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Notes: Kentucky Speedway sale could be done by October

SPARTA, Ky. -- Jerry Carroll's last race as owner of the Kentucky Speedway marked the first sellout in the IndyCar Series' nine visits to the track.

The irony wasn't lost on the man who tried for years to prove the 1.5-mile oval halfway between Cincinnati and Louisville was the equal of almost any track in the country.

"You have to give a lot of credit to the fans, because they wanted to show there's an interest in this sport," Carroll said before the Meijer Indy 300. "We're a performing team here. We've always been trying to sell a good product."

The salesmanship, however, couldn't convince NASCAR to bring a Sprint Cup race to the track. The ownership group filed an antitrust lawsuit against NASCAR and International Speedway Corp. three years ago. The case was dismissed in January, though Carroll has filed an appeal.

Frustrated, Carroll and company agreed to sell the track to Speedway Motorsports Inc., owned by Bruton Smith, in May.

"Bruton will have an opportunity to come in here and justify some of the situations that are going on," Carroll said. "Are deal was if you don't like some of the (details) send the contract back."

Smith, who owns several other tracks, including Texas Speedway and Infineon Raceway in California, spent some time before the race talking with IRL president Tony George and said he's eager to get started revamping the track.

"I think that what can happen is we'll be doing a lot of things here and I think anything that we do is going to make the IndyCar Series better as well as NASCAR," Smith said. "We're going to work both sides of the street."

Smith said he has no concerns about the IndyCar's future at the track, and has no problem with the series' early August date.

Things aren't as rosy on the NASCAR front. Though Smith still holds faint hope that the track will land a Sprint Cup date next year, he thinks the lawsuit between the current ownership group and NASCAR is holding things up.

"If you could wave a magic wand and the lawsuit was dropped, we would go to work on (getting a race) and try to change their mind," Smith said.

Carroll said he has no plans to drop the lawsuit, though he admits winning is a long shot. Wearing a Speedway shirt with the phrase "get lucky in Kentucky" stitched underneath the logo -- a gift from Smith -- he's eager to move on.

"I'm not bitter, I'm just dissatisfied and unhappy and I feel bad that the team that we had, the race track that we had, they have both completely been put into a second-class kind of atmosphere," Carroll said. "With the opportunities we've been given, we did as good a job as we can."

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Copyright 2012 by STATS LLC and The Associated Press. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and The Associated Press is strictly prohibited.
 
 
 
 
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