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Displaying 1 - 20 of 25 in total

#25

Jamey Price: Jockey, Spy Suspect, and the Motorsport Photographer Every Team Wants

Jamey is one of the most recognized photographers in global motorsport, 68 tracks deep, with clients across F1, IMSA, WEC, and IndyCar. What most fans don't know is that a significant part of his work has nothing to do with the shots that end up on your phone wallpaper. Tire photography. Technical documentation. Competitive intelligence. Teams spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on it, it lives inside the budget cap, and it has directly shaped race outcomes. Red Bull pioneered it. Every team followed. Every team but one.We also go back to the beginning: growing up in Charlotte, finding Formula One on a satellite dish in 1998, becoming a licensed steeplechase jockey with 11 wins in 55 races, and picking up a camera in the jocks' room because nobody turns away a guy in a flak vest and riding boots. He learned by doing, built a following by refusing to let bad takes go unanswered, and somewhere along the way became the person Conor Daly and Colton Herta both feel comfortable teasing to his face.The conversation also gets into the structural gap in women's motorsport that the F1 Academy doesn't address, what Lewis Hamilton's paddock behavior costs the media that covers him, and why IMSA remains Jamey's favorite series to shoot.Topics covered:Steeplechase racing, what it takes, and why he walked away when he didTeaching yourself photography at horse tracks in full jockey kitThe spy photography economy inside professional motorsportHow a tire photographer contributed to Hülkenberg's Silverstone podiumThe one F1 team that still doesn't use tire photographyWhy the F1 Academy ladder has a physics problem, not just a pipeline problemEngaging trolls as a brand strategy (it works)Monaco, IMSA, Jordan Taylor, and what Lewis Hamilton does with his hand in the paddockFollow Jamey Price: Instagram: @jameypricephoto Wednesday Wallpaper: jameyprice.comBusiness of Speed: Newsletter + more at bizofspeed.com
#23

Tom Blomqvist: Rally Royalty, Red Bull, and Two Rolex 24 Wins

Tom Blomqvist has won the Rolex 24 at Daytona twice, claimed the IMSA DPI championship, and raced in DTM, Formula E, and IndyCar. He also broke Lewis Hamilton's record as the youngest Formula Renault UK champion. In this conversation with Lali Michelsen, he tells the full story for the first time in one sitting.Tom grew up between England, Sweden, and New Zealand as the son of World Rally Champion Stig Blomqvist. He talks about what his father actually taught him (it wasn't driving technique), how a surprise birthday party in Indonesia rescued his entire career, and why a single crash in IndyCar became the most embarrassing moment of his professional life.He also explains why New Zealand keeps producing world-class drivers from a talent pool of 20 kids, what Balance of Performance actually does to manufacturer competition in IMSA, and why grassroots racing costs have gone from expensive to genuinely absurd.Plus: the motorsport marketplace he's building, breaking a rib playing golf, and why Max Verstappen is the most naturally gifted driver he's ever raced against.0:00 Growing Up the Son of a Rally Legend4:07 Two Schools of Racing Dads7:06 Why New Zealand Produces So Many Elite Drivers9:23 From Karting to Formula Renault: Breaking Hamilton's Record16:21 The Brutal Economics of Junior Racing21:51 A Birthday Party That Changed Everything28:47 DTM, Formula E, and the IndyCar Reckoning37:15 IMSA, Meyer Shank Racing, and Two Rolex 24 Wins41:26 Balance of Performance: The Real Story45:37 Life Beyond Racing: Investing, Golf, and a New Venture51:46 Favorite Track and the Most Talented Driver He's Faced
#21

Shami Kalra: From $10 in the Bank to the Indy 500 Podium — The Omologato Story

Shami Kalra had $10 left in his bank account, no food in the house, and a wife who told him she'd had enough. That Friday night, he designed two watches in Photoshop. By Thursday, he'd taken his first $1,000. Within 30 days, $50,000. He didn't even have a product yet.That was the birth of Omologato — the motorsport watch brand built by a fan who couldn't afford a hamburger at Silverstone, let alone the $7,000 watches roped off behind VIP barriers.In this episode, Shami tells us the full story: 20 years working for people he hated, the moment his wife forced a change, launching on Shopify with no money, and how a cold introduction to Chip Ganassi at Le Mans turned into a phone call, a partnership, and a spot on the podium when Alex Palou won the Indianapolis 500.We get into:Why he flew to the south of France for a 2.5-hour meeting instead of doing a Zoom callThe swimming pool watch dial born from COVID isolation and what it taught him about hope and belongingSupporting drivers from age 9 who are now knocking on the door of Formula 1The FIA blocking him on social media for advocating for a disabled marshal at Le MansMeeting Mario Andretti behind the bins at a race and Tony Kanaan at ThermalHis dream of owning an IndyCar team — and how close it came to being a 2025 realityWhy kindness is not a weakness, toxic people are insecure, and karma always collectsShami also shares stories about Juan Pablo Montoya, Roger Penske, Scott Dixon (who lives a mile away), Tom Kristensen, Luke Browning, and why the greatest people in racing are the ones who stand up when you walk over to say hello.
#16

