Why unloved Lotus 76 may be Colin Chapman's most significant car
A wide variety of Lotus cars are often proffered as the ultimate F1 game-changer – but was the Lotus 76 an unusual candidate which trumps them all?
My blog in this space two weeks ago – about the possibility of Bernie Ecclestone and some partners making a bid to buy the Long Beach GP – evinced denials from owners Kevin Kalkhoven and Jerry Forsythe. Long Beach boss Jim Michaelian, who was particularly aggrieved, grumbled to me about dragging up old news. But from all I’m told there’s no doubt that Ecclestone, Zak Brown and Chris Pook are going to make a bid to buy the race in 2015 with plans to install F1 back in Southern California in 2016.
It’s been reported that Long Beach mayor Bob Foster will fly to the Canadian GP in June to meet with Ecclestone to begin discussions about Bernie’s sales pitch. If that happens, it will be clear the game is on and you can be sure that Ecclestone’s pitch will be lucrative for Long Beach while the global exposure figures the city would receive from a contemporary F1 race would dwarf today’s tepid IndyCar numbers.
This year’s race drew 375,000 viewers on NBC Sports Network in the United States, down 20% from 468,000 last year. Through this year’s first three IndyCar races NBCSN is averaging 343,000 viewers, 10 times smaller than a typical NASCAR race. Twenty years ago, when Nigel Mansell was racing for Newman/Haas in CART’s IndyCar World Series, the domestic TV audience for CART equalled NASCAR, but those days are long gone.
Similarily, the media centres at Long Beach and most other IndyCar races these days are quiet, almost deserted, unlike the raucous crowds from the Mansell days that continued through Alex Zanardi’s three years in Indycars with Ganassi’s team a few years later. But today, IndyCar is almost entirely absent from the mainstream media across the United States. Outside the city of Indianapolis, the series has little or no identity and sadly has become one of America’s smallest, most irrelevant sports. A big part of Bernie’s sales pitch to Long Beach will be the transformation in the global media exposure F1 would bring the race.
Of course, the return of F1 to Southern California would bring a similar transformation to the race’s current comfortable ambience and accessibility. Like all modern F1 races it would become much more restricted, segregated and expensive for all.
It will also be expensive for Ecclestone and his partners. They will have to spend a lot of money to upgrade the track and pitlane and it might be a challenge to find the room and suitable location for today’s spacious F1-spec media centre.
Without doubt, the loss of Long Beach would be a blow for IndyCar. The race is by far IndyCar’s biggest and best street race and the series’ second most important race behind only the Indy 500, so Kalkhoven and Forsythe will be reluctant to cede control of the race.
One day at Long Beach this year I chatted with Stefan Johansson about the possibility of F1’s return. Stefan has lived in LA for the past 20 or so years and is as active as ever. He manages Scott Dixon, manufactures and sells his own large format watches and continues to race a few times each year in LMP cars.
“It would be fabulous!” Stefan grinned about recreating Long Beach with F1. “They’d have to spend a lot of money, but they could make it the race. It would be great for F1 and great for motor racing in America.”
It’ll be intriguing to see how the battle for Long Beach plays out over the next few years.
A wide variety of Lotus cars are often proffered as the ultimate F1 game-changer – but was the Lotus 76 an unusual candidate which trumps them all?
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