RIP Dan Wheldon

lito

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Died of injures sustained today on huge crash on a really stupid race of an stupid league.

Sad situation, prayers for his soul and his family.
 

TurboX

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Died of injures sustained today on huge crash on a really stupid race of an stupid league.

Sad situation, prayers for his soul and his family.

Wow Lito, People grieve in different ways but Im sure Dan, his Family, his Team, his 6 month old son and many others would disagree with the above. Somewhat disrespectful IMO.

Very few of us are lucky enough to get paid for something we really enjoy doing, this man was lucky enough. I like my job but I would much rather make mad money doing something I enjoy, like driving a to the limits. Sometimes when those limits are pushed, things like this will happen. When I die, I hope it happens fast and its while I am doing something that brings me great happiness.

Rest in Peace Dan
 
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lito

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Buzz, maybe if you knew all the dealings before the race, the league, the dallara's they use and the driver's feelings prior to the race you would think differently.

This shit could have been avoided, 34 cars that are not safe because when the crash they just lift off, racing all together at 255MPH is way too much. When Moore died it was crazy but it was somehow safer but still crazy, this could have been avoided.
 

TheStig

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Rest in peace Dan...I'm personally not a fan of Indy, but a death of any racer in any league is tragic. God bless his family.
 

Ch4r1ie

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RIP Dan

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Ch4r1ie

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Great memorial piece on Dan by SPEED.com's Auto Racing Editor, Marshall Pruett:

SPEED.com: PRUETT: Danny Boy

My iPhone lit up last Wednesday.

Jet-lagged after a 23.5-hour door-to-door flight back home to California after covering the Bathurst 1000 race in Australia, (and in my usual morning stupor), I looked over and saw the name ‘Dan Wheldon’ pop up on the display.

“Hey, is this the famous international motorsports reporter?” he said.

Filled with pride for what I perceived was Wheldon’s recognition of my work Down Under, I was barely able to reply, “Thanks, Danny Boy, I…” before he interrupted me.

“Wait a minute…who is this?” he said.

I replied, “It’s Marshall.”

“Oh, my bad,” said Wheldon, “I was trying to call Robin Miller…hahahahahahaha…”

After a good thirty seconds of laughing at me (“I got you to bite on that one pretty good, mate…”), Wheldon--thoroughly pleased with himself for executing a perfect bait-and-switch, fell into the familiar tone and tenor of a man whose life had taken a sharp turn for the better in recent months.

He’d gone from being unemployed and on the sidelines one year ago to unlikely and unexpected Indy 500 winner to INDYCAR’s official test driver for the new 2012 car to Danica Patrick’s replacement at Andretti Autosport to the man vying for his share of a $5 million prize last weekend at Las Vegas.

At 33 years old, Wheldon was in the midst of an epic rebirth—reclaiming a career that had been derailed by two frustrating years at Panther Racing from 2009-2010 and a poor showing in 2008 at Target Chip Ganassi Racing.

With the path recently cleared for another five to 10 years of IndyCar racing, Dan Wheldon, the two-time Indy 500 winner and 2005 IndyCar Series champion was on his way back to where he belonged--at the top of the sport.

The indescribable sadness that comes with his loss at Las Vegas, however, has nothing to do with the death of an athlete—a champion driver.

I don’t write very many ‘I’ pieces, but with a flight headed back to Australia just hours away for this weekend’s Gold Coast 600 event, and knowing that plenty of other writers will have the time to produce more polished and eloquent remembrances of Dan, I’ll do my best to put his death in whatever raw context I can with the limited time I have to work with.

• I’ve been affected by death at the race track, like most in the sport, on more than one occasion. I’ve had a driver die in a car I prepared—suffered a massive coronary. I’ve seen drivers killed in crashes directly in front of me. I’ve seen Indy car stars and future champions cut down in their prime. I’ve cleaned copious amounts of my driver’s blood off of the sidepod of an Indy car. And in all of those instances, I was saddened, shocked or stunned. But I never cried. The loss of those men, however tragic, was filtered and processed internally as the loss of athletes. It took getting away from the Las Vegas track on Sunday for the gravity of Dan’s death to hit home, and sitting in the McCarran International Airport, of all places, I started to cry in front of complete strangers. On the short flight home from Las Vegas to the Bay Area, the reason for my belated tears became obvious: losing Dan Wheldon--bon vivant, friend, character, jokester, beaming source of light and warmth—was the real tragedy. What the world of racing lost at Las Vegas pales in comparison to what the world at-large surrendered on Sunday.

• I clicked with Dan because he was what my father would call ‘A lover of a person.’ Wheldon, especially once he got married and had children, breathed life into whatever he touched, described or whomever he came in contact with. Compared to some of the dark and brooding types in the IndyCar paddock, Wheldon made no effort to hide the sheer joy and blessings that filled his life. He was a lover of what he had, what he did and what was yet to come.

