johnharrison01
John Harrison
johnharrison01

The problem is the thin crowds at every event this year. If there is no paying fan base sooner or later the major sponsors are going to have second thoughts about throwing good money after bad showings. The reason ESPN covered it was the TV crew and equipment were all ready there for the NASCAR race, so costs for air

Now all they to do is get some people to fill the stands. Without paying fans it's doomed.

Just another example of "junk" sports.

I live in NYC, problem solved.

Someone at Smart USA has way too much time on their hands.

I Jersey anything is legal, as long as you don't get caught.

Oh, I can feel the love.

Good luck with that.

This must be the end of days.

Thank you God! And I'm an atheist.

As bizarre as the LM002 was, it proved to be one of the most capable vehicles I've ever driven. During the 1989 One Lap of America I co-drove one of the first two in the country with Sandro Munari, and Joe Nastasi. During the 11,000 mi 10 day torture test it never skipped a beat. From 105 degrees in LA to -20 in

Wow! Just wow.

I just confirmed brake failure. Second time in two One Laps at Road America. Folks if I owned a CTS-V I would seriously consider installing stainless steel brake lines.

This is the second time CTS-V has crashed at Road America during the One Lap. Two years ago a break line poped off the caliber and it rolled in the gravel trap. I hope it didn't happen again.

I'm glad Robert is ok. He is a nice guy and an impressive racer in Europe.

Actually the One Lap got its name because the first one was One Lap of America. We went from Darien Ct., to Boston, Seattle, San Diego, Miami, and back to Darien Ct. For the finish. It was 8800 miles in 8 days, all interstate and really boring. The race tracks started in later runs and really made it much more

It's two track sessions each has 1 warmup/reconnaissance lap, then 2 race laps. Total time of both laps counts toward your overall score.

Actually the One Lap got its name because the first one was One Lap of America. We went from Darien Ct., to Boston, Seattle, San Diego, Miami, and back to Darien Ct. For the finish. It was 8800 miles in 8 days, all interstate and really boring. The race tracks started in later runs and really made it much more

Fracture a Femur!

Fracture a Femur.