NASCAR is at a crossroads. The next few years are going to be extremely important as to what its identity will be moving forward.
Plenty to be excited about. New teams with names like Jordan and Pitbull attached to them, rising stars emerging, new markets. And I'm sure after the way Los Angeles and St. Louis embraced NASCAR with Chicago on deck, I'm sure some other cities have made phone calls. Baltimore's hosted IndyCar before and embraced it in spite of what happened in 2011. There has already been a lot of chatter about Denver. We could even see Cup races in Canada and Mexico by 2024-25.
Along with looking to the future, NASCAR is also trying to reconnect with its past more than it did during Brian France's reign of terror. The shocking return to North Wilkesboro (THANKS DALE), the inevitable return to the Nashville Fairgrounds. After years of upsetting rumors about Martinsville's future during the BZF Reign of Terror, its presence and importance have been firmly solidified under this regime.
This year is also the first time in a long time I can remember NASCAR making headline news and it not being for awful reasons. The Hail Melon, Los Angeles, St. Louis, Daniel Suarez winning, Austin Cindric's upset at Daytona.
We also have a solid crop of rising stars like Ross Chastain, Tyler Reddick, and Ty Gibbs. The Xfinity Series has a healthy mix of aspiring young drivers as well as veteran racers such as Justin Allgaier and Josh Berry. We're seeing a diverse group of rising stars, from the short tracks to the speedways.
Hailie Deegan is poised to enter the Xfinity Series with a rockstar personality, a massive social media presence, and the potential to possibly one day make history - not just in motorsports, but all of sports. Rajah Caruth comes in with raw talent, an extremely likable personality, and a work ethic to match. We also have a crops of rising young female stars, Kaylee Bryson in USAC, Katie Hettinger in the CARS Tour, Isabella Robusto with Toyota Racing.
There is a renewed commitment to NASCAR's grassroots racing level, from Modifieds to the Weekly Series, and a spotlight on short track racing (THANKS AGAIN DALE) that hasn't existed since the days of TNN Motorsports and ESPN Speedworld.
There's so much going on now, and I'm actually emotionally invested in NASCAR for the first time in a long time.
NASCAR has A LOT of work to do. They have to capitalize on the positives, but also have to address the negatives. I'm 100% sure that the safety issues with the NextGen car is their #1 priority. As much flack as I'll give NASCAR, driver safety is something they take seriously. They also need to fix how this car races on short tracks, flat tracks and road courses. Those are the two most important things right now.