Alexamateo
8th November 2007, 02:38
Muggle, I hope you don't mind, but I pulled this out of the "OW to Nascar thread" It's scope is so much broader than that.
Alexamateo, I am not putting all the blame on the influx of O.W. drivers. It is the direction that Brian is taking Nascar that is causing the big decline in fans, and not only any fans, but the important group of grass root fans. I live in Greensboro where they have one of the largest groups of the grass roots fans and listening to them talk it is obvious that they are unhappy with things recently. Many of them are saying the hell with Nascar and are becoming more involved with the other sports in the State. Nascar simply cannot lose this base of fans. I talked with some carpenters that were doing work on my house a while ago and asked them if they thought that Nascar would take a date away from Martinsville and they responded that if that happened it would be the end of watching nascar for them.
Along the same line the ratings were down at Texas:
Texas overnight TV ratings down from 2006: ABC's broadcast of Sunday's Dickies 500 Nextel Cup race at Texas Motor Speedway earned a 3.6 overnight Nielsen Media Research rating, Street & Smith's SportsBusiness Daily reports. The figure is 10% lower than the 4.0 NBC earned overnight for the race in 2006.(SceneDaily)
I am not surprised the ratings were lower, look at the competition. You had an NFL game of two unbeatens with at least 3 of the game's most recognizable all stars (P. Manning, Brady, Moss) It was a hyped game that lived up to it's hype. It's a shame too, because Jimmie Johnson had a career highlight duel with Matt Kenseth.
That said, it is true ratings have dropped. Now, the question is, why? Is it because it's grass roots fans are unhappy with the direction it's going and not watching? Is it the new fans who came in after the wave of mainstream attention following Dale Earnhardt Sr.'s death who are tiring of this fad and looking for the next new thing? Or is it simply a function of our increasingly fractured television audience?
I think there are probably elements of all three scenarios, but it's mostly the latter. Overall ratings for everything are dropping, even the NFL, a certain Colts-Pats game not withstanding.
All things considered though, even dropping, it is so much more popular and so much bigger than it used to be. The only time I was ever "in" racing in my life was back in college. I worked as an unpaid public relations intern for Charlotte (now Lowe's) Motor Speedway(Fall 1991). (Under Eddie Gossage and Susan Russo no less ;) ) Things were at a pretty spectacular level then, and they would have probably killed for half of what we have now.
I am running out of time to post all my thoughts here, but for now I do think things have plateaued in Nascar, but I hardly think it's the death knell, nor do I think Nascar is heading in the wrong direction. (Not to say I agree with every decision made of course)
What does everyone else think, and where should Nascar go?
Final observation: I first started following Nascar intensely in 1982, I know that's the year, because in the age before the internet, I cut out every article out of our local paper on racing and put them in a notebook. Back then, people were saying "It's not like it used to be, it's so corporate", and pining for the 60's and 70's. Yesterday at Trackforum, somebody posted a youtube about Tim Richmond being interviewed after his wreck with Dale Earnhardt at Pocono in 1982. Someone else commented how Nascar's not like it used to be, and was longing for the early 80's. :p :
Alexamateo, I am not putting all the blame on the influx of O.W. drivers. It is the direction that Brian is taking Nascar that is causing the big decline in fans, and not only any fans, but the important group of grass root fans. I live in Greensboro where they have one of the largest groups of the grass roots fans and listening to them talk it is obvious that they are unhappy with things recently. Many of them are saying the hell with Nascar and are becoming more involved with the other sports in the State. Nascar simply cannot lose this base of fans. I talked with some carpenters that were doing work on my house a while ago and asked them if they thought that Nascar would take a date away from Martinsville and they responded that if that happened it would be the end of watching nascar for them.
Along the same line the ratings were down at Texas:
Texas overnight TV ratings down from 2006: ABC's broadcast of Sunday's Dickies 500 Nextel Cup race at Texas Motor Speedway earned a 3.6 overnight Nielsen Media Research rating, Street & Smith's SportsBusiness Daily reports. The figure is 10% lower than the 4.0 NBC earned overnight for the race in 2006.(SceneDaily)
I am not surprised the ratings were lower, look at the competition. You had an NFL game of two unbeatens with at least 3 of the game's most recognizable all stars (P. Manning, Brady, Moss) It was a hyped game that lived up to it's hype. It's a shame too, because Jimmie Johnson had a career highlight duel with Matt Kenseth.
That said, it is true ratings have dropped. Now, the question is, why? Is it because it's grass roots fans are unhappy with the direction it's going and not watching? Is it the new fans who came in after the wave of mainstream attention following Dale Earnhardt Sr.'s death who are tiring of this fad and looking for the next new thing? Or is it simply a function of our increasingly fractured television audience?
I think there are probably elements of all three scenarios, but it's mostly the latter. Overall ratings for everything are dropping, even the NFL, a certain Colts-Pats game not withstanding.
All things considered though, even dropping, it is so much more popular and so much bigger than it used to be. The only time I was ever "in" racing in my life was back in college. I worked as an unpaid public relations intern for Charlotte (now Lowe's) Motor Speedway(Fall 1991). (Under Eddie Gossage and Susan Russo no less ;) ) Things were at a pretty spectacular level then, and they would have probably killed for half of what we have now.
I am running out of time to post all my thoughts here, but for now I do think things have plateaued in Nascar, but I hardly think it's the death knell, nor do I think Nascar is heading in the wrong direction. (Not to say I agree with every decision made of course)
What does everyone else think, and where should Nascar go?
Final observation: I first started following Nascar intensely in 1982, I know that's the year, because in the age before the internet, I cut out every article out of our local paper on racing and put them in a notebook. Back then, people were saying "It's not like it used to be, it's so corporate", and pining for the 60's and 70's. Yesterday at Trackforum, somebody posted a youtube about Tim Richmond being interviewed after his wreck with Dale Earnhardt at Pocono in 1982. Someone else commented how Nascar's not like it used to be, and was longing for the early 80's. :p :