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muggle not
1st November 2008, 21:16
http://sports.yahoo.com/nascar/news?...yhoo&type=lgns (http://sports.yahoo.com/nascar/news?slug=jb-junior103108&prov=yhoo&type=lgns)

FORT WORTH, Texas – Dale Earnhardt Jr. went from race car driver to philosopher Friday at Texas Motor Speedway. And in the process, stock car racing's favorite son likely ruffled quite a few feathers in NASCAR's front office.

In one of his most poignant interviews ever, Earnhardt confirmed what a lot of people – most notably disenchanted or former NASCAR fans – have been thinking for a long time.

Namely, NASCAR has grown too big, the season is too long and the watered-down result, particularly the Chase for the Sprint Cup, is hurting the sport dramatically, with potentially even more damage to come as the world remains in economic crisis.

With rumors swirling that current Sprint Cup, Nationwide and Craftsman Truck Series teams will lay off close to 1,000 employees at season's end, as well as reports that several teams across the sport's top three series are likely to close their doors or merge with others, this is one of the most challenging times NASCAR has ever faced

In a year that the sanctioning body was supposed to get back to its roots, it may be time for NASCAR to take an even longer, harder look at itself, Earnhardt said.

Foremost in his mind: the length of the season.

"We have saturated the market with race after race after race," Earnhardt said. "The NFL, they do such a great job. I hate to keep comparing to them and using them as examples, but they do the best job.

"They give you just enough to keep you wanting more. The season ends before you want it to. You get just enough to get excited and then it's all over and there's such a long wait. The model works."

With expansion both geographically and event-wise, the bloated NASCAR schedule has, in effect, become a victim of its own success.

"We have basically a very similar reaction that baseball, hockey, a lot of other sports do that have long enduring seasons," Earnhardt said. "There's lulls and inactivity between the fan and the sport itself at times. There's no way to fix that."

But perhaps Earnhardt's most pointed comment was a swipe at what could be construed as greed and excess, not only by the sanctioning body, but drivers, team owners and practically everyone associated with the sport.

"We're driven by the ability to go make another dollar and make more money and there's no way we would ever trim it down," Earnhardt said with a shrug. "When we were a 28-race schedule, the sport was giving you just enough to get really get excited about the next season.

"When we were racing at 12 o'clock, people were racing home from church to get to see the start of the race. We've just made it too easy and too much. We sort of lost a lot of the substance that we really had before and the character of the sport I think has waned a little bit, but its part of the times, too."

Even though it would mean a significant drop in revenue, Earnhardt would love to see NASCAR scale back. But he isn't holding his breath it'll happen any time soon.

"I don't think [NASCAR's current problems are] all our fault," he said. "I think it has a lot to do with a lot of other things going on, like the temperature of the world out there and the economy.

"I think the model that the NFL has is the perfect one and I feel like that's really our best bet for the most amount of success and to maintain it I think also that's the best way."

Unfortunately, Earnhardt said, NASCAR has already passed the point of no return.

"No way we would ever trim the schedule back," he said. "There's no way we would change what we really already have here."

Junior was equally vociferous in his thoughts on the Chase for the Sprint Cup format and how it has played out over its five-year existence, particularly this season.

Since NASCAR chairman Brian France introduced the Chase to the sport in 2004, it's gone through several so-called "tweaks," including expanding the qualifying field and rewarding drivers with bonus points for wins, among other things.

As much as fans are increasingly clamoring for even more significant change in the Chase format – if not scrapping it outright – now is the time for patience, not pestilence, Earnhardt said.

"I think it's not a good idea to go making a bunch of changes, especially with the Chase," Earnhardt said. "How do we understand what to change and how to make it better if we can't watch it and look at it for seven years or eight years and see how it's working and really get a good look at how it is working and not working?

"How can we really know what to change and make the right change? We shouldn't keep changing and changing until we stumble on the right spot and the right options and the right ways to have things."

More changes could further alienate more fans, something NASCAR can ill afford in a time when so many seats at races are going unfilled; when media outlets are scaling back – if not totally eliminating – coverage of the sport; and opportunities for up-and-coming drivers are drying up quicker than an ice-cream cone in the desert.

