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Another Great Short Track Closes

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  • Another Great Short Track Closes

    This hits home a bit... Although I never went to this track since we moved before it was built, I saw my first races in Ft. Wayne in the late-1950s...

    This is from the Baer Field Speedway Web Site:

    It is with great sadness, that a Fort Wayne tradition is closing its doors. Officials announced today that, effective immediately, Baer Field Speedway is ceasing operations.

    In an interview with Blake Sebring of the News-Sentinel, promoter Jon Raney said, “I don’t want to go through this anymore. The main problem is the decline of attendance for the grandstands and a lot of that is due to the racers tearing down the place in social media. I build up the facilities and the racers don’t reciprocate it to me. It’s just a negative weight for me.”

    Raney, a former racer took over the facility in late 2012 after the retirement of the late Tom Isch. Under his leadership, the facility saw sweeping changes, with modernized facilities; a substantial project to clean and freshen up everything; increases to the weekly prize money; and bold, new shows, aimed at bringing in new fans. And, last year, it all worked.

    2014 was a different story.

    “It all started,” said Raney, “when we tried to listed to our fans and be a good neighbor to the surrounding area, by mandating mufflers on the racecars. Despite the fact that noise is the #1 cause of racetrack closures over the last 20 years, and that mufflers are mandated at almost every track within 200 miles of Fort Wayne, our drivers rejected them in a very public manner on social media and many others flat refused to put them on their cars this summer.”

    The next battle was over driver safety. “Most people don’t know this,” said Raney, “but Fort Wayne, Indiana, is the sport and entertainment insurance capitol of the world. Through K & K (our insurer), that industry was virtually invented in Fort Wayne. As we operate in their backyard, we have to do everything we can to dot every “I” and cross every “T” that they require. As such, we instituted some new rules this year, mandating that every car pass a safety inspection.”

    “One of the new items we now require is a collapsible steering column, just as has been standard in EVERY passenger car for decades. Our mandating that, is a direct result of an accident we had last year, where a driver was injured and ended up off work and unable to walk for over four months. Happy to say he’s now well and even returned to racing, but he would have walked away from the incident had he had that installed beforehand. It’s a $120 item, but you would think we’re the worst people in the world for making guys install one. Or have a helmet manufactured in the last 15 years, or seat belts that are no older than the manufacturer recommendations, or anything else meant to keep them safe. We were just absolutely trashed on social media for forcing our racers to look after their own safety.”

    And it didn’t stop there.

    “A few weeks ago, we had some people at the track from our insurer, who noticed that people were going around the pit area shirtless and in open-toes shoes. Both of which are in violation of track policy, as per insurance regulations in a restricted-area. When I informed one gentleman that he needed to put on a shirt, he said he’d kill me before he put a shirt on. When I informed a lady she needed to change her shoes, she told me to ‘f-off’! And, it’s not just necessarily idle threats. I had someone come to my house and assault me, because I refused to refund his money after he was thrown out by the police for being intoxicated and unruly.”

    Raney also addressed a few weather cancellations this season, which were also met with discord. “Last weekend, it rained hard all morning and at 1:00 pm, the forecast was for a 90% chance of rain from 6-8 pm that evening. So, we called off the show. 90 minutes later, the sun is shining and the forecast changed to ZERO chance of rain from 6-8, but we can’t UN-cancel. I mean, it’s not MY fault, I didn’t make the forecast, I’m just reacting to it and trying to do what’s best for my business and my competitors and fans. Trying to spare them from a wasted day of sitting in the rain. And, of course, I’m savaged on social media for my decision. The yesterday, we announced that because of lack of interest (4-5 cars vs. 70+ competitors on Saturday’s) we were cancelling the policy of practice every Wednesday. Again, a social media firestorm, despite attendance showing that less than 20 people had shown for any of the last THREE practice days.”

    “I just don’t need this! I have people calling my trucking business and threatening me and my staff. I paid to have our business evaluated as to our social media profile, and find that our approval rating is just above Congress. Even though a VAST majority of those who participated, have either never been to the Speedway, or haven’t been in over 10 years.”

    “How do you fight that? How can you advertise your way out of that?”

