An Epic Day in Austin, Texas

260 days. That is how long curious Austinites, die-hard F1 fans and everyone in between had to wait since the first F1 USGP Press Conference in July 2010 and this week's coming out party in Austin, Texas. In Tavo's defense, to say they have been busy would be an understatement.

We arrived at the Palmer Events Center on a typical April afternoon in Austin: 80' F (27' C), sunny with a few clouds in the sky, and so many people frolicking about in the neighboring Zilker Park, you begin to wonder if anyone works a typical 9-5 job in this town. As evidenced throughout Austin's cohesive, collaborative, laid-back yet get-down-to-business vibe, we passed by the sunny fun-loving people in the park and walked into the Palmer Events Center, where we were transported to a high tech press conference with a platform for innovation and excitement, and some cool backdrops. The stage was bordered with two giant screens looping some new and some familiar snapshots of Austin; the Williams F1 car served as a focal point and photo op; and about 100 media and invited parties began to fill the room.

We mingled, ran into our friend USF2000 Driver Rodrigo Sanchez, met a few new folks and took our seats behind the "Reserved Row," not knowing who would join us, but impressed when we were joined by Del Valle School Board President Richard Vasquez, Austin City Manager Marc Off, Texas Rep. Eddie Rodriguez, Texas Sen. Kirk Watson, Austin Mayor Lee Leffingwell (hard to see from this angle) and Council member Mike Martinez.

SPEED TV's iconic Bob Varsha welcomed everyone and noted that he had visited the construction site and was "impressed with what was being accomplished at the track site." Before introducing the founding team on stage, Red McCombs, Tavo Hellmund and Bobby Epstein, he also shared his newfound love for the city of Austin, and shared our sentiments that it is an active and entertaining town supported by the welcoming and fun-loving people of Austin.

You may recall that McCombs and Epstein were announced as the major financial backers at July's press conference and Tavo is the ring leader in this entire project. McCombs quickly took over and before announcing first order of business, the naming of the track, he reminded people of the scale and magnitude of this project, equating it to "a SuperBowl every year" for the city of Austin. There has been so much buzz around this press conference in the past week, including speculation about what was going to be announced, that we were confident a title sponsor would be named, thereby revealing something of the sort: "The AT&T Williams Momentum Park." That was my calculated guess because AT&T is headquarted in Texas and has strong business and historical ties to central Texas, that Williams F1 car keeps popping up, and Momentum Park was a name that was referenced via some online research.

Alas, McCombs, Epstein and Tavo revealed the track as "Circuit of the Americas - Home of the World Championships, United States," or "COTA" for short. I've heard some mixed reviews of the name, but the thought behind Circuit of the Americas was to tie in the United States with Canada, South and Latin America, where I think F1 fans might rival US F1 fans in number. I'm unable to embed the video here, but SPEED TV just posted a great 8 minute+ video of the highlights of the press conference. If the full press conference is published, we will share that video with you in the future. For now, you can watch the SPEED TV video of this F1 USGP April Press Conference by clicking here.

McCombs then invited Steve Sexton, F1US and now COTA President, to the stage and Steve also shared Varsha's sentiments of the warm welcome he has received as a new Austin resident. Then the discussion transitioned from the "Who" to the "What and Where." This is not just a race track, folks. The Circuit of the Americas is a destination: a high-end, multi-purpose development that has grown from 970 acres to 1,100 planned acres. Tavo began to paint a clearer picture of what we can expect at the Citcuit of the Americas:

  • 40,000 square foot, 3-story tall conference center bordering the 300 yard pit area
  • 14 executive suites, each 3,600 square feet with elevators, kitchens, latest A/V gear, high-speed connections and capacity for 75 people each (to be used by teams and sponsors on race weekends for meetings and hospitality)
  • Main grandstand includes luxury suites for business entertaining and capacity of about 750, including commercial kitchen and cafe
  • Media and conference center - business conferences, seminars and receptions, and converting to international media center
  • 500-person banquet hall (private or corporate dinners and nonprofit fundraising galas)
  • 5,400 square foot Medical Building with year-round use as a training facility (professionals and students) and converting to trauma care center for driver-athletes
  • Live music entertainment venue during race and non-race weekends, including indoor and outdoor space, and spanning the equivilent of 3 football fields wide with a capacity of 35,000
  • 22-story Observation Deck providing breath-taking and memorable views of the destination set amidst the gorgeous Texas Hill Country
  • Entertainment and festival venue with capacity of 35,000