"It is kind of foolish to want to make changes," Earnhardt said. "This is kind of how we got in this spot in the first place. It's just going to snowball into more and more corruption and disagreement if we continue to change and change and change just because a guy has such a great year.

"I think the playoff atmosphere is better and I do enjoy it. We need to really kind of watch it happen for a while before we know what kind of change to make."

Given the economy, NASCAR might not have to change things. The problem may very well take care of itself by default, albeit it might be a long process, Earnhardt said.

"I think they should really remain the same for a while so we can get a good [look]," he said. "Especially with the turbulence with the economy right now, we all need to be really kind of watching and looking in different areas to make sure things are working right.

"We've got to make sure we're doing all the right things to keep the sport healthy and get through the tough times that we're going to have in the next year. I think we leave the things as they are."

Earnhardt Jr. may not be the eldest statesman in the NASCAR garage, but when he speaks, fans listen. The question is, will NASCAR?

nigelred5
2nd November 2008, 14:28
Every bit of what he says is true. Nascar is so oversaturated people are getting sick of it.

oldhippie
2nd November 2008, 15:35
i think the fans are more annoyed by the constant changes
much more than they are upset about the schedule
i am a big nascar fan and i like the number of races
i dont like the stupid chase and i dont care for the cot :p

Sparky1329
2nd November 2008, 18:35
i think the fans are more annoyed by the constant changes
much more than they are upset about the schedule
i am a big nascar fan and i like the number of races
i dont like the stupid chase and i dont care for the cot :p

I couldn't agree more. I don't think it's the number of races as much as it's the quality, or lack therof, of the racing. The COT is obviously a safer car but it has produced terrible racing. The handful of teams that have the resources to figure out the car consistently run away with the races. The Chase has helped nothing and nobody other than the Chasers.

The booth announcers keep trying to tell me how exciting the races are when I can see for myself that they suck eggs. When more than half of the field is a lap down well before the halfway point it's not good racing by anybody's standards regardless of the spin.

NASCAR would be smart to listen to Jr and others in the garage area which means they probably won't.

slorydn1
3rd November 2008, 06:11
I couldn't agree more. I don't think it's the number of races as much as it's the quality, or lack therof, of the racing. The COT is obviously a safer car but it has produced terrible racing. The handful of teams that have the resources to figure out the car consistently run away with the races. The Chase has helped nothing and nobody other than the Chasers.

The booth announcers keep trying to tell me how exciting the races are when I can see for myself that they suck eggs. When more than half of the field is a lap down well before the halfway point it's not good racing by anybody's standards regardless of the spin.

NASCAR would be smart to listen to Jr and others in the garage area which means they probably won't.

I find myself wanting to agree with you, you are right on about the COT sucking, although I believe some minor rules changes (front splitter, gone, no bump stops, and more room for teams to explore, larger tires, etc).

But with out even realizing it, we fans got exactly what we were clamoring for, the "Good Old Days".

During the "pre-COT modern era", say from roughly 1981-2006 we all got spoiled by the fact that the teams had all that development time with the "short wheel base"
(as opposed to the monster sedans of Petty's era) that we had all gotten used to 20-25 cars on the lead lap, and close finishes.

During the "good old days" how many times was the 10th place car something like 5 laps down, or somebody got a DNF with 4 laps to go and finished 6th....How many times did the winner lap the ENTIRE FIELD? It happened, lots of times.

Richard Petty won 200 races. I believe had his career spanned the same number of races but run from say 1975 until now, he would probably have had 80-90 wins, if that much, because so many more cars would have been competitive instead of the 6 or 7 per race of his day.

The Nationwide series still races the jellybean, but with 90 less horsepower than they had last year, and 150 or so less than a cup car, and those races have been snooze fests too. They are fixing to go to their COT in 2010. I hope the horsepower restrictions come off then or I shudder to think how crappy the racing will be there, too..

Lee Roy
3rd November 2008, 10:44
I hope that NASCAR is driving away fans. I'd love for NASCAR to drive off the majority the fans it's acquired over the last 20 years or so. It was so much better before they started stocking the stands with whiners.

I look forward to them being gone and attending NASCAR races being more like it was when I first started attending 40 years ago.