The past year has been very frustrating for Paul Tracy. After Jerry Forsythe decided last winter to pull his team out of the reunified IndyCar series Tracy raced only a handful of times in a variety of cars from a Champ Car at Long Beach to a NASCAR truck in Texas. With Tony George’s help Paul’s only IRL race of the year came at Edmonton in July. The car was prepared by Derrick Walker and despite zero testing Tracy showed his stuff by coming through from near the back of the grid to finish a rousing fourth. Yet Tracy has encountered little or no interest in anyone hiring him in the IRL, Grand-Am or ALMS series.

“There’s nothing out there,” Paul remarked. “There are options if you want to drive for nothing. But I race for a living ¬– to get paid. I’ve spoken with Mark Raffauf at the Grand-Am and I’ve also talked with Jim France who suggested a few teams for me to talk to. But none of them have a budget for a driver. In fact, they want you to pay your way to get to the races as well. There aren’t any options if you want to get paid to drive.”

Tracy’s spirits were revived recently by talks with Jimmy Vasser and Kevin Kalkhoven about joining KV Racing for a full season of Indy Car racing if sufficient sponsorship can be found. “We’re trying to work together to drum up money for me,” Tracy commented. “Kevin seems to like the fact that he can walk into a board room and my name means something while there’s no recognition of most other drivers he mentions.”
Tracy had some personal sponsorship last year from Monster, an energy drink company, and hopes to convince them to become at least a partial sponsor of his car for the new season. “We’re talking to Monster and a couple of other companies, too,” Tracy said. “We’ve got a proposal on Monster’s desk and a meeting scheduled in a couple of weeks. So we’ll see what happens. If we can get something together, I’ll go racing. If not, I’ll stay home.

“I’m just working-out, getting ready like I’m going racing. I go to the gym every day and I’m working the phone, but right now, it’s like wading through molasses. There’s some interest from Canada and we’re working on that. We’re looking under all the rocks we can find.”
Tracy tested one of the SpeedCar series stock cars last fall and hoped to compete in the winter series but the Arabian-backed series has run into financial problems as well. “It didn’t happen,” Paul chuckled. “The price of oil plummeted and suddenly there was no money. When I went and tested they were saying they were going to have twenty-five cars but they only had thirteen cars on the grid for the first race in December. With the oil price so low, they’re in a cash crunch as well.”

So Tracy is hoping to return to Indy car racing with KV Racing. He celebrated his fortieth birthday in December but remains a ferocious competitor. Anyone who watched his opening laps at Milwaukee in the last two or three Champ Car races at the old one-mile oval knows that PT is still as aggressive as they come. He’s an exciting driver, an outspoken personality, and one of very few of today’s Indy car drivers who enjoys any kind of name recognition across the United States or Canada.
The IRL badly needs Tracy in its field, not only for the sake of the series as a whole but for its two Canadian races in particular in Toronto and Edmonton. There’s no other Canadian talent on the horizon and the fact is Tracy’s presence or absence could make or break both of those races. On the face of it you would think it’s a no-brainer for KV Racing and the IRL to put together a package to ensure Tracy a competitive ride this year. Let’s see what happens.






Here’s hoping we see Tracy back in an IRL car soon. He did a cracking job at Edmonton last year.
Yeah, if only there were some sort of non-IRL American Open Wheel series that had a die-hard fan following…
The .irl should just die and go away. Tracy should save himself from this horrible series and find something else to do.
I think I speak on behalf of all Champ Car fans. We wish PT the best but find it unfortunate that his only option to compete in an Open Wheel series may be in the pathetic series with pathetic ‘race cars’ and pathetic leadership. Paul, go the ALMS !
The IRL exists only to support the Indy 500. It saddens me greatly to see American Open Wheel racing headed by George and his limited ‘vision’ for it.
Tracy should pass on this idea and let the IRL succumb to its own (lack of) momentum.
I’m excited about the unified series, but if Tracy cannot get a ride, he should move to the ALMS or the Rally America Series.
Let’s hope PT does get a decent drive in IRL. He’s agreat competitor and just what motorsport needs. He polorises opinion; he pole-axes competitors, and he’s not beyond snatching pole-positions.
…as for IRL “dying and going away”…never!!!
PT was and still is the most exciting driver in open wheel racing. He doesn’t just wait for an opening he makes openings. He is the only true racing driver out there. Even with an inferior car in Edmonton he still managed a 4rth place starting from the back of the pack.I haven’t watched a race since he left.The previous comment is right, he has to at least race in the Canadian races or know one will show up at those races.The extra seats he sells and advertising he sells for the races in Canada alone would probly cover most of the costs of the car.I think there must be something going on that he doesn’t have a ride. I saw a pole done on some racing site a few months ago asking fans who they would most like to see back from the cart series and it was overwhelmingly PT. I think he got 68% of the votesout of 3 0r 4 drivers. It makes absolutely know sense that he doesn’t have a ride.
I’m not taking the IRL seriously until PT has a permanent ride.. How Tony George in his ‘wisdom’ hasn’t signed him up already is beyond me…Here we have one of the most well known, fastest and controversial drivers in US openwheel racing…sitting at home while people like Marty Roth are driving full time…
Crazy!
and F1 has never had a ‘Philippe Adams’ or a ‘Pierre Chauvet’ in a car while more talented (and broke) drivers flip burgers…..
even James Garner had to take on crap work because no competitive drive was readily available ;-)
Don’t forget, it was PT himself that said he’d never be back to Indy after 2002. Of course, us IRL fans would love to see him back!
and to all the IRL haters – which one of you is going to start a series that is better? It is not what it was, but it is all we have over here. I cannot afford to jet around the world looking for good, competitive single-seat racing. I have to accept what I have available to me. In 2009, in North America, it is the IRL.
From the perspective of a great fan of Champ Car in the past, I still wish the IRL all the best, I mean it has to succeed for the sake of open wheel racing over there! I think one of the things that has been surprising about the ‘merger’ is that many of the obvious big figures, like Tracy (and Wilson it now seems) from Champ Car haven’t secured full time rides and the series hasn’t really received the boost that you would have anticipated-when the merger was announced i was assuming they’d easily have 30 cars on the grid by this stage! Now some will say this is sheer bad luck, the ‘credit crunch’ making finding the money for new entrants harder. But others would say economic conditions were much more benign, 10 and more years ago when they should really have been banging heads together and bringing the series’ back together. The powers that be definately made their own luck there…
agreed Ben, when it happened in 1995-6, I was one of the biggest critics of the IRL. I was at the Vegas race in ’96 – what an atrocious mess. But since 2001 or so I have seen some fantastic races in the IRL on the tube and in person. I am entertained by it.
Another comment on the ‘Marty Roths’ of the world. A mobile chicane he might be at times, but I have tremendous respect for anyone who has qualified and raced at Indianapolis. The tube does not do Indy justice. The relentless pace of the race is something that can only be experienced in person. Driving any race car at average speeds approaching 220 mph takes something that I don’t think I possess. Therefore I have a lot of respect for Marty and AJ Foyt IV too!