NBC reporter Nate Ryan calls the All Star rules "
socialized racing." I think he is right... taking from the fast guys, giving to the slow guys.
Jeff Gluck expresses a similar sentiment. He discusses the dilemma of racing as a sport versus an entertainment product in an
insightful podcast, and concludes that he is in the game to be a sports reporter, not an entertainment reporter. That means the best drivers in a contest of driving skill with minimal aero downforce. And that means leaving the plates to Daytona and Talladega.
I don't follow racing "for entertainment purposes." If it's good hard racing, I am always entertained by that. If it's not good hard racing but is presented "for entertainment purposes," well, I'm just not interested. I can be happy with various ways to structure the competition... playoffs, points systems, stages... these are not inherently right or wrong IMO. But to take away braking zones and off-throttle time in favor of droning around WFO... that is just wrong if you regard racing as a sporting contest of skill.