going
there in K&N and Xfinity," said Chase Elliott, who has won the
series' Most Popular Driver honors six straight times. "I remember
fans always talking about how they wanted a Cup race, so I'm
excited. ... It's been a worthy facility for a long time. I think
it's good."
Reigning series champion Ryan Blaney hasn't raced there in 10 years,
but he's excited to be back because of the track being wide, racy
and at a unique length of 7/8th-mile.
"The fans there were always like really dedicated to the event and
the weekend, no matter if it was IndyCar, trucks, Xfinity, whatever
it was," Blaney said. "It's good for the area around there."
[to top of second column] |
When the central Iowa city of Newton threw its hat
into the motorsports ring in 2004 and decided to build a new race
track, it enlisted the design services of a Midwesterner -- former
NASCAR great Rusty Wallace.
To no one's surprise, Iowa Speedway turned out to be something
Wallace would certainly have liked to turn left on.
A winner of 55 Cup races and the 1989 championship, the Missouri
native made it known throughout his career how much he enjoyed the
3/4-mile, D-shaped short track in Richmond. It bears a strong
resemblance to the speedway in Newton, a town where the Maytag
Washing Machine Co. got its start in 1893.
"I do think that anytime we go to a new facility or a new town of
any sort, it's been a home run," said Blaney's Team Penske teammate
Joey Logano. "People show up. It's the unknown. People like change
and new things. I think (adding a new track) to the circuit every
year makes total sense. It's been healthy for the sport."
Among others involved in Iowa Speedway, Wallace helped build it.
The fans will come.
--Field Level Media
[© 2024 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely
responsible for this content.
|