This article, "Circuit of the Americas Partners with Texas Schools," is a great overview of the educational institutions that have jumped on board with COTA and their specific roles "linking classroom learning to practical application work." We are really hoping to hear that Austin's own University of Texas at Austin and Texas State University-San Marcos are also jumping on board!

Tavo continued to highlight the business and economic impact of the facility not only during this fast-paced construction phase that we are currently in, but also the sustained opportunities for local and global companies for the duration of the 10-year contract with Formula One Management and F1 racing:

  • Agreement with Austin Energy to build a new energy sub-station in Del Valle
  • Research and development opportunities almost solidified with two large auto manufacturers
  • Potentially 1300-employees tied to the multi-purpose facility
  • Construction expenditures alone of over $400MM, with a focus to keep 80% or more of that in the pockets of local Texan businesses
  • In addition to plans for on-site retail, the COTA team is in talks to bring a major hotel developer to the development
  • In the course of a single F1 race weekend (which, as we know, is only 3-5 nights out of the facility's 365 days of planned business), you can expect 300,000 guests to spend 3-5 nights in the Austin and surrounding Central Texas areas and spending an average of $1400-1600

Tavo then shifted the focus back to the "Who and What" by introducing two icons in an equally exciting motorsport field: 1993 World GP Motorcycle Champion Kevin Schwantz and 2010 MotoGP "Rookie of the Year" Ben Spies. Schwantz made the highly-anticipated announcement of the addition of MotoGP motorcycle racing to the circuit's lineup. MotoGP is to the world of motorcycle racing what Formula One is to the world of automotive racing: they are both the cream of the crop in their respective fields; partnering the highest advancements in technology and innovation to deliver non-stop excitement to their large international audiences. The introduction of MotoGP's partnership with The Circuit of The Americas facility was met with energetic support from the crowd as Schwantz also reported a 10-year agreement was met to bring MotoGP to Texas from 2013-2022.

While I was live-tweeting snippits of the press conference via our Twitter feed, I heard Schwantz ask Spies "How excited are you to be able to come and race in Austin in 2013?" His response was "Very!" and I think you can expect to see an expansion of our COME AND RACE IT© product line to show our support of MotoGP's introduction to the Texas lineup.

As the press conference wrapped up and we were directed to make our way to the shuttles leaving for the construction tour of the facility, we snagged two great interviews with Bob Varsha of SPEED TV and Christian Epp of Tilke Engineering. You can enjoy them on our dedicated Press Conference page or via our Vimeo Channel.

For all high-def photos and official facility renderings, check out our Gallery.

Next up from us: our recap of the site tour, and hopefully next up from COTA: the "When" and more announcements on the "Who" regarding this decelopment of epic, Texas-sized proporstions.

In the meantime, tell us what you thought of the Press Conference and enjoy the first-ever video of the drive up Turn 1 at The Circuit of The Americas!

On Location at the Circuit Of The Americas from The Austin Grand Prix on Vimeo.

 


 

 

On Location at Circuit of the Americas

We took a ride up the main straight with Austin Commercial foreman Buddy Reed and stopped at turn number one.  The view was incredible and so amazing to watch the progress below.  There's a great view of Austin in the distance that's sure to make these grandstand seats worth a bit more.

Watch and enjoy!  (FYI, this is the first video footage from the main straight and up to turn 1, pretty cool!)

SEE THE GALLERY FOR PICTURES...

On Location at the Circuit Of The Americas from The Austin Grand Prix on Vimeo.

 

Is Momentum Building at Austin's Newest Park?

