Motorsport Week
  • Formula 1
    • 2025 Formula 1 Calendar
    • 2025 Formula 1 Standings
  • Formula E
    • 2025 Formula E Calendar
    • 2025 Formula E Standings
  • IndyCar
    • 2025 IndyCar Calendar
    • 2025 IndyCar Standings
  • WRC
    • 2025 WRC Standings
    • 2025 WRC Calendar
  • MotoGP
    • 2025 MotoGP Calendar
    • 2025 MotoGP Standings
    • Moto2
    • Moto3
  • WEC
    • 2025 WEC Calendar
  • IMSA
    • 2025 IMSA Calendar
  • World SBK
  • More
    • Formula 2
    • Formula 3
    • F1 Academy
    • Moto2
    • Moto3
    • World Superbikes
    • Technical Insight
    • Galleries
    • About/Contact
    • Privacy Policy
No Result
View All Result
  • Formula 1
    • 2025 Formula 1 Calendar
    • 2025 Formula 1 Standings
  • Formula E
    • 2025 Formula E Calendar
    • 2025 Formula E Standings
  • IndyCar
    • 2025 IndyCar Calendar
    • 2025 IndyCar Standings
  • WRC
    • 2025 WRC Standings
    • 2025 WRC Calendar
  • MotoGP
    • 2025 MotoGP Calendar
    • 2025 MotoGP Standings
    • Moto2
    • Moto3
  • WEC
    • 2025 WEC Calendar
  • IMSA
    • 2025 IMSA Calendar
  • World SBK
  • More
    • Formula 2
    • Formula 3
    • F1 Academy
    • Moto2
    • Moto3
    • World Superbikes
    • Technical Insight
    • Galleries
    • About/Contact
    • Privacy Policy
No Result
View All Result
Motorsport Week

Could IndyCar possibly return to the Land of the Rising Sun?

by
6 years ago
A A
0
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

The NTT IndyCar series is on the rise. Nine of the 16 races in 2018 saw an increase in attendance from the previous year, and the relatively low entry costs mean more teams and more new drivers are heading to the sport.  Figures from IndyCar show television viewing figures have grown by 38% over the past five years, and with the likes of McLaren and Fernando Alonso getting involved, worldwide interest is expanding.

With more interest, there may be more races. Current IndyCar CEO Mark Miles has said: “I would expect us to see try to get a couple more international races in earlier in the season”. One of those is expected to be the return of Surfer’s Paradise in Australia, but with IndyCar’s new title sponsorship deal with Nippon Telegraph and Telephone (NTT), could IndyCar also return to the Land of the Rising Sun?

The series has been to Japan before, at the Twin Ring Motegi circuit, more familiar in recent times to fans of MotoGP. This track was opened in 1997, after a construction period of several years. The circuit, owned by Honda, is so named because of two circuit configurations; a one and a half mile oval and a road course of just under three miles in length. The construction of the course was in part related to IndyCar, with Honda’s 1994 decision to design and build engines for the CART series thought to have been a factor in the final sign off of the works.

IndyCar first raced on the oval circuit in 1998 under the CART moniker, with Adrian Fernandez winning the inaugural race. A crowd of 61,000 at the 1999 running underlined the event as a success, and by 2003 when the rebranded Indy Racing League started to visit, none other than Tony George described the track as “one of the finest ovals in the world”. The late Dan Wheldon claimed the first ever Honda-powered win at their home circuit in 2004.

RelatedPosts

(L to R): Third placed Andrea Kimi Antonelli (ITA) Mercedes AMG F1 in parc ferme with second placed Max Verstappen (NLD) Red Bull Racing. 15.06.2025. Formula 1 World Championship, Rd 10, Canadian Grand Prix, Montreal, Canada, Race Day

Kimi Antonelli ‘not worried’ about Max Verstappen to Mercedes F1 rumours

10 minutes ago
Race winner Lewis Hamilton (GBR) Ferrari (Right) in Sprint parc ferme with third placed Max Verstappen (NLD) Red Bull Racing. 22.03.2025. Formula 1 World Championship, Rd 2, Chinese Grand Prix, Shanghai, China, Sprint and Qualifying Day

Lewis Hamilton endorses possible Max Verstappen F1 switch to Mercedes

1 hour ago
Danica Patrick claimed her sole victory on the Motegi oval

Perhaps the most famous IndyCar moment at the track was Danica Patrick’s first (and only) IndyCar win which came in 2008, in a 300-mile race dominated by fuel strategy. Passing Helio Castroneves with two laps to go as others dived to the pits for fuel, Patrick told reporters, “When I passed him for the lead, I couldn't believe it. This is fabulous… I knew there was a good reason for coming to Japan.” Nicely put, Danica. She remains the only woman to have won an IndyCar race.

2011 has been described in some quarters as ‘the year a lot happened’, and whilst world events such as the Arab Spring in the Middle-East and the Royal wedding in England might not have had much effect on IndyCar, the Japanese earthquake and subsequent tsunami of 11th March certainly did. The tremors and aftershocks damaged the oval circuit, having formed ‘waves’ on the surface, to such an extent that it was deemed unsuitable for racing use.

IndyCar was due to visit the circuit in September of that year, but with the oval out of action, a decision was made to switch to the road course layout instead, a decision which left many fans grumbling.

