ONLINE SPORTSBOOK, SPORTS BETTING, CASINO GAMES, FOOTBALL BETTING, BLACKJACK GAMBLING

Online Sportsbook Online Blackjack
 HOME  JOIN  SPORTSBOOK  RACEBOOK  POKER  CASINO  ABOUT  PROMOS  HELP  CASHIER

SPORTSBOOK LOGIN

Join  My Sportsbook
Forget your Password?

Secure Offshore Sports Betting

SPORTSBOOK LINES

Sportsbook Lines ESPN
College and NFL Football Sportsbook Lines Football
College and NBA Basketball Sportsbook Lines Basketball
MLB Baseball Sportsbook Lines Baseball
NHL Hockey Sportsbook Lines Hockey
Soccer Sportsbook Lines Soccer
Tennis Sportsbook Lines Tennis
NASCAR Sportsbook Lines Auto Racing
Golf Sportsbook Lines Golf
Horse Racing Betting Lines Horse Racing
Boxing Betting Lines Boxing
Online Sportsbook Lines Cross Sport Parlay
Sportsbook Odds Mixed Prop Parlay
ONLINE SPORTSBOOK - Betting football, baseball, basketball, hockey and more

SPORTSBOOK NEWS

College and NFL Football Sports News Football
College Football Sports News College Football
College and NBA Basketball Betting News Basketball
College and MLB Baseball Betting News Baseball
Pro NHL Hockey Betting News Hockey
Pro Boxing Betting News Boxing
NASCAR, INDY, Formula 1 Betting News Auto Racing
PGA Betting News Golf
Harness and Thoroughbred Horse Racing News Horse Racing
English Premier, MLS, Intenational Soccer News Soccer Group 1
Intenational Soccer News Soccer Group 2
Intenational Soccer News Soccer Group 3
Pro Tennis Betting News Tennis
This Day in Sports This Day in Sports
Olympics Betting News Olympics
College Coaching Moves College Coaching
Sportsbook

 Indy Racing Sports Betting News

 

Indy 500 Qualifying needs an overhaul


All RSS Feeds
MySportsbook.com - Online Sportsbook, Casino & Racebook
Philadelphia, PA (My Sportsbook) - The Indianapolis 500 qualifying schedule is antiquated, archaic, outdated and, frankly, just plain boring for much of the time. It needs to be modified before it puts any open-wheel racing fans who are still left to sleep.

There are some good things about the four days and 24 hours of qualifying time, but it is overshadowed by the boredom of watching an empty track for about 18 of the 24 hours in which the track is available for qualifying attempts.

Actual qualifying for the pole on Day One is interesting, although of the 30+ teams, only about half-a-dozen have a realistic shot at the pole. But still, the interest is there to see who can put up the fastest four laps.

This year, the winner was Scott Dixon, who posted a four-lap average of 226.366 m.p.h. He edged out his Target Chip Ganassi Racing teammate Dan Wheldon and Team Penske's Ryan Briscoe for the spot.

However, even with the excitement of pole qualifying, there were long hours of boredom mixed in with a few minutes of entertainment.

Because Indy Car racing is so competitive, teams will go to any length for the smallest edge. Unfortunately, one of the primary advantages a team can gain is getting a better race track than the opposition.

A cooler track has more grip and therefore allows a driver to go faster. So teams either get out at the start of the session or wait until the sun sinks behind the grandstands. What this means is during the six-hour open qualifying period between 12 p.m. - 6 p.m., cars either go out in the first hour or wait until after five o'clock to qualify. What happens between those periods is nothing...and more nothing...and more nothing.

This "nothing" happens on all four days of qualifying. I'd rather watch grass grow or paint dry.

This year we did get a reprieve from some of the monotony when Day Two was washed out by rain. The weather forced 22 drivers to qualify on Saturday. Still, between 2:15 p.m., when Jeff Simmons qualified, and 5:46 p.m., when A.J. Foyt IV made an abortive attempt, there was no real action on the track.

Bump Day was not much better. Many of the drivers, at least the stars, weren't even in Indianapolis, but were headed to New York for some promotional work. The six hours consisted of around five hours of waiting until the last 30 minutes when there was some actual excitement and drama.

In the first five minutes on Sunday we saw Foyt race his way into the field with a four-lap average of 219.184 m.p.h. At 1:15 p.m. Marty Roth bumped Buddy Lazier temporarily out of the race with a 218.965 m.p.h. effort. Then nothing until the final few minutes.

In the final frantic minutes Mario Dominguez was in and out of the race, Max Papis could never get his car on the track to attempt a qualifying run and Lazier fought his way into the race with a great last-minute run.

Dominguez got in line for one last attempt at qualifying with two minutes remaining. It would be between Dominguez and Marty Roth for the 33rd and last spot in the race. Dominguez's first lap was 219.780 m.p.h., enough to make the race. But on the second lap he spun and hit the outside wall to end his chance and the qualifying session.

The question is: How many people had already turned off their televisions, changed to another channel or fallen asleep and missed the final frantic, drama-filled minutes?

There must be a better way.

May 19, 2008, at 12:05 PM ET
<-- Roth hangs on to final Indy spot
Indy drivers prepare for chance at immortality -->

Archives: | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 |
Dixon leads Target sweep of front row
Second day qualifying for Indy a washout
Dixon leads Ganassi sweep on Pole Day


My Sportsbook Affiliate program Make My Sportsbook your homepage My Sportsbook Referral program Bookmark My Sportsbook

About Sportsbook | Sportsbook | Cashier | Join Sportsbook | Online Casino
Sportsbook Lines | Sportsbook Promotions | Sportsbook Rules | Download Casino
Sportsbook & Casino Help
Sports News | Privacy | Security | Site Map

© 1997-2009 My Sportsbook Sportsbook - Casino - Racebook - Poker
Online Sportsbook - Internet Sportsbook - MLB Baseball Betting - Football betting - NFL Football Betting - Online Casino

My Sportsbook is a fully licensed online sportsbook providing sports betting, casino games, horse betting and online poker. Large sports betting lines selection, fast service and payouts. Review live sports betting odds on all major sports including MLB Baseball betting and NBA Basketball betting and NFL Football betting.
Toll Free Phone #: 1-866-BetOnIt (1-866-238-6648)
  Non Toll Free Phone #: 011-506-2282-3822
  Support Email : support@mysportsbook.com
18 and over only