• I mourn for his wife, Susie, and sons, Oliver and Sebastien. I mourn for his family—most of whom were in attendance at Las Vegas to watch him run for the big payday.

• I want Wade Cunningham, who mistakenly triggered the crash, to know that no one--with a sane mind or grasp of the sport--blames him. Dan’s loss isn’t your fault, son. Don’t internalize this.

• I’m heartbroken for Dario Franchitti and Tony Kanaan. They grew so incredibly close to Greg Moore—became inseparable—and lost him in similar circumstances at the season finale in 1999. More than a decade later, and after feeling the enduring sting of Greg’s loss, Dario and TK are suffering through the same thing again with the loss of Dan, who had become a little brother to them, a new best friend and helped to fill the void left by Moore. Losing one’s best friend, on two occasions and in violent crashes is a cruel, cruel twist.

• I applaud Randy Bernard for handling the announcement of Dan’s death personally, rather than passing it off to one of his PR staff.

• I’m saddened by the “I told you so” articles I’ve seen emerge within hours of Dan’s death.

• I’ll miss reminiscing with Dan about our days in the Toyota Atlantic series when he routinely kicked my driver’s ass and loved every minute of it. I was all set to win my first race engineering for a new team at the season opener in 2000, but Wheldon felt the need to spoil my party and pass my driver for the win--in his series debut. I hated the little bugger with a passion back then…

• I’m sorry for taking the Lord’s name in vain dozens of times on Sunday.

• I hate that anything like this needs to be written.

• I hate referring to Dan in the past tense.

• I’m thankful for having good friends in John Hindhaugh and Eve Hewitt to lean on throughout the ordeal. With many of the people in the Las Vegas media center openly weeping, summoning the strength—even if it was only borrowed for a few hours—to stay on task was made easier by John and Eve.

• I’m saddened for Jon Baytos, Cal Wells, John Barnes, Michael Andretti, Chip Ganassi, Bryan Herta and all the people who ran Dan and helped move him from the bottom to the top of the open-wheel ladder once he arrived in America.

• I’m thankful for the idea offered by IndyCar driver James Hinchcliffe on Twitter: “I'll think about Dan every time I'm fortunate enough to sit in the [new] car he helped develop. I'd love to see Dallara name the chassis DW 001”

• I love the fans at Las Vegas who never left their seats in order to honor Dan during the five-lap celebration performed by the 19 drivers whose cars were still functional.

• The same goes for the fans that’ve left candles, flowers and memorials outside the Turn 1 gate at Indy.

• I’m keeping Sam Schmidt in my prayers. Schmidt, who witnessed his driver, Davey Hamilton, suffer terrifying injuries in 2001 when the Idahoan was launched into the catch fencing at Texas after a car slowed in front of him and he rode over the back of that car, watched a nearly identical replay of that accident at Las Vegas when his driver, Wheldon, met a far more grave outcome when he hit the catch fence.

• I’m hopeful the events at Las Vegas will not bring the positive momentum surrounding the 2012 car and season to a grinding halt.

• I’m frustrated that most of the people in the paddock and media center knew a big wreck would happen as early as Friday, yet none of us pushed hard enough to demand changes of some sorts to reduce the possibility of a crash like the one that claimed Dan.

• I wish the people who are blaming Randy Bernard for Wheldon’s death would step back and take an honest assessment of the situation. Wheldon raced in 133 IndyCar races before Las Vegas, and went after every penny of prize money that was offered—just as the rest of the drivers happen to do. Wheldon used the same free will and eternal optimism in his decision to race for the money at Las Vegas as he did 133 times before last weekend.

• I’ll miss accosting Dan and waiting for his stellar comebacks. My “Hey there, you sexy little bitch,” and Dan’s familiar response of, “Hey there you NON-sexy bitch” was always a source of levity and laughter.

• I’ll miss Dan’s ridiculous $30,000 smile.

Simply put, I’ll miss Dan. He was a champion driver, but champions aren’t hard to come by. They aren’t rare, nor are they precious.

Wheldon’s greatest accomplishments came away from the race track and had nothing to do with championship rings or trophies.

He was a champion friend. He left the people he met and cared for better off for knowing him. He was giving of his emotions and spirit. He was fearless when it came to opening himself up and letting his true character be seen. He gave love—through deep connections, pure mischief and heartfelt honesty. He was irreplaceable.

I’ve got a lot more tears to shed for you, Danny Boy, but I’m damn thankful I got to know you in this life.

Marshall Pruett is SPEED.com's Auto Racing Editor, covering IndyCar and sports cars. He also contributes to Road & Track and Racecar Engineering. Follow him on Facebook and Twitter.
 

Red06GT

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RIP Dan. What a horrific crash! You gotta be a little crazy to drive an open wheeled car with that many other cars on the track.
 

Ch4r1ie

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HRT paying tribute to Dan, who was due to drive for them this weekend at the Gold Coast 600...

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