Jorge De Guzman
RESIDENT NASCAR STATESMAN and/or REGIONIONALIST.
- Joined
- Feb 13, 2017
- Messages
- 18,902
- Points
- 883
Bob breaks it down
and if you don't think that the car and the ancillary lessioning of equipment and manpower hasn't cut expenses I don't know what to tell you. So there are two sides of the story, The RTA will get a bigger piece of the pie, Nascar will get increased monies from the TV moguls and the world will continue to spin.. yawn.The drivers are the reason NASCAR is even making money in the first place. They are the reason ticket sell, the reason people watch on tv, etc. If you don’t think they deserve the teams and drivers deserve a bigger piece then I don’t know what to tell you.
This year has been something! Every week it seems when the circuit gets to the track, some kind of news breaks
Number one, they are a private company which means the France family owns Nascar lock stock and barrel. They bought out all of the stock holders shortly after the Brian left. So heavy on the "private"LOL.
Why doesn't NASCAR open up their books? Of course they want to keep the focus on cutting costs so it doesn't eat into their profits, which are going to continue to grow exponentially with the new TV deal.
Let's see how much they make every year and go from there.
LOL.
Why doesn't NASCAR open up their books? Of course they want to keep the focus on cutting costs so it doesn't eat into their profits, which are going to continue to grow exponentially with the new TV deal.
Let's see how much they make every year and go from there.
It works well for the conspiracy conspirators that way lolOne of NASCARs downfalls is how sneaky and secretive they’re allowed to be as a private entity now.
It works well for the conspiracy conspirators that way lol
surely you can come up with a handful. Here is one lolWhat’s the conspiracy theory.
surely you can come up with a handful. Here is one lol
"One of NASCARs downfalls is how sneaky and secretive they’re allowed to be as a private entity now."
This isn't stick and ball would be the first thing that came to mind. The second thing that I can't quit laughing about is picturing the room full of owners with OEMs in tow maybe a gerbil or two trying to figure out what is fair.Buy them out.
Everywhere else, franchise holders own “the league” and employ managers.
I imagine it currently as a back burner conversation involving Penske, Haas, a couple of other hitters from the RTA and a New Yawk City investment bank or two.Endeavor would be a changing of the guard.
Think big.This isn't stick and ball would be the first thing that came to mind. The second thing that I can't quit laughing about is picturing the room full of owners with OEMs in tow maybe a gerbil or two trying to figure out what is fair.
I imagine it currently as a back burner conversation involving Penske, Haas, a couple of other hitters from the RTA and a New Yawk City investment bank or two.
could be. Nascar doesn't have stock holders and nothing is going anywhere unless they say so and from what info Nascar is putting out on the wire none of that is happening.Think big.
Like Roger.
I don’t know a thing about the combat sports.That’s good. UFC is a very successful entity from what I see.
NASCAR had Goldman Sachs exploring the buyer’s market in 2018.could be. Nascar doesn't have stock holders and nothing is going anywhere unless they say so and from what info Nascar is putting out on the wire none of that is happening.
The Saudis aren't attempting to make money with LIV.Right now, the golf world is going through a similar deal... the PGA/LIV war. No one knows how that will turn out, but the Department of Justice has signalled that it will not allow the PGA to exercise monopoly powers against the upstart LIV league.
I wonder if the new TV contract will include a clause requiring a minimum number of chartered teams to attempt qualifying?You may have said it first, but the RTA led with their chin threatening to pull out of the series. Reasonable souls don't want that to happen from both sides, but the power is in Nascar's hands. It is a whole lot easier to find race cars and teams than a whole racing series from scratch.
TV execs are unlikely to be willing to swap Chase Elliott for Bubba Pollard straight up.I wonder if the new TV contract will include a clause requiring a minimum number of chartered teams to attempt qualifying?
I'm not a network sports exec but if I were one and saw any form of strike on the horizon, I'd already have my bargaining team on a conference call.
RTA profit-sharing? It doesn't help the big teams if they don't have anyone to race against.It's impossible to impose a salary cap in auto racing. Why should those with the deepest pockets be forced to limit their resources even further? NASCAR is extremely fortunate to have owners like Hendrick, Gibbs, Penske etc. who are willing to do whatever it takes to be the best.
They're not likely to tolerate swapping the #9 for a Late Model either.TV execs are unlikely to be willing to swap Chase Elliott for Bubba Pollard straight up.
Cars and stars.
Exactly.They're not likely to tolerate swapping the #9 for a Late Model either.
