Hi Long time lurker, first time poster. I felt compelled to reply after seeing this thread. Been a fan since 1989 or 90ish, I'm only 32 so I don't go back that far. I became a fan watching my dad cheer for Dale Earnhardt on Sundays,but became a die hard during Jeff Gordon's first few years. My dad told me when we were watching a race "that kid is going to be great", been hooked ever since. I think NASCAR was great from about 1990-04 . I loved the season long points system, every race felt like it mattered. And it didn't bother me if a driver clinched early, there were other points battles for positions in the top 10 going on, a rookie trying to win his first race, a veteran trying to keep his years long win streak alive or a vet trying to win for the first time in a long time. To me, the season long points system felt authentic. I think that's what NASCAR is missing most now, true authenticity and things happening organically. I also felt the schedule was more awesome back in the day: Wilkesboro and The Rock were such exciting tracks to watch for me personally. Wish they were still on the schedule today but reality is they are not. But man those tracks were throwbacks were it felt like it took more skill for the driver to win than engineers and aero like it seems most of the 1.5 miles are. I also feel NASCAR is missing it in the details,for instance the Winston Million was a pretty cool deal. I remember when Jeff won in 1997, it felt like he did something amazing in winning 3 of those 4 races. It'd be like a golfer now winning 3 of 4 majors in a year, I wish NASCAR would do something like this to emphasize their big races like the Winston Million used to. Say it's Daytona, Charlotte, Indy and Southern 500. I hate what NASCAR has become, but I can't walk away. It's such a big part of my Sunday's it'd be weird to walk away. I DVR most of the races now and really am not excited for these segemented races but..Iam willing to give it a chance maybe the first 8 weeks of the season and see what happens.