| Re: To the IRL, size matters A long standing practice in many racing organizations is to "equalize" the field by making sure every driver and car combination weighs at least a certain amount. They don't care whether the driver is a 100 lb girl or a 300 lb man. It's the total that counts.
Many times they also specify how much weight is on the front or rear axles as well as on the left side (for oval track racers). Then there's the cross weight rule which specifies how much the combination of the left rear and right front can weigh. And all this is with the driver on board.
Until now the IRL has only spec'd the car's weight. The new rule changes it to include the driver. They don't spec how much the driver can weigh, only that the combination of the driver and car must weight at least X.
If, for instance, Danica and the 300 lb driver changed cars, each car would still have to weigh at least X when they rolled across the scales with the driver aboard. Now, how is that unfair to any driver?
__________________ I Am Y2K Compliant A selection of Ben Franklin-isms. - "After three days men grow weary, of a wench, a guest, and weather rainy."
- "There are more old drunkards than old doctors."
- "Well done is better than well said."
|