IndyCar also has made up considerable ground in safety, but Sunday's race was the final event for its current car. The new car scheduled to debut next season is considered to be a vast improvement in safety and technology standards. Even so, former Formula One world champion Jody Scheckter wants his son, Tomas, to quit the IndyCar series.
"I've wanted him to give up for a while," Scheckter told BBC. "Hopefully this will knock some sense into him and make him realize there is more to life. It really isn't worth it. It is the most dangerous form of motor racing at the moment."
IndyCar was at Las Vegas for the first time since 2000, and the first time since the track was reconfigured to add progressive banking. Many have complained the combination of the banking and the current car were an unsuitable mix Sunday, but the series' top drivers have remained largely silent on the issue since Wheldon's accident.
IndyCar CEO Randy Bernard has called a driver meeting for Monday, the day after the second of two scheduled memorials.
"It's very easy for you to blame things after it happens, and not before," said Nelson Piquet Jr., a former Formula 1 driver who now races in NASCAR's Trucks Series. He was watching his father race in 1994 when Ayrton Senna was killed, F1's last fatality.
"Before, nobody says anything, and when the accident happens everyone starts getting revolted and everybody starts complaining."
Stewart, the 1997 IndyCar
series champion, staunchly defended the series Friday and urged people "to take a deep breath and let the emotions settle down."
"I've wanted him to give up for a while," Scheckter told BBC. "Hopefully this will knock some sense into him and make him realize there is more to life. It really isn't worth it. It is the most dangerous form of motor racing at the moment."
IndyCar was at Las Vegas for the first time since 2000, and the first time since the track was reconfigured to add progressive banking. Many have complained the combination of the banking and the current car were an unsuitable mix Sunday, but the series' top drivers have remained largely silent on the issue since Wheldon's accident.
IndyCar CEO Randy Bernard has called a driver meeting for Monday, the day after the second of two scheduled memorials.
"It's very easy for you to blame things after it happens, and not before," said Nelson Piquet Jr., a former Formula 1 driver who now races in NASCAR's Trucks Series. He was watching his father race in 1994 when Ayrton Senna was killed, F1's last fatality.
"Before, nobody says anything, and when the accident happens everyone starts getting revolted and everybody starts complaining."
Stewart, the 1997 IndyCar
series champion, staunchly defended the series Friday and urged people "to take a deep breath and let the emotions settle down."
"You hate it for everybody involved. Randy Bernard has been getting beat up over it, and he shouldn't. It's part of racing, its part of what can happen," Stewart said. "It still boils down to the people that are steering the cars around. It's not that the cars are unsafe; there's still people that tell the cars where to go, so we've got to take responsibility.
"There is no reason for anybody to point fault anywhere. There's no fault in it. It's racing. It's a freak thing that happened, and it can happen every race."
NASCAR president Mike Helton does not view Wheldon's accident as an IndyCar problem, but one that affects every form of motorsports and forces everyone to push to make racing as safe as possible.
"Sunday is one of those moments where all those billions of hours that have gone into safety make you remember it's still a dangerous sport," Helton said. "It's safer than it's ever been, but no matter how hard you work, circumstances can line up to create a really tough situation. When that happens, it transcends to every sanctioning body in existence."
And even though Kyle Busch used words such as "inevitable" to describe Wheldon's death and spoke of the constant "threat that something horrifying can happen," drivers believe they are safe.
"I feel good about where our sport is and the safety procedures and precautions and everything that NASCAR has continuously developed through the years," Kevin Harvick said. "I think when you look at IndyCar racing, in particular and you look at the style of cars that they race and don't get me wrong ... they have a constant effort to be a part of the safety precautions and safety measures ... the bottom line is, those cars are running really fast and your head is hanging out of the cockpit and some things are going to happen.
"It is part of our business."
