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History of Watkins Glen International Speedway
Watkins Glen International (nicknamed "The Glen") is an
auto race track located near Watkins Glen, New York at
the southern tip at Seneca Lake owned by International
Speedway Corporation. It was long known around the world
as the home of the United States Grand Prix, which it
hosted for 20 consecutive years (1961–1980), but it has
been home to road racing of nearly every class for over
50 years, including: Sports Car Club of America (SCCA),
NASCAR Busch Series, Formula Libre, Formula One, Can-Am,
Trans-Am, Formula 5000, International Race of Champions
(IROC), Champ Car, NASCAR Winston/Nextel Cup, World
Sportscar Championship, Indy Racing League.
The
first races in Watkins Glen were initiated by Cameron
Argetsinger, whose family had a summer home in the area.
With Chamber of Commerce approval and SCCA sanction, the
first Watkins Glen Grand Prix took place in 1948 on a
6.6-mile course over the local roads. For the first few
years, the races passed through the heart of the town
with spectators lining the sidewalks, but after a car
left the road in the 1952 race, killing one spectator
and injuring several others, the race was moved to a new
location on a wooded hilltop southwest of town. The
original 6.6 mile course is listed in the New York State
and National Registers of Historic Places.
The
new 4.6-mile course for 1953 also used existing roads.
The Watkins Glen Grand Prix Corporation was formed to
manage spectators, parking and concessions. This
arrangement lasted three years before a 2.35-mile
permanent race course was constructed on 550 acres (2.2
km²), overlapping part of the previous course. It was
designed by Bill Milliken to be a smaller version of the
original street circuit and laid out by several
engineering professors from nearby Cornell University.
Along with the annual SCCA race, the track hosted its
first professional race (NASCAR Grand National Division)
in 1957 and became truly international when the Formula
Libre race attracted some of the best road racing
drivers in the world, including Jack Brabham, Stirling
Moss, Phil Hill and Dan Gurney from 1958 through 1960.
After two less-than-successful US Formula One events in
1959 (Sebring, Florida) and 1960 (Riverside,
California), promoters were looking for a new venue for
an American Grand Prix in 1961. Just six weeks before
the scheduled date for another Formula Libre race that
fall, Argetsinger was tapped to get Watkins Glen ready
to host the final round of the Formula One World
Championship instead. While many of the necessary
preparations had already been made for the Formula Libre
race, new pits were constructed for the F1 Grand Prix
according to the European style of pit boxes with
overhead cover. Seven American drivers participated, and
the race was won by British driver Innes Ireland with
American Dan Gurney second. The sole disappointment of
the weekend was that newly-crowned American World
Champion Phil Hill appeared only as the event's Grand
Marshal, not on track in his shark-nosed Ferrari, as the
team was still mourning the death of Count Wolfgang von
Trips at Monza the previous race.
The
United States Grand Prix at The Glen quickly became a
fall tradition as huge crowds of knowledgeable racing
fans flocked to upstate New York each year amid the
spectacular fall colors. The race was also among the
most popular on the global Grand Prix calendar with the
teams and drivers because its starting and prize money
often exceeded those of the other races combined. The
race received the Grand Prix Drivers' Association award
for the best organized and best staged GP of the season
in 1965, 1970 and 1972.
One
fixture of the USGP at The Glen was the starter for the
races, "Tex" Hopkins. Wearing a lavender suit, clenching
a big cigar in his mouth, and giving the job everything
he had, Hopkins was the most recognizable starter in
Grand Prix racing. Once the cars had taken their places,
Hopkins strode across the front of the grid with his
back to the field, turned, and jumped into the air,
waving the green flag to start the race. At the finish,
he would meet the winner in similar fashion, this time
waving the checkered flag as the car crossed the line.
Before the 1971 race, the course underwent its most
significant changes of the Grand Prix era, as it was
extended from 2.35 miles to 3.377 miles by the addition
of four corners in a new section called the 'Boot' or
'Anvil.'. The new layout departed from the old course
near the south end into a curling downhill left-hand
turn through the woods. The track followed the edge of
the hillside to two consecutive right-handers, over an
exciting blind crest to a left-hander and back onto the
old track. In addition, the circuit was widened and
resurfaced, and both the pits and start/finish line were
moved back before the northwest right-angle corner known
as "The 90."
