SpeedPagan
The iRacing Guru
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- Sep 29, 2009
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So I will be honest, I wasn't always against the Chase, in fact I thought it didn't really affect the season that much. I mean you still have to race hard for the first 26 races so that you can make it into the chase so the first 2/3rd of the season still mattered. It didn't hurt that my favorite driver was five time in a row champion due to The Chase. Of course I think Johnson would've won five championship under the old system since Chad and Johnson have been known to adjust and adapt to changes.
Hel, I even thought NASCAR had some good ideas with simplifying the points system and making winning races actually mean something. That way drivers aren't just points racing, but they're going for that win because it'd mean that they have a better chance of starting out near the top when The Chase begun.
Everyone and their grandmother knew that The Chase was a gimmick, but I accepted on some level because as a business owner myself, I know the importance of always improving your products and making changes so that you'd get more customers. The fact that it was a gimmick was no more apparent than the introduction of The Wildcard system. However, I accepted it because I knew NASCAR wanted an "underdog" story and it could've lead to some great races.
However in 2011, I started to have a problem with The Chase. IMHO, Carl Edwards should've been the 2011 Champion, not Stewart. Edwards was the one that's been super consistent all year long and continued to place top 10s and top 5 finishes as well as wins while Stewart just kicked it into gear during The Chase.
Now, I do not like The Chase and I see for what it really is, a gimmick that didn't grow the NASCAR brand or improved the product, and this is nowhere more blatant than what happened at Richmond with Bowyer and what happened today with the creation of the 13th Chase spot.
NASCAR: Get rid of The Chase.
Hel, I even thought NASCAR had some good ideas with simplifying the points system and making winning races actually mean something. That way drivers aren't just points racing, but they're going for that win because it'd mean that they have a better chance of starting out near the top when The Chase begun.
Everyone and their grandmother knew that The Chase was a gimmick, but I accepted on some level because as a business owner myself, I know the importance of always improving your products and making changes so that you'd get more customers. The fact that it was a gimmick was no more apparent than the introduction of The Wildcard system. However, I accepted it because I knew NASCAR wanted an "underdog" story and it could've lead to some great races.
However in 2011, I started to have a problem with The Chase. IMHO, Carl Edwards should've been the 2011 Champion, not Stewart. Edwards was the one that's been super consistent all year long and continued to place top 10s and top 5 finishes as well as wins while Stewart just kicked it into gear during The Chase.
Now, I do not like The Chase and I see for what it really is, a gimmick that didn't grow the NASCAR brand or improved the product, and this is nowhere more blatant than what happened at Richmond with Bowyer and what happened today with the creation of the 13th Chase spot.
NASCAR: Get rid of The Chase.