Austin's track is gaining momentum, YEEHAW! It's been an amazing couple of weeks since all activity at the SXSW Film, Music and Interactive conference in Austin, Texas. Let's recap:

-Congratulations to Asif Kapadia, Manish Pandey, Working Title Films, Universal and all parties involved with the SENNA film, as release dates have been progressing:

  • 13 April - Valencia, Spain - Spanish premiere

  • 4 and 6 May - Toronto - Canadian International documentary film festival, "Hot Docs"

  • 3 June - UK Release

  • 15-19 June - Sydney, Australia Film Festival

  • 21 July - Australian Release

  • July - US Release

-Asif and the SENNA online outlets (Twitter, Facebook, web) have been working hard to keep us all informed of the latest release info. It is motivating to read inquires from fans all over the world: "When can I see SENNA in MY hometown!?" Keep asking and keep coming back here. We will continue to help bring this movie to you because it truly is an epic film which we so thoroughly enjoyed. Believe it or not, we have even more #SENNAxSW content to share with you in the coming weeks!

Congratulations to the entire Formula One drivers and teams for the amazing first two races of the season. Although Bahrain was cancelled, Sebastian Vettell gave everyone a run for their money at Australia and Malaysia. Check out this Formula 1 interview here.

And now...there have been many reports in the past few weeks that suggest development at the future home of the Austin Grand Prix is racing ahead.

-Tom O'Keefe published his recap of his Texas visit on Autosport today; you can read it here.

-Dave Doolittle, of the Austin American-Statesman, reports that zombie roadkill is halting F1 construction at the site! Oh no!

-Bob Varsha, of SPEED TV, said "We have a delegation from SPEED that’s going to go visit the track and assess the situation with our own eyeballs on April 13."

-During SPEED TV's airing of the Malaysian Grand Prix on April 9/10, they also made an announcement regarding the upcoming April 12 "special news conference" and said they plan on bringing you a live feed on Tuesday night at 8pm ET.

-Austin's KVUE News posted a supershort video of earth-movers and construction at the site from the ground level, however we're still partial to our exclusive aerial video which F1 Russia picked up and sent us viral! Here it is if you'd rather not dig through our archives:

Exclusive: First Aerial Video of Austin Track Construction from The Austin Grand Prix on Vimeo.

So, with all the recent rumblings, we want to know what YOU think will happen at tomorrow's news conference. Here are a few ideas we've heard and/or made up over a few cups of coffee this AM:

  • Tavo Hellmund and Bob Varsha will skydive out of an airplane to give you an idea of a real aerial descent upon the future track site, since they weren't too happy with our photos or video.

  • Since the Bahrain race was cancelled, construction is really going to ramp up and the Austin race will actually happen in <gasp> 2011 later this year!

  • Red Bull is going to return to Austin, the home of their largest U.S. Flugtag audience of 85,000, and create a permanent Flugtag stage constructed over the F1 pit area. (What's Flugtag? Read recap of 2007 event here.) by Lynn M. Stone

  • The official F1 USGP team is going to formally name the track: "The Best Little Race House In Texas."

  • SPEED TV will start the highly-anticipated 24/7 webcam of progress, so you never have to miss a second of the non-stop action as earthmovers crawl around the track!

  • Bernie decided that in addition to artificial rain, he would also like to create artificial snow for future driving "excitement"...in Texas...in the summer.

  • While Tavo and Bob dive into the track location, Bernie will be on the ground to catch them atop his new ride, this lovely Texas Longhorn:

What are you expecting tomorrow and what would you like to see?

Before I go, I wanted to introduce you to our expanded product line at COME AND RACE IT©! We now have shirts in 4 different colors:

Natural, Texas Orange, Heather Grey and Ladies Mocha Brown! (Click on the pictures above to go directly to the order page.)

Here's our shirt Down Under at the Australian Grand Prix last month! We would love to get pics of you in your shirts at every Grand Prix and from all over the world. Please send them to us at COMEANDRACEIT {at} gmail.com. Thank you for your ongoing support!

