The fourth installment of the Nashville Grand Prix was primed to be a gigantic disaster.

Established in 2021, ambitious changes to the event, which raced around the Tennessee Titans’ NFL stadium as a street race for the NTT IndyCar Series through 2023, would move it from its wonky layout to a new configuration resting right in the middle of downtown Nashville in 2024.

Set amid Broadway’s hottest spots for food and music, the race would serve as the championship finale and host city for an IndyCar celebration unlike anything we’ve seen in decades. The excitement for all that was meant to unfold was nearly unparalleled; announcements were made and promotions shifted into high gear.

And then a myriad of issues related to the building of a new Titans stadium destroyed the plans crafted by race promoter Scott Borchetta and his Big Machine team. By the middle of February, IndyCar’s downtown Nashville dream race was gone before it got started.

The party in Music City was being traded for Nashville Speedway and the doldrums of Lebanon, TN, where, despite multiple attempts to make IndyCar racing a thing from 2001-2008, locals near the oval positioned 40 minutes southeast of Nashville never quite cottoned onto open-wheel racing.

Poor attendance under its previous owner/promoter and a general apathy for anything that wasn’t NASCAR made Nashville Speedway one of many tracks that fell off IndyCar’s calendar. But with the circuit’s recent and energetic new owners in Speedway Motorsports Incorporated in charge of the facility and looking to increase its use, and Borchetta’s urgent need to deliver a successful event for IndyCar, he began searching for ways to transport the vibe of a city center street race to an oval that lacked the same natural charm.

Beyond simply saving the event, the true task was to overcome low expectations for its ability to thrive where IndyCar once failed.

“It’s been a massive undertaking, more than I honestly expected,” Borchetta told RACER. “It’s the education of repeatedly telling the audience where you’ve moved the race to, and we haven’t taken anything for granted. Just the other night, my wife Sandi and I were at dinner, and we’re sitting on the patio, and the table next to us, this 10-year-old boy was talking about what a big F1 fan he was, and he was showing his big sister and her boyfriend his Ferrari hat.

“And the parents were there, and they’re talking, and I turned to Sandi, and she goes, ‘Go talk to him,’ and so I went and introduced myself and talked racing, and I invited them to come out to the speedway because they had no idea it was happening there. So, I showed him a picture of myself and Lewis Hamilton, and just talked racing for a few minutes, and they’re coming out. And the story I keep going back to is, when you get young people early enough to see their first race, it’s like seeing your first concert.

“So that’s been part of the strategy. If we’re going to really build this, it’s a heck of a lot more than just having one successful event this year. We’ve taken this thing by the horns, and I’m proud of what we’ve done so far, but the job is not done. We have a few more days to keep grinding at it.”