Indy Tiregate. Loudon plate race.I sincerely have never seen a bad race. Ever. Each one has its own story. This is what I feel. Hell, I thought I didn't like road course racing. Went to Sonoma. I liked that too.
LaughableThere never was one.
Standards change all the time, in and out of sports.Laughable
Agreed. I think it is weird that we draw the line at Paul Menard or Ricky Stenhouse making the playoffs. Apparently it was still fine when Ryan Newman was one good restart away from being, objectively, the worst Cup champion ever. It was okay when Aric Almirola got in with what may be the flukiest type of win possible, a rain-shortened restrictor plate victory. Likewise with AJ Allmendinger qualifying with a handful of Top 10s thanks to his Watkins Glen win - because we like AJ. And yet again with Chris Buescher putting a Front Row car in with a win in the rain, on fuel mileage.I've disliked all 32 iterations of the Chase/Playoffs. This writer is a lightweight.
Laughable
Playoffs crown a winner. They do not crown the best.Playoffs are the best way to crown a champion. Old points system was broken, that's why the made the switch. 16 is a fine number for the playoffs and its not like all 16 make it to the final.
Agreed. I think it is weird that we draw the line at Paul Menard or Ricky Stenhouse making the playoffs. Apparently it was still fine when Ryan Newman was one good restart away from being, objectively, the worst Cup champion ever. It was okay when Aric Almirola got in with what may be the flukiest type of win possible, a rain-shortened restrictor plate victory. Likewise with AJ Allmendinger qualifying with a handful of Top 10s thanks to his Watkins Glen win - because we like AJ. And yet again with Chris Buescher putting a Front Row car in with a win in the rain, on fuel mileage.
Never mind the unprecedented wildest of wild cards with a 13th competitor being added at the discretion of the sanctioning body before that, or the numerous years before that where we could debate whether Jimmie Johnson was or wasn't the "deserving" driver and if "peaking at the right time" should be a thing in NASCAR.
There is no competitive reason the NBA should have 16 teams in the playoffs; no one has mistakenly believed that the Timberwolves and Wizards actually have a shot at taking the Warriors in 7 games, or that they even should have a shot. Professional playoffs are largely nothing more than massive revenue generators, driven by huge TV ratings and the biggest crowds seen all season in their respective sports, but that hasn't been the case for NASCAR. Despite all of the different iterations of whatever NASCAR feels like calling it now, it hasn't resonated well with the core nor with the casual fans it intended to bring in. There hasn't been a good reason for them in a while now, if ever.
I believe the subject of conversation, and my post, has shifted.Then, tell me what it is.....I mean this very sincerely, and not rhetorically. I love Jeff Gluck. However, I have always been a fan of spending time talking about what a good race is (or what "good racing" is) rather than simply defining a race as "good" or "bad." What is the "standard?" Perhaps Mr. Gluck could use this as evaluative criteria, and we could get this sport moving forward again.
Those are some of the reasons 'playoffs' don't make sense for NASCAR. In other sports with playoffs, the only teams participating are those who are actually in the playoffs. Every other team in the league is done for the year. In other sports, those teams making the playoffs are competing in extra games that extend the season and make for revenue for those teams. In NASCAR, the 'playoff' races are the same ones that have long been the last 10 races of the schedule, and playoff teams aren't making any more revenue than they were under the old 36-race season.Professional playoffs are largely nothing more than massive revenue generators, driven by huge TV ratings and the biggest crowds seen all season in their respective sports, but that hasn't been the case for NASCAR.
Back then they could play favorites and did. Today we all know at what lap to go to the john and get another 6 pack.At least they tried to hide the nonsense back then, now they rub our noses in it
You're damned if you do, and damned if you don't. If you do have a playoff, you get what we have now... endless complaining about it, but at least we have a championship that gives more reward to winning and less reward to conservative points racing than the pre-Chase decades.The concept [of playoffs] never made sense for an auto racing series.
