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Flair Country
03-26-2006, 09:01 PM
Paul Dana died of multiple injuries Sunday following a crash during a pre-race practice session for the Toyota Indy 300 at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

IRL president and chief operating officer Brian Barnhart made the announcement at 12:45 p.m. Sunday, hours after Dana’s car crashed into Ed Carpenter’s car on the second lap of the final practice session before the IRL IndyCar Series season opener.

Bobby Rahal, co-owner of Rahal Letterman Racing, said Dana’s two teammates would not compete in Sunday’s race, which was scheduled to be held as planned. The No. 16 RLR Honda/Panoz of Danica Patrick and the No. 15 RLR Honda/Panoz of Buddy Rice were parked.

“This is a very black day for us,” Rahal said. “On behalf of our team, David and our sponsors and associates, our prayers and sympathies go out to Paul, his wife, Tonya, and the whole Dana family. This is a great tragedy. As a result, and in honor of him, we will not be competing with cars 16 and 17.”

Dana’s No. 17 RLR Honda/Panoz slammed into Carpenter’s No. 20 Honda/Dallara after Carpenter’s car had spun to a stop in Turn 2 on the second lap of the morning practice session. The yellow flag had been out for several seconds, and several cars had slowed and passed Carpenter’s spinning car, before Dana’s car slammed into it at speed.

Both Rahal and Barnhart said their were no communication issues regarding the crash.

“There was no problem with the communication,” Rahal said. “The spotter made clear the incident. From what I could see, there was a car on the outside that Paul was passing or had just passed. It would be conjecture and probably be very irresponsible for me to dissect why it happened, but there was no problem with the communication.”

Both drivers were airlifted to Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami. Carpenter, who reportedly was knocked unconscious at impact, was reported to be awake and alert and was listed in stable condition.

Barnhart said caution lights were on, the flag was out and the radio call had been made -- and responded to -- before Dana's car crashed into Carpenter's. Video replays showed only a brief puff of tire smoke from Dana's car before impact, the only indication that he had attempted to slow before the crash.

“This was the first time this weekend that we’d had all 20 cars on the track at the same time,“ Barnhart said. “Ed had his problem in Turn 2 initially. The yellow lights were called immediately and all systems functioned properly. It’s just a busy time out there with a lot of cars and a lot of traffic.”

Dana, a 30-year-old native of St. Louis, is survived by his wife, Tonya. A graduate of the Northwestern University school of journalism, Dana covered racing for magazines before pursuing his racing career. He was seriously injured last year during a practice session before the Indianapolis 500 in a Hemelgarn Racing entry. He sat out the rest of the season to recover from the injuries before joining Rahal Letterman for the 2006 season.

Barnhart said he spoke with officials of International Speedway Corporation, which owns the track, and with track president Curtis Gray before deciding to continue with Sunday's race as scheduled at 3:45 p.m. ET. “We‘re all in agreement that the race will go on as scheduled today, on time,” Barnhart said.

The crash was the first fatal incident in the IRL since Tony Renna was killed in October 2003 during a test session at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

*Credit to SpeedTV.com*

Appels
03-26-2006, 09:45 PM
Another Article. Thoughts and Prayers go out to Dana and his family.

Deadly start to season

Despite the tragedy, Sunday's season-opening IRL race will still be held on schedule.

HOMESTEAD, Fla. (AP) -- American rookie driver Paul Dana died after a two-car crash Sunday during the warmup for the season-opening IRL IndyCar Series race at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

The other driver, Ed Carpenter, was awake and alert at a Miami hospital, IRL officials said.

Dana, 30, a former auto racing journalist, competed in three IRL races for Ethanol Hemelgarn Racing last year with a best finish of 10th in the race at Homestead.

The Toyota Indy 300 race was expected to be run as scheduled. Bobby Rahal, co-owner of Rahal Letterman Racing for which Dana was to race this season, said the team's other two cars -- driven by Danica Patrick and Buddy Rice -- will be pulled out of the race.

Dana's wife, Tonya, was in Indianapolis, where the couple lived, and was notified of her husband's death while attending a church service.

"Obviously, this is a very black day for us," Rahal said. "This is a great tragedy."

Carpenter spun and hit the wall moments after the practice began at 10 a.m. ET. As Carpenter's battered car slid to a stop, Dana slammed into it at almost full speed -- about 200 miles per hour.

Dana's car nearly split in half. The chassis flew about six feet off the ground and pieces were strewn down the track. It nearly turned over, but landed on its wheels before sliding to a halt.

Buddy Lazier said Dana passed him and Scott Sharp after both slowed because of the accident.

"He carried way too much speed in and wasn't aware of what was going on around him," Lazier said.

There was no immediate explanation for Dana's failure to slow down several seconds after the yellow lights came on around the track because of Carpenter's crash.

"That's just the first time of the weekend that we got all 20 cars on the track at the same time," said IRL president Brian Barnhart. "Ed had his problem in Turn 2 initially. The yellow lights were called immediately and all systems functioned properly. It's just a busy time out there, with a lot of cars and a lot of traffic."

Rahal said the team knew of no problem with communications.

"The spotter made clear the incident," Rahal said. "From what I could see, there was a car on the outside. Paul was just passing or had just passed, but I think it would be conjecture and probably very irresponsible for me to try to dissect as to why what happened, happened. But there was no problem with communication."

It took track safety workers about 15 minutes to get both drivers out of their cars. The practice session did not resume.

Rahal, who co-owns the team with television talk show host David Letterman, said the plan was to field cars for Patrick and Rice at next Sunday's race in St. Petersburg, Fla. He said any future plans for the No. 17 entry, the car driven by Dana, "are unclear at this time."

Dana and Carpenter, the stepson of IRL founder Tony George, both were airlifted to Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami. IRL officials said Dana died shortly before noon.

Vision Racing team general manager Larry Curry said he was told Carpenter "would be fine."

Dana is the first IRL driver killed since Tony Renna died in a crash during testing at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in October 2003. The last NASCAR driver killed was Dale Earnhardt in February 2001, and the last driver to die in Formula One was Ayrton Senna in May 1994.

It is the third racing death at the Homestead track -- John Nemechek was killed in a NASCAR truck race in February 1997 and Jeff Clinton died in a Grand Am sports car event at the track in March 2002.