DNQ - I Need a Hero

 

The United States has produced exactly two Formula One World Champion drivers, the last in 1978. That's not technically true - Mario Andretti is a citizen, but originally an immigrant from Italy.  Sooo not exactly "produced" per se... when you really get down to brass tacks, Phil Hill is our lone born and bred F1 champ'een, all the way back in 1961 (and also partner to Bruce McLaren in the stupefyingly awesome Ford GT40 of the late 60s, recounted in the book Go Like Hell, which you should find and read ASAP).

With the Circus coming to Austin next year (and does saying that out loud still blow your mind, or what), who do we have to root for? Aside from the potential hotshot Mexican rookie Sergio Perez driving for Sauber, there's not even a Canadian in the field. The last American behind the "wheel"  of an F1 car was Scott Speed from 2005-2007, who's now going roundy-round in the NASCAR Nationwide feeder series.

 

Photo courtesy Team Lotus

 

We need a hero (I encourage opening this link and at least letting it play in the background as you continue to read, but to try not thinking about Kevin Bacon). Or at least a hero in hero training.
I don't know a whole lot about Alexander Rossi just yet, aside from the fact he's 19 years old, is originally from California, is the only American to hold a valid FIA Super License, which is required for competition in Formula One, and has just been named to the Team Lotus driver development program. That last part is pretty significant.
 
Photo courtesy www.alexanderrossi.comFormula One teams maintain driver development programs as more or less farm teams for promising young talent. The program gives the young drivers the chance to have access to machinery, trainers, other drivers, and all the accoutrement of an F1 driver, while still competing in races (in Rossi's case, it's GP3). It's an essential stepping-stone to land one of the most coveted seats on all of racingdom. He's one of seven in the program, ostensibly vying for one of three currently occupied seats.

 

Is the kid our only hope? He certainly shows promise. A cursory review of his Wikipedia page reveals a not unimpressive competitive history dating back to 2005 (meaning he was 13 when he began putting in the hot laps). He was reportedly tapped to be one of the drivers for the aborted US F1 team last season. He also has a good name, which considering Scott Speed's track record, might not be such an obvious asset, but he presently lives in Italy, nullifying any potential cosmically mandated surname related tomfoolery. But he has loads of seat time in open wheeled cars, a solid win percentage and an apparent desire to be an F1 driver - not just a professional one. You could be a professional driver anywhere, but the fact this kid is committed to F1 is reason to be hopeful. 

 

Here's the most basic, elemental formula for rejuvenated fandom for Formula One in the United States - American Driver + American Race = Interest (Revenue). The teams also know that having a local native in the cockpit drums up revenues and sponsorships, banking on the cumulative media coverage of holding the first F1 race in the United States in five years and also having the first American driver in just as long. No one is decreeing yet that Rossi will have a drive in 2012, but given the musical chairs nature of backmarker rosters (and sadly, team Lotus is still very much a backmarker, albeit an improving one), you should not be too surprised to see him driving at least the one race. 

 

In the short term at least, Rossi's placement on the development team means whenever there's coverage of F1 on these shores, he'll be talked about. There will be footage of his last GP3 race or his testing with Lotus, discussions about his development or potential. It'll mean there's one more connection between the American audience and the sport. It's not panacea for the many obstacles that remain in terms of long-term success, but it's definitely a better starting place than previously. This is an exceptionally good thing. 

 

But let's hope bigger. Let's hope the kid finds speed and victories this year, and curries favor with the Team Lotus bosses or otherwise suitably impresses one of the other teams, and ends up a full-time driver in 2012. Then we take the next logical, if hopeful step... with the race in Austin for the next 10 years at least, maybe we will begin to see more young kids, from karting aces to autocross wizards, begin to show some interest in the fine art of slicing an earthbound fighter plane through the corners and have access to the resources to support that ambition.

 

Maybe it'll be my kid. 

 

 

If you want to win, employ a Finn

So goes the saying, and so goes Kimi. I think I can speak for all race fans here, this should be interesting.

This is my favorite write-up thus far.

Wonder what Kimi would look like with a beard...

DNQ - Race Recap and other tragedies

One down...

