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 Monday, June 19
ESPN will television Nashville race
 
 Associated Press

NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- The still unfinished Nashville Superspeedway has landed an Indy Racing League race for next season.

The 300-lap race on July 21, 2001, will be broadcast on ESPN. The race has yet to find a sponsor.

"With the addition of this Indy race, I think it takes our inaugural year to a new level," Cliff Hawks, Nashville Superspeedway vice president and general manager, said after Sunday's announcement at the IRL race in Pikes Peak, Colo.

"I don't think there's any question that, with the addition of Indy-style racing, that the credibility and demand for season tickets continues to increase."

Already booked to run on the $125 million superspeedway are NASCAR Bush Series, Craftsman Truck Series and ASA-ACDelco Series races. Track officials say each race could draw more than 100,000 fans.

For Nashville to get a Winston Cup event, one of the host tracks would have to back out.

The open-wheel IRL series features 12 races. Next year's schedule adds five other new markets: Miami, St. Louis, Chicago, Kansas City and Richmond, Va.

The 1.33-mile superspeedway is being built just outside Nashville and is scheduled to open in April.

The Nashville Speedway, which is closer to downtown, had Winston Cup racing until 1984, when NASCAR pulled out because of poor track conditions. The five-eighths mile oval has had stock car racing for more than 40 years.
 


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