IndyCar To Open Season In Texas

IndyCar has gotten the green flag to finally start its season in Texas next month with a nighttime race on June 6 without spectators.

The race at Texas Motor Speedway was the next one on the series schedule that hadn't been postponed or canceled because of the coronavirus pandemic. IndyCar and track officials announced the details Thursday, heavy with safety precautions.

FORT WORTH, TX - JUNE 09: Josef Newgarden, driver of the #1 Verizon Team Penske Chevrolet, leads the field during the Verizon IndyCar Series DXC Technology 600 at Texas Motor Speedway on June 9, 2018 in Fort Worth, Texas. (Photo by Sean Gardner/Getty Images)

IndyCar President Jay Frye said IndyCar worked with TMS President Eddie Gossage and public health officials on a plan to "ensure the safety of our event participants alongside an exciting return to competition for our drivers, teams, and viewers tuning in from around the world."

Texas has hosted IndyCar races since the 1 1/2-mile track opened in 1997. TMS used to have the first race after the Indianapolis 500 in late May and hosted two races a year from 1998-2004, including the series finale the last six years of that stretch.

The June season opener will be on 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 a health screening system administered to all participants and personal protective equipment provided to everyone entering the facility.

FORT WORTH, TX - JUNE 09: A general view of racing during the Verizon IndyCar Series DXC Technology 600 at Texas Motor Speedway on June 9, 2018 in Fort Worth, Texas. (Photo by Sean Gardner/Getty Images)

Social distancing protocols will be in place and carefully maintained.

"America needs live sports and they are not going to believe what they see when the Genesys 300 storms into their living rooms on TV from Texas," Gossage said. "One of the world's greatest sporting events, the Indy 500, has been postponed until August by coronavirus, so all of that pent-up energy, anticipation, frustrations, and anxiety will be pounding through the drivers' nervous systems."

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott had said April 20 that NASCAR was working with Texas Motor Speedway on a plan to race there and that his 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 and is one of eight races NASCAR has postponed so far because of the COVID-19 outbreak.

ARLINGTON, TEXAS - MARCH 18: Texas Governor Greg Abbott addresses the media during a press conference held at Arlington Emergency Management on March 18, 2020 in Arlington, Texas. Abbott announced that Arlington health officials received 2,500 testing kits so all residents and workers at the Texas Masonic Retirement Home, the retirement home where COVID-19 victim Patrick James lived with his wife, will be tested for the virus. (Photo by Tom Pennington/Getty Images)

NASCAR is set to resume racing May 17 in South Carolina and for now, will stick close to the home bases of the teams in North Carolina.

In a joint statement, Abbott and Gossage said 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 said.

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