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View Poll Results: Should they adopt more road races into NASCAR? | |||
Yes | 23 | 44.23% | |
No | 9 | 17.31% | |
Yes, but only a few more | 20 | 38.46% | |
No, get rid of all of them | 0 | 0% | |
Voters: 52. You may not vote on this poll |
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25 Feb 2012, 16:52 (Ref:3030923) | #1 | ||
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Bring Road Racing To NASCAR!
I know that they run a few odd road races throughout the season, being Infineon, Watkins Glen, Montreal, and Road America... but I think it is time to split it evenly!
So many people enjoy road courses... I think it would attract a better crowd, to be honest... not so many hillbillies drinkin' thar beer at 'Dega. So, what do you think? Yes or no? And, if yes, what tracks should they bring to NASCAR? My thoughts: Mosport, Circuit of the Americas (Austin F1), Long Beach GP, Miller Motorsports Park, Barber Motorsports Park, Lime Rock Park, and Laguna Seca. |
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25 Feb 2012, 17:07 (Ref:3030928) | #2 | |
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Yes 2 or 3 road courses extra would be nice. At least one in the Chase.
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25 Feb 2012, 18:44 (Ref:3030969) | #3 | |
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My dream sport has a Daytona 500 (reluctantly...not into plate racing at all), a World 600, a Southern 500, and a Pennsylvania 500 (just to offend everyone who hates Pocono). The rest of the races are split 16 on short ovals, 16 on road courses.
But not my call. In reality, adding a third road course to the Sprint Cup would be really nice. I much prefer having more tracks than visiting the same 1.5-mile ovals twice (though I am aware a road course would be at the expense of Pocono or Michigan). |
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25 Feb 2012, 19:38 (Ref:3030989) | #4 | |
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I would like some more road courses, but I think the best way to do that would be to take 2nd dates away from a few of the tracks, especially Fontana, Loudon, Kansas, and Pocono.
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25 Feb 2012, 19:41 (Ref:3030993) | #5 | ||
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25 Feb 2012, 19:53 (Ref:3031000) | #6 | |
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Double-header NASCAR + ALMS/Grand-Am? I for one would like to see NASCARs running at Laguna Seca or maybe even Sebring (though not in the sports car races themselves).
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25 Feb 2012, 19:59 (Ref:3031003) | #7 | |
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Unfortunately my very unscientific study of Nascar fans in swVA shows me the road races are off weekends. I was the only one that watched the road races and they in fact hated them, especially after Montoya and Ambrose joined the series. Personally all for road courses and wish Indy was 60/40 road course and Nascar had maybe 5 road courses.
As for tracks they could go to, first we should push for the full Glen course and the long course at Sonoma as well. I could see them adding Austin in a few years actually. Laguna Seca could be interesting, how many cars off at the corkscrew on lap 1? Lime Rock could be exciting but would they run without one or both chicanes? Seemed like the ALMS guys had problems with the west bend chicane and who knows how the midpack Cup guys would handle it. |
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25 Feb 2012, 20:03 (Ref:3031007) | #8 | ||
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Road America for the Cup cars as well please.
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25 Feb 2012, 20:05 (Ref:3031009) | #9 | ||
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It's the same where you are now, broadrun. While I enjoy stockcars on the the road courses, they are HATED amongst most NASCAR fans.
For the OP and the tracks mentioned: Long Beach would be a disaster, Barber and Miller would a complete bore, while the old Lime Rock layout (with the uphill and no chicanes) and Laguna would be quite enjoyable, IMO. |
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25 Feb 2012, 20:56 (Ref:3031039) | #10 | |||
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Quote:
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25 Feb 2012, 20:57 (Ref:3031040) | #11 | ||
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26 Feb 2012, 01:41 (Ref:3031202) | #12 | |
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I could see Road America, Road Atlanta (they test there too, don't they?) and possibly Austin working for Cup cars, if there would be a will to add more road courses. Maybe Laguna, but it might be a bit tight in some places.
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26 Feb 2012, 04:02 (Ref:3031270) | #13 | ||
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Road atlanta and road america for sure.
just good tracks. If Salt lake wasn't so ugly i bet they could make a case for it in some configuration. i wonder how austin will turn out. |
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26 Feb 2012, 06:19 (Ref:3031310) | #14 | ||
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I put in for more road courses, but only a few more.
