Sunday’s IndyCar Race Left Fans Wanting More
Two cars go wheel-to-wheel for twenty laps, neither driver able to clear the other. And in the end the defending champion loses by a nose.
No, not the Dover race. The one in Kentucky. The IndyCar race.
If you happened to tune in to the end of the IndyCar race on Sunday, you saw what NASCAR dreams of seeing at each and every one of its races — Ed Carpenter going wheel to wheel with Dario Franchitti for the final five laps of the race.
It was the guy who never wins against the defending champion, the little team owned by Sarah Fisher versus Big Brother. Wherever IndyCar CEO Randy Bernard was watching it from, he wasn’t sitting down.
The odds are that a few fans might have switched over to the IndyCar race from the third race of the Chase for NASCAR’s Sprint Cup. Around that time, Jimmie Johnson was looking like he had just been toying with everyone the last two weeks and was ready to stomp the crap out of the field and claim title No. 6. Insider Racing News