Well, the RTA has retained representation for the media negotiations. And so has NASCAR, separately. That was posted a few weeks ago by Adam Stern, iirc. So the RTA seems to believe they at least have a seat at the table.I wonder if the new TV contract will include a clause requiring a minimum number of chartered teams to attempt qualifying?
Seems fair if they take that 10% and give it to the teamsA reminder that as current broadcast contracts near their end, the revenue stream is almost $1 Billion per year. New agreements are expected to pay more.
So ... currently $100 Million to NASCAR. They might consider some cost cutting of their own.
But that would only be about 2.7 million per team. Nothing to sneeze at but not a windfallSeems fair if they take that 10% and give it to the teams
Might pay the tire bill. Won't happen anyway, NASCAR isn't giving up its slice.But that would only be about 2.7 million per team. Nothing to sneeze at but not a windfall
And flip that to the other side with the 9 car racing at Bubba's 1/4 mile dirt extravaganza. I think both sides needs to take a good look at the situations.They're not likely to tolerate swapping the #9 for a Late Model either.
It's never over lol continuous loop.Something has to happen.
The quality of the sport has been sucking for two decades.
Chase bullschit, fake yellows, then a goofy stick n ball playoff format where everyone gets a participation championship, fake-yellow-stage-yellows, less fans in the grandstands, new car that bounces off of soft walls but hammers the pilot…
NASCAR has been collecting big money while slowly schitting the bed for 20-some years. Now they’re negotiating bigger media contracts and giving the stars bread crumbs.
I hope something dramatic happens soon. The new car sucks. Slower lap times but quicker corner speed, crap-dirty-air racing is boring AF.
Quality of racing has been steadily declining with every greedy NASCAR gimmick change.
I’m glad the owners and drivers are finally asking WTF is going on.
Rant over.
RTA is going to make something happen.It's never over lol continuous loop.
Is $1M enough to put on a show at a level corresponding to Cup? Staffing, utilities, promotion, purse, taxes? Doesn't seem like nearly enough.15,000 seats going for $70 a pop covers $1,000,000 with a small profit.
I don't think it's even close to enoughIs $1M enough to put on a show at a level corresponding to Cup? Staffing, utilities, promotion, purse, taxes? Doesn't seem like nearly enough.
RTA is going to make something happen.
NASCAR cannot exist without quality race car drivers.
Quality race car drivers don’t necessarily need NASCAR.
We’re going to find out.
One little problem, you havent paid anybody yet. Track workers, advertisement, taxes per seat, insurance, general repair and upkeep etc......A NASCAR split a la IRL is not crazy. It wasn't doable 10 years ago- it is today. 10 years ago you needed a TV deal and tracks that held 80,000+ people. Now there are options. Online streaming for viewing. CBS and ESPN back in the picture of wanting motorsports coverage if you go the TV route. There are self-sustaining tracks all around this country that don't need the huge amounts of $$$ today's NASCAR tracks do. "But the sponsors don't want to be shown on a podunk short track". Sponsorship in NASCAR is essentially dead. What you see today is B2B deals that bring in a very small percentage of revenue compared to 15, 20 years ago. The money comes from the TV deal. The TV deal money is mostly going to the MASSIVE tracks we race at today. 100+ acre monstrosities that make money 1 or 2 weekends a year and would lose millions of $$ a year if the TV dollars weren't going to them. I believe that's the key issue- the tracks. Other tracks around the world PAY THE SACTIONING BODY to run at their speedway. From the dirt tracks in North Carolina to the massive F1 modern behemoths. Even in NASCAR's own ranks- the roots levels, the tracks pay NASCAR to bring the Modifieds or the ARCA tours there. We don't need 150,000 seats in the house now. We don't need 100,000. We don't even need 50,000 save for the marquee events on the schedule. The current model worked when attendance records were being set and sponsorship money was flowing in. Those have dried up. Either the teams fight for the scraps of the TV deals, or reverse back 30 years to the model the rest of the racing world uses.... I own a racetrack. I'll pay you $1,000,000 to bring your series here. That supports much of the purse as well. I'll sell tickets to cover my costs.... 15,000 seats going for $70 a pop covers $1,000,000 with a small profit. Online streaming revenue can be split 50/50. Right now what's happening is the TV money is being used to cover the losses of the tracks that are no longer profitable with the current attendance figures.
My unique perspective of 2 cents....
Pardon?Racing is the one sport that talent doesn't matter at some level.