Reminder to self.....make sure to check with our two intrepid gamblers, Julian and Bundy, and see how much money they've lost...ahem, I mean, won...oops

. Anyway, what kind of race can we expect in Vegas Saturday night?
Well....if last year's race was any indication, it will be another old-fashioned oval fight. From the drop of the green last year, as Patrick Carpentier led the field into turn 1, it was a dogfight all the way to the checkers as Newman-Haas Racing's duo, Sebastien Bourdais and Bruno Junquiera fought the last 15-20 laps inches apart at over 200 mph, neither giving an inch, wheels literally next to the other car's until SeaBass won by 66-thousandths' over Junky.
With Junquiera sidelined, Catalonian Oriol Servia now sits as #2 with the team, but that appelation will fall once the race begins. While Servia finished 12th last year, that was with Dale Coyne's squad; this year, he's proven he can run with Bourdais, Tracy, and Allmendinger. Speaking of PT, he probably feels that the track owes him one; last year, a drivetrain failure on the parade lap cost him a shot at the Vanderbilt Cup as he finished 18th, last in the field. It won't be easy, though...for in his career, he's never won on a long oval(unless you believe that he won the 2002 Indy 500 and not Helio Castroneves!), so he's not
the favorite to win. But if he wants to fight Bourdais for the Vanderbilt Cup, he had best do well here.
But the prohibitive favorite is, of course, Le Mans, France's own, Sebastien Bourdais. In his 2+ yrs. in the series, he's won both long-oval races(EuroSpeedway, 2003, Las Vegas-2004) and was very competitive in his one-off at the Brickyard this year. He also, back in April, won a round of the Corwn Royal IROC Series at Texas Motor Speeway, so he knows how to run the banked ovals.
The big question, though, is technical in nature. Unlike 2004, when drivers were'nt given the use of the "power-to-pass"(boost) function on the XFE-2 engines, this year, they'll get the 60-sec. boost, but in 10-sec. increments. This will assuredly add more strategy, as drivers will have to decide for themselves when to use it. Do I use it at the start, during the rounds of pitstops, or at the end? Since the drivers won't lift off the throttle while at speed(100% throttle racing), the key turns to the aero side of the race. With the road-course packages in use this weekend, speeds should hover around 205-210 mph, and if you can "draft" off the car in front, this, and the boost function onboard, could give us should hair-raising, white-knuckle driving.
All I can say going into the weekend is...once the green falls, hold on tight, because its' 166-laps of pure adrenaline the 80,000+ people expected there will witness, and the results could have a major impact on who hoists the Vanderbilt Cup in Mexico City come November.