 

More informed race analysis is all over the Interwebs by the point, so I'm just going to share a few observations from the perspective of a non-obsessed fan (not to say that I'm not a freakish F1 fan, just not to the extent of a true anorak, to pretentiously steal some Brit-speak).

 

Speed Channel, you suck. For years, I've gotten up Sunday morning, made some breakfast, read some news, then around 11 am or so, switched over to the race.  Comfort breeds complacency, because I didn't bother to reschedule the recording of the new season in my DVR. Doing so would have revealed there would be no rebroadcast of the race on Sunday morning. Instead, I fell asleep on the couch Saturday night watching Foo Fighters on Austin City Limits, woke up close to 2 am, and decided I might want to program the DVR just in case the rebroadcast started early the next morning. Ummm... Did the DVD revert to the previous month again? *whack the remote* Nope. No race Sunday morning. The cherry on top was that there were about four laps left in the race, being shown live. I caved and watched, but my glorious plan for Sunday morning was blown to hell. I ended up spending the day cutting rust out of an Alfa Romeo and grumbling. 

 

Thanks to the man above for torrents, I've pieced it together. So, did anything interesting happen at Albert Park? Talk amongst yourselves.

 

Aside from NASCAR pre-emption, how amazing was it to see a John Player liveried Lotus- Renault on the grid and on the podium? Any while we're in a rhetorical frame of mind, everyone seemed to ask, "What could Kubica have done with that car?", but it seemed like few were asking, "What the hell happened to Petrov over the winter?" 'Cause he looked awesome out there. Totally in control of his race. Amazing that he was driving for his job last season. Heidfeld though... Bruno Senna deserves a chance in a good car. Give him the seat. Because the universe wants it.

 

McLaren has speed!

 

Sauber. Ridiculous disqualification aside, what a showing! I've been a fan of Kobayashi ever since his first race in Brazil '09, relegating Button to a waggling tail for several chaotic laps. I love that guy. Formula 1 needs more insanity. But Sergio Perez! That kid is true talent. Where did he come from? Aside from Mexico. And the Ferrari Driving Academy.

 

That said, does anyone else think Alonso might have a new Spanish-speaking teammate before too long? Massa is Cougar. I hate it for him, but he's lost the edge.

 

Speaking of dulled edges, I just get the feeling the 2011 season might be the last hurrah for Schumacher and Barrichello. Schumacher says he's only driving to win, but honestly - he can't. I know that somewhat contradicts what I said previously, and while I think he can be competitive and score points, I don't think he has a snowball's chance of winning any races. 

 

Vettel and Hamilton are probably among the best drivers to grace the grid in decades. No one driver is going to be routinely beating either of them for a long, long time. Maybe Alonso, although the Ferrari didn't seem to have the pace of the Red Bull once the show was actually on. Webber and Button are great drivers (if not for an as-of-yet disclosed problem and a questionable ruling and subsequent drive-though respectively, either might have ended up on podium), and in all honestly my two favorites. But when you ride in-car with Vettel and Hamilton, it seems to perfectly effortless. Supernatural even. Watching the way they control their cars, it seems like they've been bred to do this. Everyone has been awaiting the new Schu'. It might just be Sebastian Vettel.

 

One more open-ended discussion for you. Is there any point to comparing modern drivers to the heroes of the past? Could you argue Vettel is the new Schumacher in any way other than the fact he dominates? Or that Hamilton is the Senna reincarnated? Or Button is our generation's Jim Clark? To me, and take this relatively uninformed opinion for what it's worth, it seems aside from the fact they're driving open-wheeled cars on road circuits in a sport called Formula 1, it's as different as playing Combat on an Atari 2600 and Call of Duty on an Xbox 360. Not that one is necessarily harder than the other, they just require vastly different skill sets to be successful. Relatable to any job these days, I suppose, but uncanny skills with the wheel and pedals really aren't good enough, anymore.

 

Oh, and in case you're curious, rebroadcast is now on Monday morning. Will that be for every race? Find out in two weeks at Malaysia. Or go here.