Racers are selfish; it’s the nature of the sport. Push to the front, get past all the others. Sacrifice to help another racer is extremely rare.

Yesterday, a story of sacrifice came full circle as Danish driver Christian Rasmussen took his first IndyCar race win. Last year, Christian’s team boss Ed Carpenter sacrificed his own career so his young driver could race the No. 21 ECR car full-time.

Twelve months ago, just before the IndyCar race at the Milwaukee Mile (America’s oldest race track) Ed Carpenter announced that he would step-away from the driving duties, making room in the cockpit for Christian Rasmussen. One year later, Rasmussen repaid ECR (Ed Carpenter Racing) by earning the team it’s first race win in 4 years.

Ed still owns the team, and nobody can fire him. At this point, he can only afford to continue competing at the Indianapolis 500. With enough funding for a two-car team, Carpenter had to make the tough decision to sacrifice the remainder of his own racing career to benefit a young driver at the start of his career. Yes, this is the plot from ‘Cars 3‘ when Lightning McQueen gives up his race number so his young protégé Cruz Ramirez can get her shot.

But it’s also the lesson from the 1982 film ‘Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan‘ when Spock drops a philosophical bomb on the audience. “The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, or the one.”. And maybe there’s even some religious texts about sacrificing oneself to save others, but this isn’t that kind of website.
Through Ed Carpenter’s selflessness and self-sacrifice, not only did his young driver benefit, but the entire ECR team did too. Ed Carpenter is a true leader and has earned our respect.
People just need to know when to step down. And I think this person knew and it paid off. Giving the reins to the next generation is always hard.
I can only imagine how tough it was to give up his life-long dream. But through his sacrifice, his driver won and the team is on top.
To do anything else would have been illogical.
You got me…. I had to read it twice!