WHY?
Also because people complained about how “boring” Watkins Glen was, and the immediate interpretation was somehow that the field needed a couple of opportunities to smash each other up for a lap or two before getting strung out again (or causing another re-rack).Probably because the last 3 RC's were green 90%+ of the time and the races ended with over an hour left in the TV window. Gotta sell commercials.
Bob Pockrass also tweeting, coming to restarts the front stretch chicane will be used.
Probably definitely a part of it. I also saw they also mentioned that some of the drivers were saying how “tough” it was driving that long under green.Probably because the last 3 RC's were green 90%+ of the time and the races ended with over an hour left in the TV window. Gotta sell commercials.
That should 1) hold speeds down going into turn 1, assuming the field gets through the chicane; and 2) sell more tickets in turn 4 and that end of the front stretch to watch the carnage, since the field isn't getting through the chicane anyway.Bob Pockrass also tweeting, coming to restarts the front stretch chicane will be used.
Probably definitely a part of it. I also saw they also mentioned that some of the drivers were saying how “tough” it was driving that long under green.
It made me realize even not regarding road courses that it’s getting to the point there are very few drivers left there who have ever driven a 500 mile race etc without breaks during the race (stages etc). Kind of sad.
Jimmie Johnson said the biggest change he had to make going to IndyCar was doing more upper body strength workouts compared to his cardio-based NASCAR training. No power steering, more downforce, quicker cornering = really high cornering loads.Road courses are pretty physically intensive so I can imagine that it would be difficult to be "on" for 2 hours straight (with intermediate 10 second breaks). Driving a heavy stock car through tight turns takes more effort than a lighter open wheel car.
Jimmie Johnson said the biggest change he had to make going to IndyCar was doing more upper body strength workouts compared to his cardio-based NASCAR training. No power steering, more downforce, quicker cornering = really high cornering loads.
Open wheelers don't have the design issues that come from trying to make Cup cars look like street cars. Their engineering makes the car help the driver as much as possible to do what it's intended to do, but that doesn't mean it's physically easier on the driver.I didn't hear that - I always thought the open wheel cars were easier to wheel.
They are easier, Indycars pull more G's because the have tons of downforce and much wider tires for the weight and that is why different muscles are used.I didn't hear that - I always thought the open wheel cars were easier to wheel.
I guess I have watched too many dirt races, they don't bother me like they do others. Two heat races and a feature.Man I hate them an additional cautions. They are an unsult to the intelligence and the whole freaking idea of having a race.
This. I saw an interview with Helio a few years ago. He watches TV lying on the floor on his right side, holding his head up unsupported. Try that for even a few minutes.You should see how open wheel drivers train their necks.
This is such an overreaction to one mediocre, mostly incident-free race. There was a similar mostly green road race the very week before that was pretty well-received!Sounds like they are going back with stage breaks for all of the road courses next year.
Using this place and the prevailing attitudes that abound, hardly ever runs parallel to Nascar's direction. Probably be right more than wrong going in the opposite thinking of this place in guessing what Nascar is going to do next.This is such an overreaction to one mediocre, mostly incident-free race. There was a similar mostly green road race the very week before that was pretty well-received!
For crying out loud, at least stop counting the laps during stage breaks.
I thoroughly enjoyed Indy, and the Glen and Sonoma weren’t bad. Road course racing is about strategy and driving talent. It’s not Daytona or Bristol and it shouldn’t be manipulated to try and make it that way.I've been thinking about this all day.
This just sucks. Plain and simple. What sucks is WHY it happened. NASCAR listened to the fans and stopped doing stage cautions on the RC's. We've had stage cautions on RC's for years, fans spoke, NASCAR made a calculated change.
What REALLY sucks... we all know WHY this is changing. TV said Sonoma, WG, and Indy GP all sucked, ended too early, and weren't captivating for the "casual" fans that want to see bumper cars at 100mph rather than strategy. I am appalled at NBC. **** TV for running this sport. I would bet Daytona 500 tickets that NASCAR was fine with not having breaks at the road courses.
Because they were boring. Back in the day you could count on a caution due to a part failure, engine failure etc... these cars are basically bullet proof.WHY?
Yeah I think that is part of it. Even the backmarkers are pretty dependable these days. The road courses went from one of the more exciting races to so so without the stages.Because they were boring. Back in the day you could count on a caution due to a part failure, engine failure etc... these cars are basically bullet proof.
Which is frustrating because one of the things holding NASCAR back is the length.Probably because the last 3 RC's were green 90%+ of the time and the races ended with over an hour left in the TV window. Gotta sell commercials.
Boring...says who?Because they were boring. Back in the day you could count on a caution due to a part failure, engine failure etc... these cars are basically bullet proof.