Despite the improvements, the circuit began a slow
decline in the 1970s as a few horrendous, sometimes
fatal accidents and increasingly rowdy segments of the
crowd began to tarnish its image. Financial difficulties
and the inability of the circuit to safely handle the
increasingly faster and stiffer ground effect cars of
the era led to its exit from the Formula One calendar
after Alan Jones won the 1980 race for Williams.
The
Glen hosted a variety of other events throughout the
Grand Prix years: from Can-Am, Trans-Am, IROC and
Endurance Sports car racing to Formula 5000 and the CART
series, these races strengthened the circuit's
reputation as the premier road racing facility in the
United States. From 1968 through 1981, the "Six Hours at
The Glen" endurance race featured top drivers like Mario
Andretti, Jacky Ickx, Pedro Rodríguez and Derek Bell.
Different races were sometimes featured together on the
same weekend (e.g., Six Hours and Can-Am) and drew
sizable crowds, but without a Formula One race, the
circuit struggled to survive. It finally declared
bankruptcy and closed in 1981.
For
two years, the track was not well maintained and hosted
only a few SCCA meets without spectators. In 1983,
Corning Enterprises, a subsidiary of nearby Corning
Glass Works, partnered with International Speedway
Corporation to purchase the track and rename it Watkins
Glen International.
The
renovated track, with the chicane at the bottom of the
Esses removed, reopened in 1984 with the return of IMSA
with the Camel Continental I, which would be conducted
until 1995, with the last two years under the name "The
Glen Continental" after Camel's withdrawal from IMSA.
(The event was numbered with Roman numerals.)
In
1986, the top NASCAR series returned to Watkins Glen
after a long layoff, holding one of only three road
races on its schedule (two beginning in 1988), using the
1971 Six Hours course, raced when the new section off
the Loop-Chute was not finished in time. As the cars
come off the Loop-Chute, instead of making the downhill
left into Turn 6, the cars shot straight through the
straight and headed towards Turn 10, as was the case
from 1961 until 1970.
NASCAR Busch Series action would arrive in 1991 with a
150-mile race on the weekend of the Camel Continental,
won by Terry Labonte, who would be a master of the
circuit during its Busch Series races, winning the
inaugural race, and winning three consecutive races from
1995 until 1997. The 1995 race would be the first
conducted as a 200-mile race, and became the first Busch
Series race to be televised on broadcast network
television, as CBS broadcast the race live for three
years.
Only
twice—1998 and 1999—did a Busch Series regular driver
win the race. The first seven races were won by Winston
Cup Series regular drivers, sometimes referred as "Buschwhackers,"
during their off-week. In 1998, the race went against
the Cup race in Sonoma, California, eliminating the
idea, and stayed that way until 2000. In 2001, the race
was run the day after the first Saturday in July.
However, the race was eliminated from the schedule after
the 2001 season, only to return in 2005 as an undercard
to the Nextel Cup race.
A
pair of incidents took place in 1991 resulted in a
massive overhaul of the circuit's safety. During the
IMSA Camel Continental VIII, Tommy Kendall's prototype
crashed in Turn 5, severely injuring his legs. Seven
weeks later, NASCAR driver J. D. McDuffie died in an
accident at the same site. Track officials added a bus
stop chicane to the back straight in 1992 .
In
1996, the Glen Continental reverted back to a six hour
format, and was once again called the Six Hours at the
Glen with the IMSA format, and stayed there until a
split in sports car racing in the United States. In
1998, the race became an event sanctioned by the Sports
Car Club of America under their United States Road
Racing Championship. In 1999, the FIA GT series staged a
500 km race after the USRRC canceled the rest of their
season before their event at the track. The following
year, the 6 hour race returned once again with the
newly-founded Grand American Road Racing Association
(Grand-Am) sanctioning the event.
In
1997, International Speedway Corporation became the sole
owner of the historic road course, as Corning
Enterprises believed they had completed their intended
goals to rebuild the race track and increase tourism in
the southern Finger Lakes region of New York State.
