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Author Topic: new survey question  (Read 886 times)
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gulf917
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« on: April 25, 2005, 08:01:54 am »

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Its main competitor is the American Le Mans Series, also begun in 1999 from the ashes of IMSA. Most in the business believe that there is not room for two major sports car sanctioning bodies in the U.S. "The American Le Mans Series is a joke," says Said. "They hire all European drivers, and American companies aren't standing behind Americans. The Chevrolet Corvette is one of the most American cars there is, and they only have one American driver on the team. I'm a strong believer in America supporting Americans, and if I don't say it, who will?" It was in one of those Corvettes, you'll recall, that Dale Earnhardt Jr. had a serious crash and fire last year as a guest driver.

Said thinks the powerful field in this year's 24 Hours should help Grand-Am "put its final dagger in American Le Mans." Grand-Am and Daytona execs proclaimed the event a major success, even though the stands, as they usually are, were almost empty.
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dodge_swinger
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« Reply #1 on: April 26, 2005, 12:41:46 am »

First off, I don't hate Grand-Am, I'm just not that interested in it. I like the ALMS because of the technology and the diversity of cars. I also like the tie-in with LeMans, which IMO is the greatest car race in the world. Grand-Am has none of that.

What they do have is big fields. Having said that, it seems like no one goes to the races. How does each race turn a profit, if there's only a few thousand people there? I haven't heard any hard numbers, but it seems that less than 10.000 fans were at the Rolex this year. Does the track get money from the series? Is this enough for the race to turn a profit?

My guess is that the sanctioning body pays for some things that are needed to stage a race, but does anyone know who pays for what at a major race? I would imagine the track would pay for security, but who provides the pace car? The track or the sanctioning body?

The short question is how can a Grand-Am race turn a profit if there are no bodies paying admission.?
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