StandOnIt
Farm Truck
yep there is plenty out there to watch and or follow besides the Cup series. It should be evident by now to even the most casual Cup fan the direction the series is heading and is going to continue in that direction.
It has been interesting to see Nascar's solutions to the racing, how they were able to improve their 1.5 tracks that were the whipping post for many to some of the best racing in years. They have some work to do on the smaller tracks but they are handcuffed with being able to make changes on the fly because of the manufacturers. I wonder what the changes will be to the cars next year. I think the hoods and the splitter are going to get changes, but I think more changes will probably come about.
Every change as you know has R&D written all over it, and with that, we are talking $. I think that hood and splitter will be the extent of it, really.
Yup, but those NASCAR Blades look like somebody "engineered" it out of a refrigerator cardboard shipping box using a utility knife; until they agreed on the latest shape and dimensions. Then grabbed some basic material to fabricate the "approved" product -- compared to F1 and Indy Car wings and things.
Balderdash! (Ha, probably the first time I've ever written that word.)The package we had the last few years was badass, but made passing almost impossible on 1.5’s bc the engineering has just became too good. These guys were regularly hitting 200 and passing was so so tough...
Balderdash! (Ha, probably the first time I've ever written that word.)
been going on for years, the car out front taking away the air of another. What is different this year is passing for the lead. I wonder how that is being accomplished?Look what happened last night when Bowyer was leading. He held up the line with a slower car. As soon as he pitted, the guys behind him picked up speed, decreased lap times and were able to stretch it out a bit.
Something is very wrong from an aero standpoint if the leader can consistently hold up the faster cars behind him.
almost 20 years worth they have been using loop data in Nascar. I guess that is short times for someLoop data, during its relatively short and evolving existence, has customarily been used by qualified analysts who understand its limitations. Not by executives and PR employees as fodder for a marketing campaign.
I don't buy it. The sport grew to it's height during a time where 5 cars were on the lead lap every week. They chased away the hardcore fan with format changes and car changes. It's just leveling off now.The problem is as I’ve said many times to any opponents of the changes, the ratings stopped falling. The low downforce did nothing to bring in new fans.
Last night at the race I was there with 8 people, 5 of which had never been to one. They all loved the tailgate scene and “how close the cars” seemed to stay. Got excited for cautions as that lead to restarts and were really glued the first and third stages.
I’ve always loved NASCAR but guys unfortunately if you allow a rules package to let someone run away from the field, so will your casual fans. Just as the NFL had to impose a ton of rules against the D, NASCAR had to do something
High downforce hasn't either.The problem is as I’ve said many times to any opponents of the changes, the ratings stopped falling. The low downforce did nothing to bring in new fans.
genuine tests of driving skill
They are now talking about wider tires on the Gen-7.
We really are doubling down on this whole "IndyCar with fenders" thing. Let's make sure a cup car never breaks traction again.
I keep seeing "restarts are unbelievable", and that's it. Seriously guys? What is happening between restarts and the 5 laps following them that's keeping you entertained?
And stop posting these inflated passing stats for the love of God. You're probably getting 200 passes or more per restart thanks to all the teeter totter nonsense that goes on between scoring loops. That's impressive?
High downforce hasn't either.
There have been a variety of race format and championship format changes in addition to significant driver retirements that have led to the ratings drop since the ratings plateau of 2010-2013. Jeff Gordon, Tony Stewart, Dale Jr., playoffs, stages, you name it. This year is the first where there is a large degree of stability among those factors and it shows. When ratings drop again as Jimmie Johnson and Kevin Harvick retire it would likewise be wrong for me to suggest that the drop is wholly related to a sudden dislike for high drag and high downforce.
Yes, the sensible thing would be to stop clinging to the TV ratings concerns or attempting to tie them into the debate about quality or entertaining racing. They have very little to do with each other, especially in the short term. This bulwark will fade quickly. Ratings from Chicago were down slightly. Overnights from Kentucky, down slightly. Casual fans aren't flocking to the derided 1.5s to watch the fabled restart package. Nor would they if we got our way. People need to stop thinking about TV ratings and their personal idea of an entertaining race as related concepts if they want to have any hope of understanding what drives viewership of auto races and sporting events.
The bottom line, after we have the same old debate again, is that the claim that "high downforce and lower power is clearly the way of the future, so get on board or get lost" fails to convince, because recent history shows how often NASCAR ane the networks can change their minds to try to sell something new. If you genuinely believed the low downforce era was bad for racing and harmed interest in the sport, the summer of 2017 when NASCAR was publicly doubling down must have been a very bleak time. Get back to me in 2023 and we'll see if they are still preaching the same line, and then we can have the conversation about whether those of us who oppose this direction should go away.
Oh nooo, not a wider tire, could this be the end of cup racing as we know it?
On 18" wheels.They are now talking about wider tires on the Gen-7.
Look what happened last night when Bowyer was leading. He held up the line with a slower car. As soon as he pitted, the guys behind him picked up speed, decreased lap times and were able to stretch it out a bit.
Something is very wrong from an aero standpoint if the leader can consistently hold up the faster cars behind him.
NASCAR racing will be around as long as any of us, and isn't hanging by a thread and ready to perish if forum posters or Twitter users are too critical or mean to it. It was a strain of criticism that produced the current rules package. If you like it, I suppose you should be grateful that "something needed to drastically change" due to the dissatisfaction.
NASCAR owes us nothing and is owed nothing.
The current racing situation has proven to be dog****, so the apologists are now taking the 'stop whining you're lucky to watch anything' approach. Lmao
The current racing situation has proven to be dog****, so the apologists are now taking the 'stop whining you're lucky to watch anything' approach. Lmao