Roger Penske buys Indianapolis Motor
Speedway, IndyCar Series
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Indianapolis Motor
Speedway and the IndyCar Series were sold to Penske Entertainment Corp.
in a stunning move Monday that relinquishes control of the iconic
speedway from the Hulman family after 74 years.
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Tony Hulman bought the
dilapidated speedway in 1945 and brought racing back to the corner of
16th Street and Georgetown Avenue after a four-year absence following
World War II. Roger Penske will become just the fourth owner of the
110-year-old speedway.
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The speedway spun off
multiple subsidiaries, including the IndyCar Series and Indianapolis
Motor Speedway Productions, which are also part of the deal, to Penske
Entertainment. That group is a subsidiary of Penske Corp., which is
owned by billionaire Roger Penske.
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"Great day for our family
and our team," Penske said in a text message to The Associated Press.

Indianapolis Motor Speedway is changing
hands for the first time in 74 years.
The IndyCar Series is on an
upward trend with improved television ratings and increased interest.
Penske is the winningest team owner in Indianapolis 500 history with 18
victories, including Simon Pagenaud's win in May. He capped the IndyCar
season with a championship from driver Josef Newgarden, the 15th for the
Team Penske organization.
The speedway is to discuss the deal in a news conference Monday. The sale
is expected to close in early January, according to a document of message
points sent to IndyCar teams on Monday, a copy of which was obtained by
the AP.
"We have found the ideal steward of the company and its iconic assets,"
the document states. "Penske Corporation -- with its 64,000-plus employees
and more than $32 billion in consolidated revenue -- will bring tremendous
energy, leadership and resources to IMS, IndyCar and IMSP.
"For a number of years, the Hulman & Company management and board have
engaged outside advisers and experts to consider the full range of
strategic options available. Ultimately, it was decided to focus on the
possible sale of the company and finding a buyer that would be the best
steward of the company and its iconic assets."
The document states that Penske Corp. approached the Hulman board in the
fall about the purchase.
Rival team owner Chip Ganassi said Penske called him early Monday morning
before the sale was announced to inform him.
"I think it's good. It's really good, it's great," Ganassi told AP. "The
place is going to be run like a business now."
Michael Andretti, another rival owner, called it "positive news" for the
series and the speedway.
"Roger has always strived to do great things for both IMS and Indy car
racing, and I'm sure he will continue to do so in this new ownership
position," Andretti said. "Both the Indy 500 and the NTT IndyCar Series
have been on a rise, and I look forward to the continued climb."
Penske's love of the speedway dates to 1951 when his father, Jay, scored a
pair of tickets to the Indianapolis 500 from the metal fabrication company
in Cleveland where he worked. He brought his 14-year-old car-loving son to
the speedway to see the event live after listening to it on radio for many
years.
Penske was instantly hooked and has missed only six Indianapolis 500s
since, five of which came when the IndyCar Series was formed by Tony
George and split from CART. Penske teams remained in CART, and CART teams
were not welcome at the 500.
CART was once the most popular form of motorsports in the U.S., but NASCAR
swallowed open-wheel racing during the tumultuous times after George
created the Indy Racing League. The split fractured open-wheel racing in
North America, and it has never recovered, even after CART conceded and
merged into what is now known as IndyCar.
Penske has mixed track ownership and team ownership before, and the
Detroit resident first purchased Michigan International Speedway in 1973.
He later owned California Speedway, as well, and currently runs the
Detroit Grand Prix doubleheader IndyCar weekend.
George, the grandson of Tony Hulman, has long run the speedway and its
properties along with his sisters and a board of directors. But matriarch
Mari Hulman George, daughter of Tony Hulman, died last November, and her
children and the board have made a series of moves divesting their
businesses. The Hulman & Company family sold its other primary business,
Clabber Girl, to B&G Foods for $80 million in May. Clabber Girl produced
name-brand baking powder, baking soda and cornstarch for 150 years.
The family has now turned its racing properties over to Penske in an
announcement made one day after the one-year anniversary of Hulman
George's death. Penske, who turned 82 in February, received the
Presidential Medal of Freedom from President Donald Trump last month.
"I cannot think of a better owner than Roger Penske and his corporation to
ensure the future and growth of IndyCar," Zak Brown, CEO of McLaren, told
the AP. McLaren is entering IndyCar next season, and Brown was a longtime
Indianapolis businessman who ran a racing marketing business.
"His business acumen and dedication to IndyCar racing and passion for the
Indianapolis Motor Speedway is second-to-none," he said.Roger Penske buys
Indianapolis Motor Speedway, IndyCar Series

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