Newbs aren't saving the sport.Explain
Newbs aren't saving the sport.Explain
Why not?Newbs aren't saving the sport.
I'd say it's 75% Car, 25% driver now.
When I started watching, it was 50-50. What makes a driver great, in my opinion, are a combination of these four things, in order from least to most significance
-Mentality (it IS a sport after all)
-Feedback
-Versatility (changing driving style, corner entry, angle, corner exit, lifting zones based on what car is doing and how it is handling)
-Ability to maximize speed in corners, which draws from versatility, to enhance this raw ability. This is what makes Jimmie Johnson a more talented driver than Kyle Busch, and anyone else in cup (most talented ever? ). Jimmie can, and has won more races with 4th, 5th, and 6th place cars in clutch time by being that good, and better than anyone else in those last two categories. Cant remember his last dominant race, save Charlotte last chase, and he still has won more than anyone the last two years. He's still the best in the business. Interesting that you became a fan towards the end of his career.
Keselowski had a Truex like performance tgis race, lead over 300 laps. Jimmie ran 3-6 all race. Beat Brad, period
Zippy did have any success without Tony. You could be exactly right.Yes and Zippy was gone also who I blame for the lack of success for Joey. As soon as Joey dropped to the xfinity cars with a different CC he was out running Kyle and Denny in those cars.
Truex proves it. He didn't just get really good in 3 years. The car has with their relationship to Gibbs and the team is making Martin look like a hero.
I don't follow?Yea, but my issue with this is that the cars never seemed to be THAT much of a saving grace. The teams were closer together.
Yes however that team was getting really good Martin's second year and that was before Toyota.Truex proves it. He didn't just get really good in 3 years. The car has with their relationship to Gibbs and the team is making Martin look like a hero.
Andy, one of the first postsI'm confused who said he was??
Ohh okAndy, one of the first posts
Right, team made the biggest jump in performance, not MTJ.Yes however that team was getting really good Martin's second year and that was before Toyota.
Kevin Harvick: Complete bottom-feeder (aka he runs the low line around the track almost exclusively). Very good at saving tires on a long run. If he's out front he's almost uncatchable. Has a tendency to choke away wins though.
Nickname from one years running. Like saying Petty is the king just not today.But....he's The Closer???
Yes but we have to admit that the combination Martin/Cole have taken over the 1.5 milers like Jimmy/Knaus used to. Running for a championship makes this a must as long as those tracks are the chase.Right, team made the biggest jump in performance, not MTJ.
Sure, because the car allows him to. When he is driving an average car, he runs average...Yes but we have to admit that the combination Martin/Cole have taken over the 1.5 milers like Jimmy/Knaus used to. Running for a championship makes this a must as long as those tracks are the chase.
The car isn't right until the driver and crew chief figure out how get it right. The car is probably more significant on an oval but it takes the driver to help get the car right before the race starts.They are all capable of driving up front if the car is right....
I don't follow?
But that is true in every case. That's why we call them a team. Some drivers think if they do well it is because of them. If something goes wrong it is the teams fault.Sure, because the car allows him to. When he is driving an average car, he runs average...
But that is true in every case. That's why we call them a team. Some drivers think if they do well it is because of them. If something goes wrong it is the teams fault.
I don't agree a 100% with that statement. Not all drivers are capable of doing more with a car not quite right to their liking. A good example is JJ runs up front and wins the race. Jeff Gordon admits he can't drive JJ's car. The car is capable but the driver is not. Seldom does the fastest car win the race simple because there are to many variables that determine the final outcome.I mean, that an average to above average driver never benefited from equipment THIS much, because the cars used to be closer together in speed. A driver of his calibur could benefit from having the "fastest car", but would only run 5-7th because more talented drivers with cars not QUITE as fast were simply just better. Now, the car can totally outweigh talent. There always seemed to be just a bit of a limit to how much a driver could benefit from a car before the gen 6
Um not necessarily. A good CC and engineers can get the car right based on what the driver tells them. Not many drivers make calls on how to fix car anymore. I put team in car category.The car isn't right until the driver and crew chief figure out how get it right. The car is probably more significant on an oval but it takes the driver to help get the car right before the race starts.
I heard that last race. Kyle and Kurt like to call the adjustments on their cars. Kyle Larson said he tells them what the car is doing and then drives what they give him. All drivers will do that soon.Um not necessarily. A good CC and engineers can get the car right based on what the driver tells them. Not many drivers make calls on how to fix car anymore. I put team in car category.
I don't agree a 100% with that statement. Not all drivers are capable of doing more with a car not quite right to their liking. A good example is JJ runs up front and wins the race. Jeff Gordon admits he can't drive JJ's car. The car is capable but the driver is not. Seldom does the fastest car win the race simple because there are to many variables that determine the final outcome.
A simple thing as a GWC can cause the best car to lose the race.
I don't think the driver (Kahne) knows what he wants. Watch Kahne start out at the mid to front and when he comes in to pit 9 times out of ten he gets worse. Also Kahne never misses a chance to pit, he will pit every time when others stay out. Rusty Wallace did the same thing at the end of his career, he would screw up a good setup every time. They want to car to be so comfortable(slow) they adjust it out of being competitive.Some CCs can't help the car, case in point Saturday at the first caution Kahne told Rodden car is good getting in , tight center off, Rodden one round of wedge in the right rear. Next caution, how's your car , you hurt the entry and center off is the same, ok we will undo the changes.
Truex proves it. He didn't just get really good in 3 years. The car has with their relationship to Gibbs and the team is making Martin look like a hero.
