NASCAR: Ticket sales slow
Published 12:00 am Wednesday, May 18, 2011
Associated Press
INDIANAPOLIS ó Ticket sales for this yearís Brickyard 400 are lagging behind last yearís pace, and race organizers worry it could produce a second straight record-low turnout for the July 31 race.
ěWe donít disclose numbers, but you saw a lot of empty seats here last year, and I think youíre going to see more here this year,î Indianapolis Motor Speedway president and CEO Jeff Belskus told The Associated Press on Tuesday.
Declining ticket sales have already hit two of NASCAR fansí favorite tracks this season ó Bristol and Talladega. And Dover, which has traditionally drawn smaller crowds, had empty sections at Sundayís race.
Indianapolis could be the next to see declining numbers.
Last Julyís attendance estimate was 140,000 ó nearly half of the 270,000 that came to the track in 2007.
Belskus concedes that the poor economy and high gas prices have made an impact on ticket sales, but he believes the tire fiasco of 2008 and too many stock car races in the Midwest have also played a part in the decline.
ěIím in the camp that thereís oversaturation, too,î Belskus said. ěItís truck events, itís Nationwide events, and itís Sprint Cup events. When we started this (race) in 1996, we didnít have a Sprint Cup event 120 miles away in Kentucky or 150 miles away in Chicago.î
NASCAR spokesman Kerry Tharp did not immediately respond to an e-mail sent by The Associated Press.
Ticket sales for Cup races do tend to pick up in the two months before the race, so things could change.
In an effort to make ticket prices more attractive, track officials have adopted a new tiered-pricing system which increases the price for some tickets and lowers the price for others. They also have not announced all the plans to boost sales over the next several weeks.
But Belskus does believe thereís a market for racing stock cars in Indy and that Cup officials agree. He expects the race to continue to stay on NASCARís schedule in 2012.
ěOh yeah, itís going to be on the schedule,î Belskus said.
NASCAR isnít the only race that has Belskus talking.
Heís also working on a contract extension with Dorna Sports, the commercial rights-holder to MotoGP, to keep the August motorcycle race in Indianapolis. Belskus did not characterize the discussions but acknowledged he wants motorcycles to continue racing at the 102-year-old track.
ěWe want motorcycles to race here,î Belskus said. ěItís a good event for us and the city. If we can make a a business deal that makes sense for both sides, then weíll do that.î