Opinion: NASCAR Needs to Continue to Mix It Up

Tim Healey
by Tim Healey

DuSable Lake Shore Drive is back open. The flooding has, hopefully, receded. The drivers are no doubt thinking about Atlanta.

Yet the Grant Park 220 that took place here in Chicago last weekend is still very much on my mind.


Not so much the race itself, though I think the event generally went well, and it was cool seeing a NASCAR rookie win in his first start.

Yes, sure, I am still thinking about what I saw and heard, and it was fun to go back and watch the broadcast replay to see what I missed as I roamed looking for photos. But I am also thinking bigger picture.

NASCAR’s first street race was a gamble, and it would’ve been no matter which city got the honor of hosting. Other series like IndyCar and Formula 1 have plenty of street-race experience, but NASCAR doesn’t.

Like with racing on dirt, racing in a football stadium, and expanding the number of road courses on the schedule, NASCAR decided to step out of its comfort zone a bit.

And I am all for it.

Yes, I am biased – as a semi-casual racing fan and Chicagoan, I was of course happy to see a race here. I hope the event remains part of Chicago’s social calendar for years to come. And if the street course goes away, I hope Chicago remains on the tour – and as a separate stop from Wisconsin-based tracks like Road America*. Maybe the Cup cars can return to Chicagoland Speedway.

*I love Road America and I believe NASCAR Cup cars should be racing there AND in Chicago. It sucks that the Cup skipped Road America this year, though Xfinity will still race there later this month. The Milwaukee and Chicago markets must be treated as separate Cup stops, in my opinion. I know the schedule is packed but NASCAR should make sure to have a stop in or near both cities each year.

Moreover, I want to see NASCAR continue to drift away, at least to an extent, from ovals.

In an ideal world, the Cup cars would race at several road courses – Road America, Watkins Glen, and Sonoma at a minimum, though I’d love to see Laguna Seca added to that list – while also having a street race or two, a few dirt-track races, and the Clash at the Coliseum. It is nice that the Cup series is now also racing at the Circuit of The Americas in Texas and had, by my count, six road/street/roval races this year.

Maybe an international race or two would be nice, especially after the Garage 56 experiment/experience at Le Mans.

I’d be fine with remixing some things to make this happen – maybe some rovals are swapped for some true road courses. Maybe the Indy stop is only on the oval, not the road course, as one example. On the other hand, I do enjoy roval racing.

Don’t get me wrong, I am not asking NASCAR to abandon its oval-track roots. The bulk of the schedule should remain oval-based.

But to become a truly national series and grow the sport, NASCAR should be looking at giving over 25-30 percent of its schedule to different types of tracks. NASCAR’s phenomenal growth in the ‘90s and Aughts was fueled in part by a willingness to bring the top series to new tracks in new towns.

It’s not just about snagging new fans, though. It’s also about making the racing more interesting to all spectators. I am not saying watching cars go fast and turn left on a banked track is boring – it can be, but it can also be quite entertaining – but I gotta say, it’s fun to watch these stock cars slide around a road course. Or a street course, in the case of Chicago.

I bet street courses will be even more fun in the future – Chicago was a bit of a mess. A lot of that is obviously thanks to the rain making it difficult to find traction, but it was also narrow. Assuming next year’s race goes on as planned – either NASCAR or the city can back out of the contract – and the weather is sunny, imagine how much fun it could be if the barriers are moved around a bit to create a wider track.

I also think the racing would be more fun because the drivers would learn to be more versatile. A big reason rookie Shane van Gisbergen won in Chicago is that he had experience driving large racecars with stock car bodies on such courses. Some of the clumsiness expressed by NASCAR regulars was related less to the rain than it was to just not being used to that type of racing.

We see the same thing on road courses – Chase Elliott and a few others dominate. Some of this, of course, is that certain drivers just thrive on certain types of tracks, and some teams know how to set the car up just right. Other drivers get the chance to drive in other series as they climb the NASCAR ladder. But I suspect that some Cup drivers just don’t get enough non-oval experience. Add in more road and/or street courses, let these guys get comfortable, and the racing will be better. Same for dirt racing, or super short tracks like what we see during the Clash.

It's not just about growing the sport – it’s also about keeping the long-time viewer interested. And creating new traditions to go along with the old.