    “I’m heartbroken. I have three years left on a lease and had plans for renovating the grandstands, replacing the track lighting, a new scoreboard, and more…but I can’t throw money at the problem and hope to fix it. Especially when the biggest obstacle, is the attitudes of the very competitors who are the stars of the show. The very people who SHOULD be our best ambassadors! No other entity in sports allows their competitors to trash it (the sport) on social media. And the stars of those sports seem to be able to see the big picture, but for some reason short track racing has turned a blind eye to this behavior and it’s just out of control. And it’s not just here; it’s a problem brewing in this business everywhere.”

    “To those who were not a part of the problem and the fans, I apologize. To my staff, I thank you for all your tireless hours and your support. Maybe we can work together again sometime.” So, for now, the venerable speedplant on the south side of town will be silent.

  • #2
    A prime example of "you reap what you sow". A few malcontents ruin it for everyone. There's some lessons to be learned here, people.

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    • #3
      This raceway is a nice one ----- It's a turn-key operation. Someone in the near future will be at the helm, for sure.

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      • #4
        I have NO idea if it's true or not but some on FB say he was rather unpleasant and downright rude. There's a lot of truth in the message but there may, and again I don't KNOW, be two sides to the story.

        I can think of similar "situations" in our not too distant past.

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        • #5
          I'd be interested to see these comments that closed a race track. Every single track on the planet has people on Facebook complaining about things, and it doesn't end them. I'm going to guess there was something far worse going on here, like some seriously poor management.

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          • #6
            that sounds alot like the campaign being waged on this board against Citrus County Speedway....I guess the burgers are not good. LoL!
            Last edited by ScottPrentice; 07-03-2014, 04:32 PM. Reason: punctuation

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            • #7
              I personally think Gary does a GREAT job responding to it all without losing it. I am totally neutral and I've never posted anything over there, but I read it for the entertainment. The other day it was RELENTLESS and he pretty calmly responded to everything. Even here he stays pretty calm too. I also applaud him for getting his English skills tuned up, because he was almost as bad as Nerone when he first got on here years ago. He does pretty well now.

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              • #8
                I understand that there are three sides to every story. Yours, mine and THE TRUTH. However if you take this guy for his word, I can't blame him for closing the place down after having people who are upset with the track calling and harassing his trucking company employees and he himself being assaulted at his home. I can see how he would think it's not worth it. The thing to remember is most people who own asphalt short tracks in this country are not getting rich off of them. We, as racers, need to work with these people and remain professional and act like adults. If the venture becomes a giant pain in the ass, you can't blame them for closing the doors. On the other hand his comparing local racers to pro athletes is way off base. If I were making millions off racing (like a pro athlete) you wouldn't hear a peep out of me. But as racers we have a right to our opinions because we lose money at this too. We just have to remain civil, be respectful and not lose our cool.

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                • #9
                  I cannot think of a more thankless job than being a track operator be it owner or outside manager. The comments from Ft. Wayne are no different than what we have seen in Florida. Why, you can't please everybody every team has different financial considerations and some people simply don't like change. Phil and Liz at North Florida have done as good a job as I have seen in 50 plus years in the sport. They listen and do not partake of double speak to try and quiet the dissenters. One other trait I have noticed is if a class has a bad showing they do not react negatively and immediately threaten the class. They are patient fair and honest and that is all I have ever asked at any track.

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                  • #10
                    I can almost promise this is why racing at Thompson Speedway up here has gone from 20+ races to 7 per year... Maybe 5 next year is what I am hearing... Sad...

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                    • #11
                      How stressful would it be to be to try to operate right in the insurance companies back yard?! I think we can all agree insurance companies are garbage.

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                      • #12
                        litigation

                        We are victims of our own demise.
                        Why did they ever start letting M$M and all the other scumbag lawyers start chasing ambulances on tv?
                        Insurance sucks because we are such a litigatious country now. It used to be for unforseen catastrophes. Now it is so all can be "compensated" for any mishap,regardless of actual fault. Ins. Cos and lawyers inflate and ruin the economies of many industries that could otherwise be profitable.

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                        • #13
                          And Another One Falls----

                          Just a short drive down the highway from Fort Wayne, I/69-Gas City speedway, near Kokomo, has just closed their doors. A fine 3/8 mile dirt facility, the promoter abruptly resigned and walked out, citing that he was merely tired of losing money. This venue, as Baer Field, is a very nice facility. Good fields, good shows, nearly full grandstands, and overall good atmosphere.

                          These two raceways won't be shuttered long.
                          Last edited by AB195; 08-17-2014, 12:50 PM. Reason: sp

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