The
circuit annually hosts one of the nation's premier
vintage events, the Zippo U.S. Vintage Grand Prix. When
the 50th anniversary of road racing in Watkins Glen was
celebrated during the 1998 racing season, this event was
the climax, returning many original cars and drivers to
the original 6.6-mile street circuit through the village
during the Grand Prix Festival Race Reenactment.
After a 25 year layoff, major-league open wheel racing
returned to the track as one of three road courses on
the 2005 Indy Racing League schedule. In preparation,
the circuit was overhauled again. Grandstands from a
speedway in Nazareth, Pennsylvania, which had closed,
were installed, the gravel in The 90 was removed and
replaced with a paved runoff area, and curbing was cut
down for the Indy Racing League event. Previously, the
high curbing in the chicane had become a place where
NASCAR Nextel Cup cars would bounce high off the
curbing, creating an ideal opportunity for cars to lose
control, and to slow cars. Other areas of the track
received improvements as well: the exits of turn 2 (the
bottom of the esses), the chicane, turn 6 (the entrance
to the boot), turn 9 and turn 11 all had additional
runoff areas created and safety barrier upgrades. The
carousel run off has been paved, as well as turn 1 (the
90) and the esses are being paved in the winter of
06-07. Augmenting what was already in place along the
front stretch, additional high safety fences were
installed on the overpasses crossing the service roads
at the top of the esses and just out of the boot
immediately after the exit of turn 9.
Another overhaul for 2006 made fundamental changes to
the circuit for the first time since 1992. Officials
installed a new control tower, which includes booths for
the officials, timing and scoring, television and radio
(the new position allows broadcasters to see more action
from Turn 10 through the foot of the Esses), and the
public address announcer on top of the new frontstretch
grandstand, moving the start-finish line further ahead
of the Sprint bridge, as the start-finish line is moved
380 feet further towards The 90 in order to accommodate
the new timing and scoring post. The new start-finish
line also means the starting lights used for club races
is moved further ahead, creating more action off Turn 11
as tactics will change with the later finish line, where
slingshot moves could become paramount to the finish.
Other changes to the infrastructure include the purchase
of adjoining property. Most of Bronson Hill Road is now
incorporated as a service road to the facility. A new
section of Bronson Hill leading up from NY 414 has been
built as the main ingress road to the facility, bending
south at Gate 6 and continuing to County Road 16, just
south of the credentials and sheriff's office
buildings.
Track safety is also always changing and training. Race
Services Inc. provides the track's Fire Rescue, Medical,
Grid personnel and Corner workers to help keep both the
driver and spectators safe.
Cameron Argetsinger remains as an advisor to the
circuit, and the track named the trophy for the
inaugural Watkins Glen Indy Grand Prix presented by
Argent in his honor.
On
March 6, 2007 just before 9pm, fire destroyed the
recently remodeled Glen Club situated on top of the
esses. Originally called the Onyx Club (named for the
sponsor, Onyx Cologne), the Glen Club was used primarily
as an upscale venue for race fans. After being recently
remodeled, it was being advertised as a social venue for
locals to use for weddings, business meetings, etc. No
cause could be determined and the building was a total
loss. The loss included irreplaceable, unique original
motorsports artwork donated to the facility by several
artists along with other racing memorabilia. Glen
officials were quoted in local media stories as being
adamant that the loss of the Glen Club would in no way
affect the 2007 racing schedule.
For
2007, Watkins Glen International again made improvements
to the facility, specifically the track surface. All of
turns 1(the "90"), 5(the "Carousel") & 6 (entry turn
into the "Boot") have been repaved. A temporary "Glen
Club" replaced the permanent structure destroyed by fire
at the races in 2007 with plans in the works to replace
it with another permanent building. New sponsors for
both the INDY and NASCAR weekends were signed to
multi-year deals. Camping World is now the sponsor of
the "Camping World Grand Prix" INDY weekend at the Glen
through 2010. NASCAR weekend at the Glen received a
double shot--Zippo Manufacturing announced a three year
extension of the Busch Series race, the "Zippo 200". The
Sprint/Nextel Cup series is now known as "The Centurion
Boats at the Glen", another multi-year deal that goes
through 2009. Additionally, Brad Penn lubricants of
Pennsylvania (former Kendall Oil refinery) has been
announced as the sponsor of the annual vintage sports
car weekend for 2007 & 2008.
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