I was really skeptical leading up to the 6pm press conference yesterday. I went into the announcement with a negative feeling towards it but came out surprised that I really didn't hate it. It's definitely a system that rewards hard racing throughout the event. I'm looking forward to watching this all play out throughout the races and the season. The benefits of have a driver that is a hard charger will be tremendous when they enter that first race of the Chase.
How many times have we read that the races don't matter to a driver once they've earned their Chase spot? How they're just working on things leading up to the first Chase race? It's obvious, looking at the breakdown, they can't afford to do that unless they also want to give up a huge advantage that they are capable of achieving.
I guess, if you're on the side that doesn't like this change, you're really in for a tough time. I feel for ya. It's going to be a long season.....
Format Recap:
• Races will now consist of three stages, with championship implications in each stage.
• The top-10 finishers of the first two stages will be awarded additional championship points.
• The winner of the first two stages of each race will receive one playoff point, and the race winner will receive five playoff points. Each playoff point will be added to his or her reset total following race No. 26, if that competitor makes the playoffs.
• All playoff points will carry through to the end of the third round of the playoffs (Round of 8), with the Championship 4 racing straight-up at Homestead-Miami Speedway for the title.
• Championship points following the first two stages will be awarded on a descending scale, with the stage winner receiving 10 points, second receiving 9 points, and so on.
• The race winner following the final stage will now receive 40 points, second-place will receive 35, third-place 34, fourth-place 33, and so on.
http://www.mrn.com/Race-Series/NASC...2017/01/NASCAR-Announces-New-Race-Format.aspx