I disagree with this, and with the others who say the car is the key to success in Nascar Cup racing. Obviously, no driver can run up front consistently in a bad car. You need a good chassis, good motor, and good body with good aero traits. And you need a good team with adequate funding and resources. But there are many in Cup who clear this bar.They are all capable of driving up front if the car is right....
You are overlooking the fact that the current Cup cars have *less* downforce than previous cup cars have had for *at least* a quarter of a century. So I think you need a new theory to explain stuff, because aerodynamic downforce is not the reason.This doesn't seem to be the case as much now. I just think it reveals too much of a downforce dependency in these cars.
My fustration is that Truex's cars are SOO good, that a better driver with the 2nd or 3rd fastest car can't outrun a slightly above average driver because that driver's cars are SO much faster, every week.
I've never seen that before, not like this, so I attribute that to the gen 6, and it's reliance on downforce.
Not that I disagree with a lot of what you said, when Ray Evernham left Jeff Gordon his career took a steady downward turn, as long as Gordon was driving cars built by Evernham he ran better. Gordon was an elite driver, but these cars are so close that when a team finds 2 tenths, like Truex has on the mile and a half it makes a huge difference. I think there are probably 12 drivers that could have won Saturday in the 78 car.I disagree with this, and with the others who say the car is the key to success in Nascar Cup racing. Obviously, no driver can run up front consistently in a bad car. You need a good chassis, good motor, and good body with good aero traits. And you need a good team with adequate funding and resources. But there are many in Cup who clear this bar.
Having a good car and a good, well funded team merely gets you in the game... and then the driver makes the difference. There are at least 19 great cars on the grid, but not 19 drivers capable of contending on a weekly basis for wins and top 5's. Hendrick has 4. Ganassi has 2. Gibbs has 6 including the Furniture Row affiliates. Stewart-Haas has 4. Penske/Wood Brothers has 3. That makes 19 without counting Roush or Childress. If you put Jimmie Johnson in *any* of those 19, you'd win races and championships.
Jimmie Johnson wins races and championships; Kasey Kahne and Dale Jr. do not. Kasey and Dale have the same hardware, and they have all the engineering and all the set-up data, but Jimmie gets most of the trophies. Kevin Harvick wins a lot more than Kurt Busch, Clint Bowyer, and Danica Patrick, who have the same equipment and resources and data.
In 2015, Martin Truex comprehensively out performed all of the Childress drivers. In 2016 and 2017, he's done the same versus Kyle Busch, Matt Kenseth, Denny Hamlin, and Carl Edwards. Same hardware from the same fabrication shop. Same engineering and set up data. Those Gibbs drivers ain't exactly chopped liver. Those who think Cole Pearn builds autonomous self-driving cars don't know much about how difficult *racing* is at the Cup level. Practice speeds and qualifying speeds aren't racing, but they are hard enough. Racing against others is way harder than simply having speed. Winners win, and losers talk about "He had the best car."
In major league racing, the two series where the driver makes the biggest difference are MotoGP and Nascar, and nothing else is close to those two. The relative performance of teammates who have the same of everything proves that.
I disagree with this, and with the others who say the car is the key to success in Nascar Cup racing. Obviously, no driver can run up front consistently in a bad car. You need a good chassis, good motor, and good body with good aero traits. And you need a good team with adequate funding and resources. But there are many in Cup who clear this bar.
Having a good car and a good, well funded team merely gets you in the game... and then the driver makes the difference. There are at least 19 great cars on the grid, but not 19 drivers capable of contending on a weekly basis for wins and top 5's. Hendrick has 4. Ganassi has 2. Gibbs has 6 including the Furniture Row affiliates. Stewart-Haas has 4. Penske/Wood Brothers has 3. That makes 19 without counting Roush or Childress. If you put Jimmie Johnson in *any* of those 19, you'd win races and championships.
Jimmie Johnson wins races and championships; Kasey Kahne and Dale Jr. do not. Kasey and Dale have the same hardware, and they have all the engineering and all the set-up data, but Jimmie gets most of the trophies. Kevin Harvick wins a lot more than Kurt Busch, Clint Bowyer, and Danica Patrick, who have the same equipment and resources and data.
In 2015, Martin Truex comprehensively out performed all of the Childress drivers. In 2016 and 2017, he's done the same versus Kyle Busch, Matt Kenseth, Denny Hamlin, and Carl Edwards. Same hardware from the same fabrication shop. Same engineering and set up data. Those Gibbs drivers ain't exactly chopped liver. Those who think Cole Pearn builds autonomous self-driving cars don't know much about how difficult *racing* is at the Cup level. Practice speeds and qualifying speeds aren't racing, but they are hard enough. Racing against others is way harder than simply having speed. Winners win, and losers talk about "He had the best car."
In major league racing, the two series where the driver makes the biggest difference are MotoGP and Nascar, and nothing else is close to those two. The relative performance of teammates who have the same of everything proves that.
You are overlooking the fact that the current Cup cars have *less* downforce than previous cup cars have had for *at least* a quarter of a century. So I think you need a new theory to explain stuff, because aerodynamic downforce is not the reason.
I don't think the driver (Kahne) knows what he wants. Watch Kahne start out at the mid to front and when he comes in to pit 9 times out of ten he gets worse. Also Kahne never misses a chance to pit, he will pit every time when others stay out. Rusty Wallace did the same thing at the end of his career, he would screw up a good setup every time. They want to car to be so comfortable(slow) they adjust it out of being competitive.
Wanna help me find a new driver?