Super Dario
I had a hot pass for the Indy Car race and was able to watch the whole thing from pit road. I documented the day in a series of real time posts (!) which for your viewing pleasure can all be seen here.
Labels: 2007 Indy Race
I had a hot pass for the Indy Car race and was able to watch the whole thing from pit road. I documented the day in a series of real time posts (!) which for your viewing pleasure can all be seen here.
Labels: 2007 Indy Race
But Dario Franchitti was, after winning the SunTrust Indy Challenge with a track record speed of 133.408 mph. His wife Ashley Judd (in purple) joined him as he raised the trophy.
Labels: 2007 Indy Race
Milka Duno, Vitor Meira, and Tony Kanaan in the bullpen
Labels: 2007 Indy Race
Victory Lane is a gated community, closed to all but those who master the track and achieve dominance over the field.
Labels: 2007 Indy Race
The guy in the white is an inspector, and he has a laptop hooked right in to the car. The car is running, and almost everything that can be measured, from RPMs to fuel intake, is restricted. P.S. You haven't lived until you've breathed in race car exhaust from five feet away.
Labels: 2007 Indy Race
It's race day, I'm at the track, and since no Indy Car event would be complete without a picture of Danica Patrick, here you go.
Labels: 2007 Indy Race
Pre-race activity in the garage as the crews prepare Milka Duno's (#23) and Marco Andretti's (#26) cars.
Labels: 2007 Indy Race
It's Indy Car day at RIR, and in the spirit of live blogging I am going to attempt to document the day's events in real time. Not the turn-by-turn results on the track -- for god's sake, just turn on the TV -- but activity in the pits and on the infield. We'll see how this goes. For now, the first quiet moments before everything heats up.
Labels: 2007 Indy Race
Looks like the lunchroom at Fairfax County Middle School is as strict as the visitation room at Orange County prison.
I have been to more baseball parks in the Midwest than any other region. Excluding Cleveland, I've now been to a park in every major league city in Ohio, Michigan, Illinois, Wisconsin, Missouri, and Minnesota (though the inclusion of those last two states may depend on your definition of the boundaries of the midwest). But thanks to the destruction of a couple of 1960's all-purpose relics, I still have three parks to get to. Of higher priority, though, are the two New York parks which each have one year left, Fenway, and Oakland if they ever get serious about a new baseball only stadium.