NASCAR Sprint-Cup Series
  • Peg It on GarageMonkey
CUP: Patience Is A Virtue For Patrick
A move to NASCAR would be easy money for Danica Patrick, but it's the wrong time for the IndyCar star...
Holly Cain  | http://www.Fanhouse.com  |  Posted August 26, 2009   Indianapolis, IN
It's not known if any of NASCAR's top Sprint Cup Series teams even seriously pursued Danica Patrick. (Photo: LAT photographic)
Smart move, not moving.

Danica Patrick should consider her apparent decision to stay in Indy cars and resist the allure of NASCAR a sound investment beyond padding her bank account. A move to NASCAR would be easy money, but it's the wrong time.

By re-signing with Andretti Green Racing (AGR) as she has indicated she will do, Patrick gives herself at least another season to move from a top-five driver to a true championship contender.

The money AGR can expect from Patrick's car sponsor Motorola should help improve that team's technical resources for her run at the 2010 title.

And the IndyCar Series keeps its biggest household name.

Even NASCAR wins because by the time Patrick makes her inevitable transition to the big-bucks, bump-and-bang stock car world, she will have padded her resume and answered questions about ability. It won't seem like a marketing ploy for "her brand" as much as a career progression -- the same kind of career progression other top open-wheel drivers have been afforded relatively grudge-free.

Team owner Chip Ganassi got it right when early on in the summer's "Danica Sweepstakes" he suggested she not rush a move to stock cars.

"My counsel to her was that she's close to making that last step in Indy Car racing and she could easily do that in the next three to five years and still be able to do this [NASCAR],'' Ganassi said in July, acknowledging his team had discussions with Patrick.

"She's one of those athletes with an opportunity to make career moves into the foreseeable future. It's up to her.''

Perhaps one of the signs that Patrick's immediate future is in open-wheel is the fundamental fact that she still hasn't turned a lap in a stock car. More established commodities like Juan Pablo Montoya, Dario Franchitti, Tony Stewart and Sam Hornish Jr. ran races in NASCAR's development series and put in miles of testing before making the full-on commitment.

And frankly, it's not clear if any of NASCAR's top teams even seriously pursued Patrick.

Other than cashing in on her popularity, it didn't make a lot of sense for her to jump in with both feet. Yet.

Mistakes would be magnified, her learning curve compressed and if she was unsuccessful -- as plenty of other talented open-wheel drivers have been -- it would have been exponentially worse for Patrick.

The unfortunate reality is that it is important for Patrick to make wise choices because she is always going to be heavily scrutinized.

By choosing to establish herself and resist the apple dangling from NASCAR's tree, Patrick puts herself in better position when the time is right. It will still mean a lucrative contract. And by spending an extra season or seasons establishing herself and bettering her racing credentials, she will also gain something equally as significant as a big paycheck: experience and respect.


Page 1 of 2
Prev
12
Next
holly_cain's avatar

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Holly Cain

Fanhouse.com

MORE BY THIS AUTHOR