Wally said:
Ahh, gather 'round kids, it's that time again. Time for people who never had, and never will watch a NASCAR race tell them how to fix it by making it like any number of existing series that people already aren't watching. No, Virginia, there is no production car in a stockcar. A NASCAR stockcar is not based on any current street car but it is very similar to the cars tens of thousands of people race at tracks all over the country. The fans are familiar with those cars, may watch them at those local tracks when NASCAR isn't in town, or even work on or drive one themselves. Most of the people involved in the top series' came from these tracks so they may even know and follow people they are familiar with. Because of this often times the cars are secondary to the fans who likely follow a driver or team that they like.
There are lots of reasons that attendance and ratings are falling. Like many sports they've gotten expensive to attend, there is more competition from other forms of entertainment, but of all the people I know that stopped following NASCAR not one of them has said "If only the cars were more like my uncle's Camry" The shape and features are only there because of manufacturing money. Once you go to the lower levels the cars become even less recognizable as production cars but remain popular because they are durable, relatively inexpensive to maintain, and easy to fix. If using a stock, unmodified, production car was what people wanted to watch there are any number of series that fill that need. Not one of them draws as many spectators as a Cup car making an appearance at a supermarket opening.
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Fielding $250,000 race cars with rules based on the 1970’s versions isn’t working anymore. You may be right that the expense of attending has gotten too far out of reach and the cost of winning too high but I think it’s because we don’t have any hero’s anymore.
Hero’s are people like you and I who start modestly and wind up successful in-spite of obstacles. Dale Earnhardt, David Pearson, Richard Petty etc.
Right now the buy in to race competitively even at the local track requires an above average income. Eliminating a vast portion of the population.
If the series is going to be successful hero’s are needed.
Then the second part, It’s got to be something that seems attainable. “I can do that”. The idea that kids can imagine themselves doing that. All kids, any kids, ordinary kids.
To the point where they drag their parents to local events.
Yes a close resemblance to something familiar is important. It’s why Midgets and sprint cars died and Stock car racing grew and flourished.
Also why it’s dying. Is there a single piece on a modern stock car that is stock anymore? So if everything is different why not have them more like Formula 1? Or Indycar?