However, that wasn’t the main focus of media attention before the race. The Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, scene of three nuclear reactor meltdowns after the March tsunami, is located barely 90 miles away, and some drivers and team members were said to have quiet reservations about visiting the area due to warnings about radioactive contamination of the food chain.

Then-CEO of IndyCar Randy Bernhart insisted that due diligence and safety checks had been performed and that they owed it to the Japanese people to honour their contract and put on a good show. But Danica Patrick was quoted as saying “I'm concerned about the food, to be honest… They say, 'Don't eat beef,' which probably means don't eat vegetables and fruit… And there's earthquakes. Like every week. And it seems like every other week, there's a pretty big one.”

Honda's Thanks Day event on the oval layout.

Apparently, Patrick ended up bringing her own food and water supplies, whilst some other drivers, keen to be seen as a positive story for a country trying to get back on its feet, were reportedly unhappy about the negative comments she’d made. But whatever the fuss, the race went ahead and Scott Dixon took the win.

And that was the final IndyCar race in Japan. The contract was up, and with the series in a fragile state, it had already been decided there wouldn’t be any extension. MotoGP has continued to race on the Motegi road course in the intervening years without any earthquake-related issues.

The oval course doesn’t appear to be in such bad shape. Takuma Sato ran his IndyCar around the track at speed as part of Honda’s ‘Thanks Day’ event in 2017, and the circuit has confirmed to Motorsport week that the oval course is “not damaged…  but we don’t use it for racing now”. This suggests that if any repairs are needed, the costs should be reasonable.

Could IndyCar return to the circuit? With track-owner Honda still heavily involved as an engine supplier and NTT the new series sponsor, quite a few of the pieces seem to be in place if the desire – and money – is there. If the race was run on a repaired oval, then it would be another sign of resurgence for both the region and the NTT IndyCar series.

Timing and climate appear to be the major issues. With an early season race slot mooted for February, the Japanese winter is probably not the best environment for racing IndyCars.

Only time will tell if solutions can be found, but perhaps the following Japanese-sounding wisdom applies. Life is very much like circuit racing – given enough time, everything goes round in circles.

Share198Tweet124Share

Related Posts

(L to R): Third placed Andrea Kimi Antonelli (ITA) Mercedes AMG F1 in parc ferme with second placed Max Verstappen (NLD) Red Bull Racing. 15.06.2025. Formula 1 World Championship, Rd 10, Canadian Grand Prix, Montreal, Canada, Race Day
Formula 1

Kimi Antonelli ‘not worried’ about Max Verstappen to Mercedes F1 rumours

10 minutes ago
Race winner Lewis Hamilton (GBR) Ferrari (Right) in Sprint parc ferme with third placed Max Verstappen (NLD) Red Bull Racing. 22.03.2025. Formula 1 World Championship, Rd 2, Chinese Grand Prix, Shanghai, China, Sprint and Qualifying Day
Formula 1

Lewis Hamilton endorses possible Max Verstappen F1 switch to Mercedes

1 hour ago
IndyCar's hybrid system has been in use for a full year. Photo: Kevin Dejewski
Feature

Feature: Evaluating IndyCar’s hybrid power system one year on

1 hour ago
Load More

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You can manage the subscriptions of this post.

Latest News

(L to R): Third placed Andrea Kimi Antonelli (ITA) Mercedes AMG F1 in parc ferme with second placed Max Verstappen (NLD) Red Bull Racing. 15.06.2025. Formula 1 World Championship, Rd 10, Canadian Grand Prix, Montreal, Canada, Race Day

Kimi Antonelli ‘not worried’ about Max Verstappen to Mercedes F1 rumours

July 3, 2025
Race winner Lewis Hamilton (GBR) Ferrari (Right) in Sprint parc ferme with third placed Max Verstappen (NLD) Red Bull Racing. 22.03.2025. Formula 1 World Championship, Rd 2, Chinese Grand Prix, Shanghai, China, Sprint and Qualifying Day

Lewis Hamilton endorses possible Max Verstappen F1 switch to Mercedes

July 3, 2025
IndyCar's hybrid system has been in use for a full year. Photo: Kevin Dejewski

Feature: Evaluating IndyCar’s hybrid power system one year on

July 3, 2025
Motorsport Week

© 2024 Motorsport Media Services Ltd

Other Links

  • About & Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Motorsport Monday

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • Sign Up
  • Home
  • Formula 1
    • Latest News
    • 2025 F1 Calendar
    • 2025 F1 Championship Standings
  • Formula E
    • Latest News
    • 2025 FE Calendar
    • 2025 FE Championship Standings
  • MotoGP
    • Latest News
    • 2025 MotoGP Calendar
    • 2025 MotoGP Standings
    • Moto2
    • Moto3
    • World Superbikes
  • WRC
    • Latest News
    • 2025 WRC Calendar
    • 2025 WRC Standings
  • IndyCar
    • Latest News
    • 2025 IndyCar Calendar
    • 2025 IndyCar Standings
  • WEC
    • Latest News
    • 2025 WEC Calendar
  • Live Updates
  • Other
    • IMSA
    • Formula 2
    • Formula 3
    • F1 Academy
    • Moto2
    • Moto3
    • World Superbikes
  • Galleries
  • About/Contact
  • Privacy Policy

© 2024 Motorsport Media Services Ltd