I suspect fans of other sports do the same thing, but I'm not on those forums so I'm just guessing based on human nature.NASCAR FANS lol, just sit and complain all day haha
I like the full schedule Championship....every race was a playoff race. If the champ clinched 3 races early, never bothered me. Try harder next year. Also I always felt drivers were battling for positions in the standings...let me correct myself...,,the race broadcasts televised those battles better for 3rd place in points or say top 10. (Also felt as a viewer and fan you got to know those drivers/teams better because effort was made to get their stories what wrong this year, how they are preparing for next year. )Those were cool to me as it was a big deal to finish top 10 in points. Even Rookie of the year battles were highlighted more, I can’t begin to tell you last time A broadcast had ROY points battle graphic. Now it’s not prestigious at all the points, it just comes down to a One Race winner take all the NASCAR Homestead Bowl and that’s the only thing highlighted those 4 drivers except in the case we have a big name retiring.I’d bet we will have this playoffs for ever and I’ve grown accustomed to it. I always felt it was never broken, maybe more emphasis on winning a race but the old way never bothered me. The Chase/Playoffs is just something I’ve tolerated, it’s just a gimmick in my mind. I do wonder how things would go with the Winston Cup Points system In today’s NASCAR world though with the emphasis on winning and more bonus pointsThose are some of the reasons 'playoffs' don't make sense for NASCAR. In other sports with playoffs, the only teams participating are those who are actually in the playoffs. Every other team in the league is done for the year. In other sports, those teams making the playoffs are competing in extra games that extend the season and make for revenue for those teams. In NASCAR, the 'playoff' races are the same ones that have long been the last 10 races of the schedule, and playoff teams aren't making any more revenue than they were under the old 36-race season.
As to 'Game 7 moments', to have one you have to have a head-to-head best-of-7 series, not a one-race shootout. And many of those best-of-7 series end after 4 or 5 games. How about a best-of-36 series? Not that anything is going to change anyway.
Not to me...but I am old schoolOld points system was broken
The pre-Chase points system was not without its flaws, but I don't know if I'd go so far as to say it was broken. The reason they made the switch is because Nextel/Sprint wanted a playoff (probably also the same reason we saw a major overhaul when Monster came in) and NASCAR also probably thought it would help them compete with the NFL.Playoffs are the best way to crown a champion. Old points system was broken, that's why the made the switch. 16 is a fine number for the playoffs and its not like all 16 make it to the final.
The pipe dream this whole 'playoff system' fiasco eminates from.NASCAR also probably thought it would help them compete with the NFL.
NASCAR FANS lol, just sit and complain all day haha
Would it be any less 'healthy' than the current situation? The mainstream sports media would still be focused only on the Big 3.Lamestream media at work.
Joey Logano is 4th...160something points back already. Don't tell me that would be healthy for only three drivers to be relevant in July.
Indy Tiregate. Loudon plate race.
What else are we talking about? If Stenhouse can make the playoff. Menard. Newman. If the three HMS guys can hang on. What if someone sneaks in with a win, like Allmendinger at the Glen? Big stuff to follow. Totally not happening if there weren't a playoff.Would it be any less 'healthy' than the current situation? The mainstream sports media would still be focused only on the Big 3.
Personally I don't have much use for championships in racing. I watch and attend races because I want to see good racing and hope that guys I like finish well, not because I want to see how today's race will have long term championship implications. In local short track racing I find that it's the guys that aren't running for points that put on the best shows when they show up at the track because all they want is to win. I've also watched some fantastic racing on championship nights where the champion only had to take the green flag. Why was it great? Because I was there to see my favourite drivers run at great tracks, not because it was championship night.You're damned if you do, and damned if you don't. If you do have a playoff, you get what we have now... endless complaining about it, but at least we have a championship that gives more reward to winning and less reward to conservative points racing than the pre-Chase decades.
If you don't have a playoff, you are forced by commercial realities to shave the winners reward to near nothing and prop up the mid-field runners in the season-long points accumulation. This keeps the championship "alive" until late in the season, but is terribly unfair to the best teams, and creates elevated incentives toward boring low-risk points racing. So be careful what you ask for! We had this for decades, and I for one hated it every one of those years... it made the Nascar championship a laughing stock to me, and capped my interest in Nascar lower than it would have otherwise been. And many others who followed multiple forms of racing, and thus were exposed to alternative championship structures and philosophies, felt the same way.
If you don't have a playoff and elect to ignore the commercial realities, in theory you could revamp the points scale to appropriately reward winners and top-5 runners. That would satisfy sporting criteria, but would entail great risk of having the championship effectively decided with many weeks remaining in the season. Sports that ignore commercial realities are pretty much doomed in today's marketplace. For example, Nascar would be foolish to adopt a points scale philosophically similar to F1 or MotoGP or IndyCar, and apply it across a 36 race schedule... It just ain't gonna happen regardless of the sporting appeal it would have.
That's me. I watch the racing.I pretty much tune in to watch a race.