The deadly realities of racecar driving

Graham Rahal's car burns following a crash early in the IndyCar Series' Las Vegas Indy 300 auto race Sunday, Oct. 16, 2011, in Las Vegas. / AP Photo
The death of seven-time NASCAR champion Dale Earnhardt led to sweeping safety improvements in NASCAR, which has not suffered a fatality since. Now, 10 years after Earnhardt's death shook all motorsports series to its core, IndyCar has been devastated by the loss of Dan Wheldon.
The 33-year-old Wheldon, one of the most well-liked drivers in the paddock, died Sunday after his car became ensnarled in a fiery 15-car pileup, flew over another vehicle and landed in a catch fence just outside turn 2 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.
It was IndyCar's first fatal accident since Paul Dana died during a morning warmup at Homestead in 2006. Formula One's last fatality was Ayrton Senna in 1994.
Wheldon's death was a stunning loss at a time when improved cars, better safety equipment and energy-absorbing walls had created a sense that, while racing was still dangerous, it was not nearly as deadly.
Fellow drivers remember Dan WheldonDan Wheldon dies in 15-car Indycar crash
On Saturday night, five-time defending NASCAR champion Jimmie Johnson was in a vicious head-on collision at Charlotte Motor Speedway, where his rear wheels lifted off the ground. He walked away from the accident, praised his safety equipment and complained only of soreness on Sunday, the day after the accident.
At Las Vegas, Wheldon started last in the 34-car field, the largest field of the season. The Indianapolis 500 was a 33-car field, there were 29 entries two weeks ago at Kentucky, and only 26 at Japan a month ago.
A crowded field, with cars racing two- and three-wide on a fast oval, leaves no room for error. Many drivers jockeyed early for position. Wheldon, who started at the back of the field, was unable to avoid the crashing vehicles that littered the track in front of him.
After the accident, veterans openly wondered why so many drivers were so impatient so early in the race.
"One mistake can take 15 people out, and that's what happened there," IndyCar driver Tony Kanaan said. "I've never seen such a mess in my entire career."
Asked if the drivers need to meet to discuss safety concerns and prepare a message for series leadership, Kanaan said patience needed to be preached to the younger drivers.
"We have to take care of each other. We are playing with lives here," Kanaan said. "We need to give each other room. As a senior member, I am going to get Dario (Franchitti) and the guys together, and we need to tell the guys to use their heads."
Recent driver fatalities, by series:
NASCAR
Tommy Baldwin, 2004, Thompson, Conn.
John Baker, 2002, Irwindale, Calif.
Dale Earnhardt, 2001, Daytona Beach, Fla.
Tony Roper, 2000, Fort Worth, Texas
Kenny Irwin, 2000, Loudon, N.H.
Adam Petty, 2000, Loudon, N.H.
John Nemechek, 1997, Homestead, Fla.
Rodney Orr, 1994, Daytona Beach, Fla.
Neil Bonnett, 1994, Daytona Beach, Fla.
Clifford Allison, 1992, Brooklyn, Mich.
J.D. McDuffie, 1991, Watkins Glen, N.Y.
Grant Adcox, 1989, Hampton, Ga.
CART
Greg Moore, 1999, Fontana, Calif.
Gonzalo Rodriguez, 1999, Monterey, Calif.
Jeff Krosnoff, 1996, Toronto
Jovy Marcelo, 1992, Indianapolis
Gordon Smiley, 1982, Indianapolis
Formula One
Ayrton Senna, 1994, Imola, Italy
Roland Ratzenberger, 1994, Imola, Italy
Ricardo Paletti, 1982, Montreal
Gilles Villeneuve, 1982, Spa Francorchamps, Belgium
IRL
Dan Wheldon, 2011, Las Vegas
Paul Dana, 2006, Miami
Tony Renna, 2003, Indianapolis
Scott Brayton, 1996, Indianapolis
NHRA
Mark Niver, 2010, Kent, Wash.
Neal Parker, 2010, Old Bridge, N.J.
Scott Kalitta, 2008, Englishtown, N.J.
Darrell Russell, 2004, Madison, Ill.
ARCA
Eric Martin, 2002, Concord, N.C.
Blaise Alexander, 2001, Concord, N.C.
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- A final thought. Racing fans like racing not for the crashes, but because there is something inherently dangerous, exciting and exhilerating about it. It's something we cannot do, and we admire those brave racers who let it all hang out. Hemingway said, "There are only three sports: bull-fighting, mountaineering, and motor racing. The rest are all games." If we put IndyCars solely on grand prix courses, go-cart tracks as I call them, I for one will stop watching. I like oval tracks, but I cannot watch NASCAR b/c of the numbers, the small tracks and closeness, all the bumping that goes on. It reminds me of bumper car. Just not my cup of tea. Jimmie Johnson said it himself, "I've never driven 225mpg in my life. And I would be scare to race an Indycar on an oval, that's why I promised my wife I would never race in an Indy 500." Folks, that's the difference between Indycar, NASCAR, and F1, and the reason I don't watch the latter two.
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- Jimmie Johnson calls for an end to oval tracks for IndyCar. So I guess he is for killing the 100 yr tradition known as The Greatest Racing Spectacle on Earth, The INDY 500? A half million people show up in Indianapolis during the month of May every year to take part in this Memorial Day tradition. Frankly, I cannot stand grand prix style courses, all that stopping & starting, and multi-car pileups around every hairpin turn at 30mph - pure nonsense. Toronto was an example of this complete waste of time for race fans. What happened in Las Vegas was everyone wanting to use up their obsolete Dallara chassis and Honda engines, in preparation for the new IndyCar of 2012. So you had more entries than the Indy 500, on a tiny sloped NASCAR track, a small fast track capable of 225mph speeds, with 34 cars bunched together, 4-wide. That was a prescription for ugly crashes, which is exactly what they got. I prefer ovals, but I do not like tiny ovals with a gagillion IndyCars racing bumper to bumper, tire to tire, NASCAR-style on a tiny track. You need big ovals, like Texas Speedway and Indianapolis. Fine by me if they ban small ovals.
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- Isn't this why people attend and watch NASCAR?
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- Gilles Villeneuve was killed at Zolder, not Spa.
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