NASHVILLE, Tenn. — IndyCar star Colton Herta, one of Nashville's newest residents, can see promotion of the season finale all around the city.
He made a joke that there are plenty of billboards around Nashville — Pato O'Ward complained two weeks ago the sign outside the Milwaukee Mile advertised a previously-held NASCAR event and not that days IndyCar race — and Herta stressed efforts have been strong to promote Sunday's championship-deciding race.
''I think they do a really good job at promoting. They do a really good job of pooling money together and putting it in the right areas,'' Herta said. ''They're committed to open-wheel racing and IndyCar as a whole. I love what they're doing.''
Yes, the season finale was supposed to be through the downtown streets of Nashville and utilize the Korean War Veterans Memorial Bridge and portions of Lower Broadway. The event was such a success in its first three years that IndyCar moved it to the title-deciding finale — bumping Laguna Seca in California to a June race at a reduced sanctioning fee — in favor of what was sure to be one of the highlights of the season.
IndyCar and race organizers did so despite construction on the NFL's new Titans stadium that would force some course changes. On paper, the alterations looked fine and the event would still be a success.
But when Scott Borchetta, founder of the Big Machine Label Group and a racing enthusiast with a deep affinity for IndyCar, took a deeper look at the plans he discovered the ownership group had a ''Pollyanna approach'' to the construction disruptions. A change to the course was going to cause major inconvenience to local businesses and not be the same event it had been the previous three years.
Then Borchetta took a look at the books and found the Music City Grand Prix was deep in the red with outstanding bills to its vendors. Although Borchetta was a founding partner of the ownership group — which initially including NASCAR's Justin Marks and Dale Earnhardt Jr., as well as Justin Timberlake — the troubles facing the race took Borchetta by surprise.
''It got to a point, literally, where there was such a financial challenge that our options were bankruptcy or figure out how to save the race,'' Borchetta told The Associated Press. ''And for IndyCar, for Nashville, for the Big Machine brand, I wasn't going to bankrupt it. Big Machine didn't do anything to deserve that black eye.''