R Clarence
Team Owner
- Joined
- Dec 28, 2013
- Messages
- 3,105
- Points
- 343
How about that! Johnny Sauter finished in 15th place, but is second in points after the first race.
That's racin'.....
Heh, heh, heh.......
How about that! Johnny Sauter finished in 15th place, but is second in points after the first race.
How about that! Johnny Sauter finished in 15th place, but is second in points after the first race.
That will get your attention to the new format.How about that! Johnny Sauter finished in 15th place, but is second in points after the first race.
How about that! Johnny Sauter finished in 15th place, but is second in points after the first race.
In some ways I like it. Pays to have a dominant night and it's not all lost on the last lapHow about that! Johnny Sauter finished in 15th place, but is second in points after the first race.
In some ways I like it. Pays to have a dominant night and it's not all lost on the last lap
Winner is the points leader and in the chase... LMAO
Sauter didn't win and he's not the points leader...Sauter won.
Got it.
Sounds like the system will benefit those that unload good. Others that run in the back but work on the car throughout the day and finish well will be the losers.The system as designed doesn't exactly reward having a "dominant night". It pays massively to have a dominant first 40-50% of the race. No points are rewarded at the 3/4 mark for instance. Why is the first quarter worthy of points but not the third? A driver who leads or runs top 5 in the first 40-50% of the race has a huge points gap over anyone who didn't run up front early that outweighs the race finish. It makes no sense.
Sounds like the system will benefit those that unload good. Others that run in the back but work on the car throughout the day and finish well will be the losers.
Agree with that, it is a significant change. The stage concept is intended to address the sizable portion of the fan base that is bored by the middle part of the races. Complaints about boring mid race periods are rampant, even among long standing fans here at R-F. Go back and read "Rate the Race" threads.Yep. At the very least, everyone should acknowledge this is an enormous upheaval and not some minor tweak. Running up front in the first half of the race has meant essentially nothing by itself for the entire history of NASCAR and comparable auto racing.
Another option is to add some milestone achievements in the middle with some rewards to make it meaningful. I don't have a philosophical objection to this approach. If performance in the first half of the race has meant nothing throughout history, doesn't that amount to proof that the races have been too long throughout history? How can you defend a race format where the first half means "essentially nothing?"
I appreciate your passion for the sport, and I appreciate your argument although I disagree with most of it.My answer to that spans a few different levels:
1. I'm not against shorter race lengths for the majority of races. I believe the historically significant races should be left alone (Daytona 500, Southern 500, etc.), but I do not necessarily believe that current overall race lengths are the optimal length in the context of what would best sell the sport. What they've done is a foolish compromise.
2. I perhaps didn't express it clearly enough, but I didn't mean to state that performance in the first half of the race has always mean nothing. I've said "in and of itself" and "by itself" to indicate that the "results" from the first half of the race shouldn't carry final scoring weight by themselves, and never have. For the bulk of NASCAR history and in most other forms of racing, performance in the early portions of events is very important, because it gives one a much greater chance of finishing the event well. This is all the incentive that is needed. Football teams don't need to be rewarded in the standings for winning quarters and halves, but I guarantee that the teams that tend to win the most quarters and halves win the the most games over time.
The main reason this dynamic has changed in recent NASCAR history is because of the all the gimmicks introduced to induce and force closer racing. Without lucky dogs, wave arounds, and most importantly, intentional cautions that breed other cautions that bunch up the field and put nearly every semi-competitive car back on the lead lap with multiple restart opportunities to snatch races away, performance during the entirety of races would still be essential. As I have said previously, they are now trying to solve problems of their own creation.
3. I don't have a philosophical objection to 'spicing up' the early portions of races with enticements, if this is needed for practical entertainment purposes. To my mind, these should be $$ bonuses and not something tied to the official standings. If I were to yield to the idea that points should be paid throughout a race, they should be paid in equal increments. If the first quarter is worth points, the third quarter sure should be. But none of that is actually necessary or wise. These are over-regulated and over-manipulated contests and the sanctioning body is still throwing bad rules on top of the pile to try to stem the unwanted effects of previous rules. It only gets worse from here unless they start to pare down the interference, not add to it.
There has never been a stronger fan disconnect.Points are still being awarded at the end of the race. Bonus 5 which carry over.
Drivers are now incentivized to race for a few points during the event. We used to complain that they were stroking it until the last 50 miles.
New complaints are no surprise.
We used to complain that they were stroking it until the last 50 miles.
Awarding money requires a sponsor. Points are free.To my mind, these should be $$ bonuses and not something tied to the official standings. ...