"Teams Will Cancel Programs" — Why IMSA's President John Doonan Says We Need BoP

In this episode of the Business of Speed podcast, John Doonan discusses the excitement surrounding the Rolex 24, his leadership style, the importance of youth engagement in motorsports, and the growth strategies of IMSA. He reflects on the passion for racing and the community it fosters, emphasizing the need for innovation and stability in the sport.TakeawaysJohn Doonan emphasizes the importance of being present and leading by example.The Rolex 24 is a culmination of hard work from many individuals in the racing community.Youth engagement is crucial for the future of motorsports.IMSA is focusing on creating a stable platform for teams and manufacturers.IMSA's growth is attributed to its open-access and fan-engagement strategies.Digital platforms like YouTube are vital for reaching a global audience.IMSA is exploring international expansion while maintaining cost efficiency for teams.Long-term partnerships with manufacturers contribute to the series' stability.The community aspect of racing is highlighted as a unique feature of IMSA events.John Doonan believes that passion and history are essential for the future of motorsports.Chapters00:00 The Excitement of the Rolex 2402:53 Leadership and Team Dynamics05:16 IMSA Labs and Innovation08:14 Engaging the Next Generation10:42 Growth and Accessibility of IMSA13:26 Stability and Partnerships in Racing16:17 The Thrill of IMSA Racing18:36 Personal Reflections and Future AspirationsKeywordsRolex 24, IMSA, motorsports, leadership, team dynamics, youth engagement, international expansion, racing culture, growth strategies, automotive innovation
#12

The One with Jeff Dodds, CEO, Formula E

In this episode of the Business of Speed, Lali and Vincenzo sit down with Jeff Dodds, the CEO of Formula E, as he approaches his third year leading the electric racing series. Transitioning from a massive career in telecom and media (Virgin Media O2) and automotive (Honda, Volvo), Jeff discusses how Formula E is positioning itself not just as a sport, but as a disruptive entertainment property focused on sustainability and digital growth.From the controversial "noise" of electric cars to the groundbreaking performance of the upcoming Gen 4 vehicle, Jeff offers a candid look at how Formula E plans to become the fastest motorsport in the world and overtake MotoGP in popularity by 2030.Key Topics Discussed:The "Sound of Inefficiency": Jeff debates the lack of noise in EV racing, arguing that the "growl" of a combustion engine is simply 50% energy loss, whereas Formula E cars operate at 95% efficiency.Gen 4 Revolution: A look at the future car which boasts permanent all-wheel drive and is 71% more powerful than the current generation, capable of accelerating 30% faster than a Formula 1 carWomen in the Driver’s Seat: Jeff discusses the systemic financial barriers keeping women out of elite motorsport and predicts that women will be racing alongside men in the Formula E championship within the next two to three years.Gamification & Fanbase: How Formula E uses features like "Attack Mode" and partnerships with content creators to engage a younger, gender-balanced audience (50/50 male-female) differently than legacy sports.Business Strategy: Why Formula E prioritizes broad media reach over exclusive, high-cost rights deals to grow its global audience.Hospitality & Networking: How the "open" paddock culture of Formula E fosters C-Suite networking in a way that differs from the exclusive nature of Formula 1.
#11

The One with Tony Kanaan, IndyCar Champion + Arrow McLaren Team Boss

In this episode of the Business of Speed podcast, we sit down with IndyCar legend, Indy 500 winner, and current Arrow McLaren Sporting Director,  ⁨@TonyKanaan⁩ .From his early days growing up in Brazil to his legendary rivalry and friendship with  ⁨@H3lioOfficial⁩ , TK opens up about the defining moments of his life. He shares the incredible story of turning down a guaranteed million-dollar contract with Audi to chase the American dream, the emotional promise he made to his father, and the grit it took to finally win the Indy 500 in 2013.Tony also discusses his transition from the cockpit to the pit wall, giving us an insider look at his role running  ⁨@ArrowMcLaren⁩ , the challenges of building a winning culture, and why he believes the future of  ⁨@indycar⁩ is brighter than ever with the new Fox Sports partnership.  ⁨@INDYCARonFOX⁩  Whether you're a die-hard racing fan or interested in the business of sports leadership, this conversation is packed with insights.Key Topics Discussed:The Million-Dollar Gamble: Why Tony turned down a house, a car, and a salary to race for free in the US.Rivalry & Brotherhood: The origin story of his friendship with Helio Castroneves.The 2013 Indy 500: Breaking the "bad luck" curse with KV Racing.Leadership: How Tony is transforming the culture at Arrow McLaren.The Greatest: Who Tony thinks is the most naturally gifted driver he ever raced against.
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