Jamesc2123 wrote:
To be fair, the Grand-Am GT class has come a long way. In fact, of the 36 GT cars at Daytona this year, only 5 were tube framed (2 BMWs, and 1each Camaro, Corvette, and RX8). The other 31 were absolutely production car chassis.
Stop bringing logic and facts into this discussion. Please! (Actually, the Mazda6s are tube--not sure if you counted them or not.)
Seriously, I think the sanctioning body also has to look at their customers, which in this case includes the teams. How do you say, Okay, team, all of your cars and equipment are obsolete. You can't. Right now there are a lot of DP, LMP2 and GT3-type cars out there. To switch to some new, open rules just obliterates your field. Innovation is great and I'm all for it, but the history books have shown that it doesn't produce a healthy series.
Remember the "real" days of no holds barred Can-Am? Porsche (and Penske) killed it. Okay, so did the gas crisis, but you can't call 1973 a banner year for the series.
Remember IMSA GTP? Nissan put it on the ropes, and Toyota delivered the knock-out punch. GTP was healthy, though, when privateer teams could call up Porsche Motorsport and buy a 962. Once the 962 became an also-ran, the fields shrank.
Remember GT1 back in the '90s? For a while, you could call up Porsche and buy a car. Then Toyota and Mercedes-Benz raised the bar. When you chase away your privateers and strong independent builders like Panoz, maybe you do have to reel things in a bit.
Is P1 healthy? Good question. Sure, it's cool seeing the Audis, but is there any real racing going on outside of LeMans? I don't think P1 has legs in the U.S., as it's definitely an OE-only program. I would love to see the class added to future Daytona and Sebring races, though.
Personally, I'd like to see a strong GT3 rule set. When I can call Porsche, Bentley, Ferrari, Aston-Martin, etc., and buy a ready-to-run car, that's good for things. Leave some room for a one-off, but don't be surprised when most fail to take the green.
On the prototype set, I think we're headed there with the revised DP and LMP2 cars. We need Ferrari to get back with something along the lines of the 333 SP, but I can't complain too much since they're doing GT cars.
Over the years I have seen teams drop way too much money into stillborn pro racing efforts. They had great intentions, but getting these one-off cars on track takes resources that even rich guys can't afford. I'm not saying get rid of innovation, but don't ignore your core customers--the dudes putting the cars on track.
Anyway, just my 2 cents.