Quote from Spydertrader:
Bristol hasn't been the same since they repaved the track a few years back. Ten years ago, if you told me I'd choose to watch Bristol on TV (vs. actually attending the race) I'd have questioned your sanity. Now, the Spring Race doesn't even sell out.
Looks like many fans have voted with their feet. Attendance is down at most tracks, and TV ratings continue to plummet. Gee, nobody saw this coming, did they? With cookie cutter tracks, cookie cutter drivers and taking dates from Historic Venues and moving those races to California, what exactly did NASCAR expect?
The whole CE vs. BK deal is a bit over blown in my opinion. If BK's car doesn't head airborne into the catch fence, we don't even have but a passing discussion on the whole thing. Of course, NASCAR feigns shock when witnessing cars spinning backwards with a wing on their deck lid reach liftoff.
Maybe NASCAR should have just left the damn spoiler in place.
Bottom line, the CoT has been a complete failure in all measureable aspects. NASCAR, in its attempt to legislate a spec car series has removed most of the 'fun' from this sport.
No wonder nobody is watching.
- Spydertrader
I think we feel the same way about this. The races lack drama and excitement, even though statistically, they are closer with far more competitive cars than in the golden days of racing. Maybe it's overexposure, maybe it's the cookiecutter tracks, definitely the rise of the corporate spokesperson-driver versus the parttime bootleggers we grew up rooting for and against. I think the decline of brand competition plays a big role. As a kid, I rooted for Richard Petty but also I totally hated Ford and GM. Particularly Ford, an antipathy I still carry. Everyone knows the cars today are identical with only a few graphics distinguishing one brand from another. In the old days, a real fan wouldn't be caught dead driving any make other than the one his favorite driver drove. Today, most fans drive minivans or japanese models.
I don't know what the answer is and I know for a fact that NASCAR doesn't either. In fact, their attitude is best described as denial. To them, moving the Southern 500 from Darlington and giving the date to Fontana was a no brainer. Probably some consulting firm ran the numbers for them and pointed out that Darlington was designed by a dirt farmer, was in the middle of nowhere and Fontana had the vast LA market. Also, fans at Darlington tended to do unPC things like bring Confederate flags to races. Tradition, history and great racing got lost in the Powerpoint presentation.
I think the COT needs to be junked. It's butt ugly. The cars are way too aero dependent. A guy gets in front in clean air and he can't be passed. If someone uses the bumper to pass, it's an international incident. My favorite NASCAR series now is trucks. I'll watch Superbike motorcycle racing over anything NASCAR puts on. I find the American Le Mans series and the Rolex sports car series to be far more entertaining, and I'm not a big road race fan. In fact, the best race NASCAR has each year is Tony Stewart's Eldora dirt track event. Too bad it's not the deciding race in the Cup.