Are Race-Day Practice Sessions Necessary?

ByABC News
March 28, 2006, 6:46 PM

March 28, 2006 — -- Sunday at Homestead, Fla., was my first race in the booth as a color commentator for the IndyCar Series. But the event itself became secondary after the death of Paul Dana during the practice session.

The question that was immediately raised: Should the race go on following his death?

The mentality of all race car drivers, no matter what happens, is that they would always want the race to go on. Sunday, it went on in honor of Paul Dana.

I told Brian Barnhart, the IRL's president and chief operating offer, that I understand tradition has been to have a Sunday morning practice session. But I asked him if he's ever thought about taking that Sunday morning practice and completely eliminating it? Is there a need for it any longer? After all, the drivers had all-day practice sessions on Friday and Saturday, and with the engine rule Honda has in place, nobody's changing engines.

You have a 20-car field right now, everybody is amped up, the cars are qualified and everything is pretty well prepared for the race. It seems to me you run the risk of losing two or three cars for the race if someone crashes during practice.

In my opinion, Barnhart's really thinking about eliminating Sunday morning practice sessions. He's a dominant leader, very open-minded, and wants everything as safe as it possibly can be for the drivers and the sport. If I were a betting man, I'd say Barnhart will eliminate the Sunday practice sessions -- effective immediately. They may have to alter that policy for road courses, but for an event like Homestead, where the drivers had plenty of practice, there's really no need for it. Barnhart is a smart guy and he'll tailor the decision to the needs of the series.

A terrible tragedy happened. The drivers realize they lost one of their own, and that was on their minds. But, as a driver, when you step into the car and get into that zone, all of a sudden your focus goes to the job at hand. Sunday's race turned out to be one of the greatest finishes in IRL history. But as soon as the race ended, a driver goes back to what happened previously. That's always the case.