WhiteBlue wrote:... But still the oval tracks are so boring. passing isn't a big deal there and it generally doesn't mean a lot until you come to the last 10 laps. that part can be lively, I admit.
WhiteBlue, my friend, please, I beg, read this, it has convinced a lot of F1 hardcore fans:
Social Science at 190 MPH on NASCAR's Biggest Superspeedways
After reading that, it's easy to understand that
oval racing is a team sport, that depends a lot on your reputation among the other guys. A guy like Schumacher in his last years is hopeless in ovals because of that: he was too good to cooperate with him (he will catch you in the last laps) and wasn't too loved by other drivers.
For me, this explains in part why JPM hasn't shined: it's not your ability, it's how many people wants to work with you.
The team work is what differentiates oval competitions from circuit racing. Once you appreciate that, the first 1900 laps
are not that boring (my wife hates the sport, btw). Most people appreciate only the last 10 laps, when the "team racing" breaks and it's everyone for himself. It does not has to be like that, once you understand the subtleties of the first couple of thousands laps.
Let's not forget that for over 1000 years all races were oval races.
Of course, the best driver in history was spaniard (South America was underdeveloped then!),
Cayo Apuleyo Diocles, who kept meticulous records: he won 1,463 races. Of these, 815 were ones were he took the lead at the start and kept it, proving the importance of a good clean start. Nevertheless, there was plenty of scope for catching up and passing: in 502 of his wins, Diocles snatched victory in the last lap. Diocles started with the Whites, moved to the Greens and when he became really famous, ran for the Reds (like Alonso?)
Roman Circus Maximus, antecessor of Indy. Since 300 B.C. until 1400 A.C. there were only four teams: the Red, the Green, the White and the Blue
To me, circuit racing is like tennis ("mano a mano"), oval racing is like football ("Go team!").
Both can be nice to watch, even if some people believe that 90 minutes, always running, always moving the ball,
apparently for nothing, football (or soccer for the US friends) is as boring as hell. That's why I predict a bright future for Indy Cars: they have a balance of tracks. With faith, sow and sow and you will see.