I am not a NASCAR fan. I am a stock car racing fan. NASCAR IS hurting stock car racing. And they claim to be THE National Association for STOCK CAR AUTO RACING.
Local doesn't mean dirt.
Never mentioned the Southern 500.
If done right, like Bill France Sr. did, number of fans,affordabilityto race, making a living (if you choose to try), all, like water, would find its own level. The sport, as a business, really hasn't advanced that much since Big Bill ran NASCAR. He built Talladega, and nothing has matched the scope of that achievement in actually advancing the sport as a consumer product, it has treaded water.
As far as the size of the car reference, like I said that is what Bill Sr. did at the time. Of course in this day and age thedimensionswould need to be different. But my example is still valid.
Competitiontoday is manufactured by NASCAR, not the competitors. Those are the innovators. You can't tell someone who issuccessful at their job how they should do it. They've done the job. THEY are the expert. You ask THEM how it should be done. You wouldn't want or expect someone from an office job to tell the craftsman on the floor how they should be doing their job. When NASCAR was run for the sake of the sport, if you won by fifteen laps like Ned Jarrett did once, you earned it. If you won a championship by sawing apart a perfectly good race car to get half a roll cage to get your car back in a race, like Benny Parsons team (team mind you), you earned it.There is nothing wrong with runawaysuccess if you earn it. Petty Ent. was hailed as legends, Jr. Johnson, Richard Childress, also. Why? They earned it.
I do not speak from an uneducated source. From childhood, I sold programs at the local track, worked the safety crew, flagged races there, did some PA announcing, raced my own cars and for others. Then I moved on also, full time crew member on an ARCA team that everyone still had regular jobs, became a spotter for that team, and rented myself out to others, from 1/4 milers to Talladega. Became a full time ARCA Racing Series official working my way up to be one of the starters, to be on the accident investigation team (like I said, NASCAR knows a good idea when they steal one.), member of the rules committee, did some TV color on a couple of broadcasts, and yes a part-time NASCAR official.
Having experienced it all, like the late Johnny Hayes of US Tobacco and TNT broadcasts years ago said, while comparing the haulers and equipment between the ARCA and NASCAR garages at Pocono, ". . . running the same race track, with the same type of car, at the same speeds, with the same competitiveness, makes you wonder, who got it right?"
If you experience half of this and are a student of the sport at all levels, and paying some attention to other forms of motorsports, you thenrealize the slight change of a nose piece, doesn't amount to a hill of beans.
By the way, go to Foxsports.com, to the NASCAR main page, and watch the video of Darrell Waltrip talking about his first cup race in his family's own '71 Mercury. That's my side of the equation. It still could have been like that. You could REACH your dream. Not just keep dreaming it.
Oh yeah, you ain't lived until you seen thirty-six, 850 HP, 3,400 lb., cup twins of stock cars, dive off into the first turn of a one-mile fairgrounds dirt track, like Springfield, or DuQuoin Illinois. Just ask Ken Schrader, Tony Stewart, Andy Petree, Justin Allgier, etc., etc.