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MALSHER: The Lost Boys
Written by: David Malsher
Editor, RACER Magazine   http://www.racer.com
Irvine, Calif.
 
Tagliani made the most of the opportunity presented him at Long Beach, but will his performance earn him another IndyCar chance? (LAT photo) » More Photos

Even as Alex Tagliani completed his cool-down lap at Long Beach last Sunday in a highly unrepresentative seventh place, there were tears being shed in the Walker Racing pit garage. And who could be surprised? The team that first dipped its toe in the then-named Indycar World Series back in 1991 and which only last year took Will Power to fourth in the Champ Car title race with two victories and five pole positions will not be a part of the unified IndyCar Series.

And there’s bitter irony in that. Team owner Derrick Walker spent some years at the front of the queue of Champ Car World Series participants stating their belief that the CCWS and IRL must unite in order to restore the status of open-wheel racing in a NASCAR-dominated continent. Now the ex-pat Scot, who spent 12 years working for Roger Penske and three years at Al Holbert’s Porsche Indycar outfit before electing to set up his own squad, has become the most high-profile casualty of that very unification.

The bitterness of the irony lies in the way that Walker has found himself in this new predicament. Having discovered which way the wind was blowing regarding Kevin Kalkhoven’s negotiations with Tony George in the off-season, and thus being reasonably convinced that Champ Car was on the brink of collapse and that IndyCar held the high cards, Derrick did not send his team to a money-wasting pre-season Champ Car test at Sebring. He couldn’t justify it, not when he was (by his calculations) owed $2.5 million by his Team Australia partner of three seasons, Craig Gore.

Walker says he called Kalkhoven several times to see if he would apply some pressure on his fellow Australian, but that he never got a reply. Then he started hearing that the pair were courting each other, and of course these suspicions were soon confirmed, when Gore declared he would be taking the Team Australia brand – and Will Power – to the Kalkhoven/Jimmy Vasser-owned KV Racing.
/> Now, any sponsorship can disappear overnight (ask Conquest Racing’s Eric Bachelart about Opes Prime, for example) and leave a team stranded. That’s the nature of the business, and gives some idea of the status of companies and businessmen that the majority of U.S. open-wheel teams have had to deal with over the last decade or so in order to survive from season to season. But what has left Walker up to his neck in the financial sewer is that the money he was trying to extract from Gore had nothing to do with 2008, but money he had spent last season on the understanding that his partner would foot $2.5m of the bill. And that’s the figure he is now trying to retrieve through the legal system, with, he says, a complete set of paperwork to prove he has been wronged, and that he created and holds ownership over the Team Australia name.
Walker: focusing on the positive even as court wrangling looms. (LAT photo) » More Photos

That’s just Walker’s side of the story, of course, and, for the record Gore refuted it all in a long and surprisingly detailed press release which he assured us would be his last word on the subject before the court case. If he keeps this promise, then it would be a rare display of vocal restraint from a man who will never be mistaken for a Trappist monk.

One can only hope that the truth will out and justice be done in court. What can be said with some assurance is that if Derrick’s trying to pull a fast one, then he, like Gore, is behaving completely out of character, as former partners and even his rivals would confirm. It wouldn’t be unfair to say that in the world of motorsports, Walker could attract more glowing character references in a day than Gore could compile in a decade. Thus the vast majority of the (now former) Champ Car personnel team owners, managers and drivers believe Walker’s story and two owners even hinted to this writer before the race in Long Beach that they would gain as much satisfaction from seeing Tagliani win as they would their own drivers.
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