2 Sweet
HMS 4-life
This isn't an argument about the racing of today vs yesterday, or anything like that. Lord knows it's been discussed here at length, numerous times. This also isn't about one or two (or three) guys winning all the races. Hear me out.....
The sport has evolved, and some things just can't be undone. Of course the best teams (usually the deepest pockets) with the best people and best equipment consistently run the best, as they should. I like to see the best drivers and teams being rewarded with victories. But over the years, the gap between the front and back of the field has reached a new extreme. In the 90's and 00's, you could hit on a setup and have a good run no matter what team you drove for. That was great! There were a lot of surprises, and who doesn't love rooting for the underdog every now and then?
You used to frequently see a midpack team bring a good car to the track and compete for a win. There was actually hope for the bottom feeders. Even in the years when Gordon or whoever was winning 30% of the races, you had your Bobby Hamiltons and John Andrettis of the field that could still manage an occasional win. The final results from race to race would vary quite a bit. There was a different guy every weekend 19th or 25th or 32nd in the points that could manage a top 5 or 10 run.
In 1995 for example, the driver who finished 30th in points (Kyle Petty) had a win and 5 top 10's. Ward Burton won a race in the Bill Davis 22 car a few months after he got fired from Al Dillard's 31 team. This was the same 22 car that had failed to qualify for a couple races earlier in the year with Randy Lajoie behind the wheel. You'll never see anything like that nowadays. Just looking at the first five races that year and you had guys like Steve Grissom, Derrike Cope, Dick Trickle, Lake Speed, or Todd Bodine finishing in the top 10.
Nowadays, there are rarely any surprises in the top 10 and it's always the same guys bringing up the rear of the field. The "have nots" are now completely incapable of being competitive whatsoever; they can rarely even sniff a top 20 unless it's at a plate track. Jeffrey Earnhardt, Derrike Cope, Reed Sorensen, Timmy Hill, Josh Wise, etc. are all guaranteed to finish at the end of the field almost every week.
There used to be much more parity in qualifying too. Almost anyone in the field was capable of qualifying up front on any given Sunday. Click on any year you want before the COT era and look at the various pole winners. Hell, just look at the starting lineup from any race back then and look at how much it varied from race to race. In 1995, guys like Ted Musgrave, John Andretti, Hut Stricklin, and Rick Mast sat on the pole. That's parity we don't see today. Look at some of the pole winners in 2001 for example.....Jimmy Spencer, Casey Atwood, Jason Leffler, Kenny Wallace, Ricky Craven, Jeff Green, hell even Stacy freakin Compton had two poles.
Here's a good example of parity, look at Loudon, 1999.....
http://racing-reference.info/race/1999_Dura_Lube_Kmart_300/W
Joe Nemechek won the race (30th in points) in the Sabco 42 car, Rick Mast finished 9th (32nd in points) in the Yarborough 98 car, and Hut Stricklin (43rd in points) finished 16th in the 58 car owned by Scott Barbour. That is the modern day equivalent of David Ragan winning, Matt Dibenedetto finishing 9th, and Cody Ware finishing 16th.....all in the same race.
And that kind of stuff happened pretty frequently; it wasn't just this one race. Gordon and Martin and Wallace and Dale and those guys won a lot because they were the best drivers in the best cars, and that's how it should be. But there was so much more parity across the board and so much more opportunity for the "have nots" to compete. If you don't believe me, look it up, pick any random race from 1994ish to 2003ish and see for yourself. The results from first to last were wayyyy more of a mixed bag week in and week out, which I believe was healthy for the sport.
Is this a problem? Depends on who you ask. If there's a "fix" for it, I'm certainly not smart enough to even know where to start. Hell, this may not even matter to most of you; a lot of you might only care about the stars of the sport running up front, and that's fine. I just figured it would be an interesting topic for discussion and hopefully I'll never bring it up again, LOL.
The sport has evolved, and some things just can't be undone. Of course the best teams (usually the deepest pockets) with the best people and best equipment consistently run the best, as they should. I like to see the best drivers and teams being rewarded with victories. But over the years, the gap between the front and back of the field has reached a new extreme. In the 90's and 00's, you could hit on a setup and have a good run no matter what team you drove for. That was great! There were a lot of surprises, and who doesn't love rooting for the underdog every now and then?
You used to frequently see a midpack team bring a good car to the track and compete for a win. There was actually hope for the bottom feeders. Even in the years when Gordon or whoever was winning 30% of the races, you had your Bobby Hamiltons and John Andrettis of the field that could still manage an occasional win. The final results from race to race would vary quite a bit. There was a different guy every weekend 19th or 25th or 32nd in the points that could manage a top 5 or 10 run.
In 1995 for example, the driver who finished 30th in points (Kyle Petty) had a win and 5 top 10's. Ward Burton won a race in the Bill Davis 22 car a few months after he got fired from Al Dillard's 31 team. This was the same 22 car that had failed to qualify for a couple races earlier in the year with Randy Lajoie behind the wheel. You'll never see anything like that nowadays. Just looking at the first five races that year and you had guys like Steve Grissom, Derrike Cope, Dick Trickle, Lake Speed, or Todd Bodine finishing in the top 10.
Nowadays, there are rarely any surprises in the top 10 and it's always the same guys bringing up the rear of the field. The "have nots" are now completely incapable of being competitive whatsoever; they can rarely even sniff a top 20 unless it's at a plate track. Jeffrey Earnhardt, Derrike Cope, Reed Sorensen, Timmy Hill, Josh Wise, etc. are all guaranteed to finish at the end of the field almost every week.
There used to be much more parity in qualifying too. Almost anyone in the field was capable of qualifying up front on any given Sunday. Click on any year you want before the COT era and look at the various pole winners. Hell, just look at the starting lineup from any race back then and look at how much it varied from race to race. In 1995, guys like Ted Musgrave, John Andretti, Hut Stricklin, and Rick Mast sat on the pole. That's parity we don't see today. Look at some of the pole winners in 2001 for example.....Jimmy Spencer, Casey Atwood, Jason Leffler, Kenny Wallace, Ricky Craven, Jeff Green, hell even Stacy freakin Compton had two poles.
Here's a good example of parity, look at Loudon, 1999.....
http://racing-reference.info/race/1999_Dura_Lube_Kmart_300/W
Joe Nemechek won the race (30th in points) in the Sabco 42 car, Rick Mast finished 9th (32nd in points) in the Yarborough 98 car, and Hut Stricklin (43rd in points) finished 16th in the 58 car owned by Scott Barbour. That is the modern day equivalent of David Ragan winning, Matt Dibenedetto finishing 9th, and Cody Ware finishing 16th.....all in the same race.
And that kind of stuff happened pretty frequently; it wasn't just this one race. Gordon and Martin and Wallace and Dale and those guys won a lot because they were the best drivers in the best cars, and that's how it should be. But there was so much more parity across the board and so much more opportunity for the "have nots" to compete. If you don't believe me, look it up, pick any random race from 1994ish to 2003ish and see for yourself. The results from first to last were wayyyy more of a mixed bag week in and week out, which I believe was healthy for the sport.
Is this a problem? Depends on who you ask. If there's a "fix" for it, I'm certainly not smart enough to even know where to start. Hell, this may not even matter to most of you; a lot of you might only care about the stars of the sport running up front, and that's fine. I just figured it would be an interesting topic for discussion and hopefully I'll never bring it up again, LOL.