LewTheShoe
Seeking Skill-based Meritocracy... More HP Less DF
- Joined
- Apr 21, 2016
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Most everyone here on R-F loves to dump on Texas Motor Speedway. I harbor no illusions about changing their minds, but personally I think it's a bum rap.*taps foot, struggling to find something nice to say about this track*
My #1 criteria for a race - any race, every race - is always the same... Is it a stern test of driving skill with results typically determined by meritocracy? If it is, then I'm entertained. If it's not, then it should be.
Before the 2017 repave, TMS was an awesome behemoth... very fast, very abrasive, tire-eating monster. Not quite a Darlington or Homestead, but definitely toward that end of the scale. People complained there wasn't enough side-by-side racing, which always seemed a bogus complaint to me. The objective is to pass that sucker, not to motor along beside him. (And now people are complaining there is *too much* side-by-side at Bristol... go figure.) It was always possible for a quicker car to pass a slower one, and the best drivers often worked their way from the back to the front. A skill-based meritocracy.
When the 2017 repave went down, the banking reconfiguration was designed for proper race cars... a full measure of horsepower, low drag, low downforce. As always, the smooth, high grip, fresh pavement was a setback to the quality of racing. And the high amount of side force remained problematic too. But it was still possible to pass a slower car. Better drivers in better cars often advanced from the back to the front. They did it by pulling right up behind the guy, thus taking the air off his rear spoiler to get him loose, then juke left and motor on by. Very good racing in 2017-18, and it promises to only get better as the fresh asphalt ages over the years.
Then came the infamous NA18D era, the "racertainment package" with neutered motors and excessive downforce and drag. TMS was not designed for this. The bad racing was the fault of the rules package and the new, misguided Nascar/SMI philosophy of WFO flat-foot racing, not the fault of TMS. If this is the style of racing you love, you probably like the Atlanta reconfiguration. I'm not saying that's right or wrong. I'm just saying it's not my thing.
As for TMS with the current car, we'll have to wait until Sunday to know. I *expect* the combination of medium horsepower and very high drag will produce dull racing with very little braking at corner entry and not much acceleration off corner exit. The Next Gen aero drag just saps horsepower, and with only 670 ponies, that's just not enough IMO. I had the same reaction at Darlington, but it's still Darlington so it's still great. TMS is no Darlington, so I predict the lack of power to be more of a problem.
The silver lining is that the new asphalt will wear and evolve if they'll just leave it alone for a few years. Look at Charlotte. CMS suffered years of lousy racing after their last repave, but this year the World 600 was a great race. I think that had more to do with the racing surface becoming rough and abrasive rather than the Next Gen car. Within a few years, Texas will do the same... if they just leave it alone.