I've long advocated the dumping of The Winston and Clash races - or whatever they're called these days. I'll give NASCAR, the teams, TV and the sponsors their due for launching them when they did.
As TV became more viable, the first few years of the Busch Clash were great. A quick, compact TV package that gave viewers a short view of what was to come in the 500. Win a pole, get in the Clash, get more air time for your sponsor, everyone supposedly gets paid more and is happy.
Then in the 1980s as Cup was poised to explode, RJR had great idea with the Winston Million and The Winston. Really was intended to bring even more focus to their brand and again reward teams and their sponsors for WINNING a race. From the first one to last year's event, the TV part of it never really caught on though.
The drivers all act like they still love it. Why? One, they have to vs. risk being fined by NASCAR for detrimental actions. Two, they get to stay home. Three, the money is good.
Many have suggested rotating the event to different tracks. With RJR having been a NC based company, it probably made sense in those early years to have it at CMS. But with KC based Sprint sponsoring the series now, I'm truly surprised they haven't lobbied to have it moved to Kansas Speedway.
Either way, if you move the event to a permanent location or a rotating one, the drivers and teams would really start to chirp about more travel costs and wrecked cars.
Many complain too that the schedule is too long or this track or that one deserve another date. My solution has been to either give the teams a well-deserved break before the summer tour - or make the weekend a points paying, legitimate race event somewhere in the country.
But the idea of an All Star race as others have said is nonsensical.
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Schaefer: It's not just for racing anymore.