NASCAR should be careful to avoid doing anything too “gimmicky” and the series should still retain races that had tradition and history on their side. And NASCAR should be aware that when it tries something new, and that goes well, soon enough what’s new becomes tradition and history itself.

It’s a fine line that NASCAR, or any sports league, really, must walk. It’s about balancing the new with the old, and about adjusting once the new becomes familiar. If NASCAR can walk that line correctly, it will gain new fans, keep the current ones happy, keep the drivers happy, and perhaps shed the stereotype of being a sport for Southern rednecks.

The good news is NASCAR has already spent the last several years trying new things. I applaud the series for working to avoid getting stale. Now, if it can just keep it up.

[Image: NASCAR]

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Tim Healey
Tim Healey

Tim Healey grew up around the auto-parts business and has always had a love for cars — his parents joke his first word was “‘Vette”. Despite this, he wanted to pursue a career in sports writing but he ended up falling semi-accidentally into the automotive-journalism industry, first at Consumer Guide Automotive and later at Web2Carz.com. He also worked as an industry analyst at Mintel Group and freelanced for About.com, CarFax, Vehix.com, High Gear Media, Torque News, FutureCar.com, Cars.com, among others, and of course Vertical Scope sites such as AutoGuide.com, Off-Road.com, and HybridCars.com. He’s an urbanite and as such, doesn’t need a daily driver, but if he had one, it would be compact, sporty, and have a manual transmission.

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  • DungBeetle62 DungBeetle62 on Jul 07, 2023

    Some will simply not be satisfied until the reanimated corpse of Dale Sr. is driving again.

    • Syke Syke on Jul 08, 2023

      You have a gift for understatement.



  • Syke Syke on Jul 08, 2023

    I was just happy to see them actually racing in the rain just like . . . . . . . bloody every other racing series out there, four wheeled or two? One of the first NASCAR races I've seen that I respected, and that includes the 9-10 Richmond races my wife and I used to do. I hate short tracks.

  • Scrotie about 4 years ago there was a 1992 oldsmobile toronado which was a travtech-avis pilot car that had the prototype nav system and had a big antenna on the back. it sold quick and id never seen another ever again. i think they wanted like 13500 for it which was steep for an early 90s gm car.
  • SunnyGL I helped my friend buy one of these when they came in 2013 (I think). We tried a BMW 535xi, an Audi A6 and then this. He was very swayed by the GS350 and it helped a lot that Lexus knocked about $8k off the MSRP. I guess they wanted to get some out there. He has about 90k on it now and it's been very reliable, but some chump rear-ended it hard when it was only a few years old.From memory, liked the way the Bimmer drove and couldn't fathom why everyone thought Audi interiors were so great at that time - the tester we had was a sea of black.The GS350's mpg is impressive, much better than the '05 G35x I had which could only get about 24mpg highway.
  • Theflyersfan Keep the car. It's reliable, hasn't nickeled and dimed you to death, and it looks like you're a homeowner so something with a back seat and a trunk is really helpful! As I've discovered becoming a homeowner with a car with no back seat and a trunk the size of a large cooler, even simple Target or Ikea runs get complicated if you don't ride up with a friend with a larger car. And I wonder if the old VW has now been left in Price Hill with the keys in the ignition and a "Please take me" sign taped to the windshield? The problems it had weren't going to improve with time.
  • SPPPP I don't think it's a sign of pressure from external competition, but rather a healthy sign of letting practicality trump triumphalism on the assembly floor. Does a 1-piece casting make sense? Imagine the huge investment (no pun intended) in the tooling for that structure. Now imagine that a change in regulation or market conditions requires a change to the structure. You're going to build all the tooling all over again? Why not use "gigacasting" selectively, to build right-sized modules that can be assembled simply and repeatably? Changing 1/3 of the tooling is much less costly. Additionally, it makes the vehicles repairable, instead of being subject to total loss in a minor accident.
  • Formula m Oh my first Ford learning experience was with a sales manager who is a former stripclub manager with a Satan’s choice tattoo on his forearm… was very eye opening. You can imagine how he has contributed to Ottawa over his long tenure with Ford. Hopefully A.I. gives a different experience
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