Open-wheel stars following Montoya

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BY MARK LONG

AP SPORTS WRITER

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. - A.J. Foyt, Mario Andretti and Tony Stewart opened the door for open-wheel drivers to race stock cars.

Juan Pablo Montoya kicked it in.

Montoya had one of the best rookie seasons in recent NASCAR history in 2007. He won a race, ran strong in several others and finished 20th in the Cup standings - better than most expected since he was making the difficult transition from open-wheel racing to stock cars.

In short, he set a new benchmark for others to follow.

There are plenty of followers, too.

Fellow open-wheel stars Dario Franchitti, Sam Hornish Jr., Jacques Villeneuve and Patrick Carpentier are making the same jump to NASCAR's top series this season. And they are hoping for similar results.

"Juan ended up in the top 20 in points and was Rookie of the Year. If I could do that, that's plenty good for me," Hornish said.

Although the influx of open-wheel drivers was met with some skepticism - defending Daytona 500 winner Kevin Harvick, for one, said they made a mistake - others believe it will be good for the sport.

The additions could create more competition for open seats, expand fan base and maybe even boost television ratings.

"You have to look at it as a positive," veteran driver Kyle Petty said. "If you believe the propaganda that we are the greatest racing series in the world, then you would hope you would attract the greatest drivers.

"Having those guys come over here, you're attracting champions to the sport, not just drivers."

It started with Montoya, a Colombian who won the 2000 Indianapolis 500, the 1999 CART Series championship and has seven Formula One victories. He moved to NASCAR's top series last year and managed six top-10 finishes.

"He's raised the bar for all newcomers," Villeneuve said.

The newcomers have equally impressive resumes.

Franchitti is the defending Indy 500 winner and defending IndyCar Series champion. The 34-year-old Scot also has 10 CART victories.

Carpentier, a 36-year-old Canadian and CART's 1997 Rookie of the Year, won races in CART and Champ Car before moving to the IndyCar Series in 2005.

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