Daytripper
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Outside of road courses, do you like stage racing?
I'm not completely against the concept of paying out stage points, but I don't like the stage breaks, even though i know the purpose they serve. I think in too many cases it screws with the natural flow and strategy of a race.
NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO points for stages are great, but stopping the race to count them is dumb, we have computers for that.how many laps does this waste? 6 +of bs.
Maybe they can still stop them so they don’t lose the time commercials etc but no pit stops allowed or only allow fuel and/or tires instead of both etcA long those lines, I do think that the caution laps between stages should not count towards the laps of the race just like the pre-race warm up laps do not.
Cautions ARE missed green flag racing.I’m fine with the cautions because if not it would be more green flag racing missed and bitched about.
really?? i though you were a race fan.Absolutely yes for me.
Cautions ARE missed green flag racing.
They shouldn't count the caution laps during any caution, period.Exactly why they shouldn't count the caution laps between stages.
Exactly why they shouldn't throw the yellow between stages at all.Exactly why they shouldn't count the caution laps between stages.
They shouldn't count the caution laps during any caution, period.
They only have two stagesWith the length of Truck and Xfinity races, cut them back to two stages. Right now its often impossible for there to be green flag stops because the stages are often less than a fuel run. Break them at around 35% or 40%.
How ever long it takes I will wait. I don't like them running around for 10 to 20 laps under caution and then staring the race with 2 laps to go. I would be fine with them not counting caution laps with 20 or less laps to go.I can’t imagine how long that one Coke 600 with like 20 cautions would have been. The winner may have gotten to celebrate as the sun came up.
That's a big part of it. TV has a set time to get the race in the slot of time they have allowed. Some of the bigger, longer dirt races I watch that don't count caution laps go on forever when there are a ton of stoppages for wrecks and track maintenance.I can’t imagine how long that one Coke 600 with like 20 cautions would have been. The winner may have gotten to celebrate as the sun came up.
What? If it’s under yellow, you’re not missing green flag racing…Cautions ARE missed green flag racing.
I was aggerating when I said no caution laps. For the reasons you just made is why I think 20 laps or less would be a decent number.That's a big part of it. TV has a set time to get the race in the slot of time they have allowed. Some of the bigger, longer dirt races I watch that don't count caution laps go on forever when there are a ton of stoppages for wrecks and track maintenance.
Don't get me wrong. It burns my ass when they run down the laps under caution to have a GWC. They don't want to take the chance of a wreck on the restart and the race runs long, so they run it down to the GWC.I was aggerating when I said no caution laps. For the reasons you just made is why I think 20 laps or less would be a decent number.
They only have two stages
Maths hardHuh? Stage one, stage two, and the final stage. 1,2,3.
They do that now when they have a stand a lone race. It's not a bad thingFor the trucks especially there’s little opportunity to get into a rhythm and get some good green flag racing in. Going back to a halftime as it started out with may be a better idea.
Has anyone figured out how stage lengths are set? Early on the first two were each roughly 25% of the total distance, with the final stage the remaining 50%. Now sometimes the second is almost twice as long as the first, and only a few laps less than the third.
I doubt it’s even intentional but the way they do it now kind of seems lined up (though not exactly) with pit windows.Has anyone figured out how stage lengths are set? Early on the first two were each roughly 25% of the total distance, with the final stage the remaining 50%. Now sometimes the second is almost twice as long as the first, and only a few laps less than the third.
Pre-planned stage breaks are less bad than NASCAR throwing debris cautions to manipulate races like they used to.
Funny how before stage racing, almost every race had multiple cautions for "debris" on track.
When stage racing began, suddenly debris was no longer a problem at most tracks.