The ZL1 roadster is apparently orange, it looked red in the picture, but anyone who tries to photograph red/orange cars knows how difficult it is to get a true representation.
rich p - your message is a little cryptic, do you mean your client has a contract for first rights to buy if the seller gets the itch, or is your client in the process of purchasing? Not to pry, but you put that out there..
I would have to agree with the supply and demand. While those two guys may be among the more visible, the market was only "cornered" from the standpoint that guys like Kevin S were sitting on their collections, and the low key longtime owners weren't inclined to sell until prices got crazy. Bottom line is more enthusiastic millionaires were in the market than there were cars. Corvettes, for reasons I don't entirely understand, were really late to the party in this last "boom". Musclecars preceded the rise in value of the significant Porsches and Ferraris this time, and one could make the argument that Corvettes (and to a certain extent, Shelby Cobras and '65-67 GT350's/GT500's) really follow that market more. In my experience, many Corvette and Shelby guys are sports car guys trying to convince themselves that Vettes are not really Chevys and GT350's aren't really Fords.
And no, I doubt those guys ever jumped railroad tracks in Roadrunners while blasting "Paranoid" on the 8 track and didn't lose their virginity in the back of a Chevelle to the romanitic tones of "Stairway to Heaven" after seducing their companions with adequate amounts of Pabst Blue Ribbon (or equivalent regional brew).
To be fair, they shot sparks after bottoming out their Austin Healeys on the train tracks, and lost their virginity on a blanket in a park after the Crosby, Stills and Nash concert once the bottle of Boone's Farm was emptied.
But still they drove fast and got laid just the same, so there really is more that brings us together than separates us