IndyCar makes it official, will open delayed season June 6

AP photo by Randy Holt / IndyCar driver Josef Newgarden celebrates a victory on June 8, 2019, at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth. The same track will host what the rescheduled opener for the 2020 season on June 6.
AP photo by Randy Holt / IndyCar driver Josef Newgarden celebrates a victory on June 8, 2019, at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth. The same track will host what the rescheduled opener for the 2020 season on June 6.

FORT WORTH, Texas - IndyCar has gotten the green flag to finally start its 2020 season, which it will do in Fort Worth with a June 6 night race minus spectators.

The race at Texas Motor Speedway was the next one on the schedule that hadn't been postponed or canceled because of the coronavirus pandemic. On Thursday, IndyCar and track officials announced the details, heavy with safety precautions as well as financial concessions from both sides to make it happen.

There will be a condensed schedule, with practice, qualifying and the race taking place on the same day. There will be strict access guidelines limiting the number of personnel on site, with health screening system administered to all participants and personal protection equipment provided to everyone entering the facility.

Track president Eddie Gossage had previously indicated he didn't want to run a IndyCar race without fans at Texas Motor Speedway, given that host facilities don't get a cut of the TV revenue for those events like they do when NASCAR visits.

"For a race track with the IndyCar race, the gate is your single largest revenue source. So that's a big deal to do it without fans in the stands, and I didn't want to do that," Gossage said. "But at the end of the day, we worked something out."

While Gossage wouldn't reveal any figures, he said it was good to get things going in the sport again. He joked that one concession he got from Roger Penske was 10 minutes in the motorcoach of the series' new owner to "search between the cushions to kind of help bridge the gap on our financial issues."

Added Gossage: "We're paying IndyCar, we're just not paying as much. So both of us compromised, and both of us are losing money."

photo AP photo by Larry Papke / Will Power heads into pit road during qualifying for an IndyCar race at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth on June 9, 2017.

Texas has held IndyCar races since the 1.5-mile track opened in 1997, longer than any facility in the series other than Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Texas hosted two races a year from 1998 to 2004, including the series finale the last six years of that stretch.

IndyCar president Jay Frye said the series worked with Gossage and public health officials on a plan to "ensure the safety of our event participants."

Gossage said IndyCar was chartering two planes to fly drivers and team members from Indianapolis to the Fort Worth Alliance Airport the morning of the race, then back home that night. The planes would be sanitized before and after each flight, as will the buses that will take everyone to and from the airport and track.

Social distancing protocols will be in place and carefully maintained. There are two 64-bay garages in the infield at Texas, and both will be utilized to give the 24 expected teams plenty of room for separation.

IndyCar was in St. Petersburg, Florida, preparing to run its March 15 season opener without spectators before the escalating pandemic forced the postponement of that race and the cancellation of races in Long Beach, California, at Barber Motorsports Park in Birmingha, Alabama and at the Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Texas. A planned doubleheader in Detroit, which would have been the week before the Texas Motor Speedway race, was canceled a month ago after the Indy 500 had already been postponed until August.

To ensure 15 races, IndyCar's revised schedule includes doubleheaders at Iowa Speedway and Laguna Speedway in California, plus a return to Indianapolis in October for a second race on the road course there. The next race scheduled after the June 6 event is June 21 at Road America in Wisconsin.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott said April 20 that NASCAR was working with Texas Motor Speedway and the state welcomed racing without spectators. Gossage then said his track was working to reschedule its Cup Series event that was supposed to be run March 29 but is one of eight races NASCAR has postponed so far because of the COVID-19 outbreak.

NASCAR is set to resume racing May 17 at Darlington Raceway in South Carolina and for now will stick close to the home bases of the teams in North Carolina. With Texas now set for the IndyCar opener, Abbott and Gossage said in a joint statement that racing "is part of Texas culture."

"The American people are eager to watch their favorite live sports again, and this race serves as an example of how we can responsibly hold sporting events while prioritizing the health of the participants and the public," the statement read.

Gossage said his track will run every race that was on its 2020 schedule, including the NASCAR Truck Series race that traditionally is paired up each summer with IndyCar but won't be next month. The track is still awaiting a new date for the NASCAR Cup Series race postponed in March, and Texas is set to host a playoff race Oct. 25.

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