Realistically, the number of road courses NASCAR could do and put on a decent race is pretty limited. Street circuits are just out, period. These cars are too big, heavy, and lumbering to be able to actually race around such courses. Even Long Beach, which is hardly the tightest one we've ever seen, would be a mess. Can you imagine the field trying to snake through the Fountain Complex? And that's IF they can even manage to make it through Turn 1 without blocking the entire track when they crash on the start or subsequent restarts. I think Laguna Seca is too tight in enough spots that it will break up the field and lead to parade-like races, much like what we often get at Sears Point. In theory, I'd like to see Cup on the Long Course at Watkins Glen, but "the Boot" is not going to be very quick for these cars, and I don't know that the uphill run from the "toe" of "the Boot" iwill be long enough to set up a pass. Road America and Montreal are probably the best options for adding road courses to the Cup calendar. They have enough quicker stuff and long straights to give overtaking zones with some frequency, while also not having every corner be a 1st or 2nd gear affair for these cars. The Alan Wilson tracks of Barber and Miller would be horrendous. Barber has no significant straightaways. I think the Cup guys might get a longer flat-out run at Sears Point than they would get at Barber. Miller has a long straight, but only one, and then you get to watch follow-the-leader for the rest of the either 3.048-mile, or 4.486-mile lap. The infield straight ends in a couple of very quick bends, which will NOT be conducive to passing in NASCAR machinery. Also, the fans would get bored having to wait two or even three minutes for the field to get back around to right in front of them. Unfortunately, at Road Atlanta, I think about the only place you'd see passing, after the start and restarts, is on the back straight. There will be little passing into Turn 1, I would think, none in the Esses, and I don't know that the straight down to the bottom of the course will be quite long enough to set something up after getting strung out. I think the regional series do NOT use either chicane at Lime Rock, at least they didn't used to. Even so, that's just a traffic nightmare to run Cup there. Austin might be a reasonable choice. It should have a few flat-out stretches that are long enough to make something happen. Also, the three heaviest braking zones are supposed to have pitch changes in the middle of them, which could unsettle a leading car, and let someone behind dive in to take the apex and the position. Portland, especially without the chicane, could be an interesting one. Most of the corners at either end are not so slow that you get an extreme accordion effect. Both straightaways are certainly long enough, and I would like to see the Cup cars launching off the curbs at the end of the back stretch. I don't think Mid Ohio would work all that well. There would be the one good spot at the end of the back stretch. They might also be able to pass at "the Keyhole". However, the field would get very strung out around the rest of the lap, so I'm not all that hopeful. The Nationwide Series showed that Mexico City could be alright for racing. I'm VERY glad that that chicane they used in the front straight was short-lived. It's hard to know how Mosport would go, but it could be alright. I think it would work markedly better than Road Atlanta. Mont Tremblant (without either chicane) might also be exciting for these guys. They might freak going over the top at Turn 1 the first few times they go through at speed. Of course, at a number of these tracks, it would REALLY be useful to have rain tires, and the other required equipment for wet running. You know, I'm just waiting for the season when they can't get a race, or three, in on the designated week, because of rain. It would sure put a lot of strain on all the personnel to be running one or more events between Thanksgiving and Christmas. If the rain check happens at a track like Watkins Glen, New Hampshire, Road America, or Pocono, snow might prevent it from getting done at all by late November/early December. Finally, as for the complaints about running all these second races at tracks, I agree. There are only a handful or so that I would want to see twice a year. And I would like to see some that haven't been on the slate get a place: Gateway and Nashville come to mind. I'd also like to see a return to Rockingham. Last edited by Purist; 26 Feb 2012 at 06:27. |
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26 Feb 2012, 11:32 (Ref:3031417) | #15 | ||
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I'm a NASCAR fan and I don't like road courses. Stockcars should race in circles. That's what stockcars are for.
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26 Feb 2012, 12:11 (Ref:3031423) | #16 | ||
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I prefer the road races because then you see who can really drive a car and who's just a robot who can drive one style alone. The real quality of the likes of Smoke, Kyle and increasingly Marcos shines through.
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26 Feb 2012, 14:13 (Ref:3031457) | #17 | |
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Although I agree that racing stockcars on road courses seems strange as a concept at first, NASCAR really works well on them. The cars have large amounts of power with relatively low amounts of grip, meaning the cars can really slide around, and it makes for great racing.
Here just before the caution comes out the #2 and the #18 really show how pushing it really makes these cars slide. |
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26 Feb 2012, 15:20 (Ref:3031473) | #18 | |||
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Quote:
And I can't argue with that, although, I really enjoy big, heavy V8 powered cars slam off curbs, shift their weights in corners and fly down the straights, singing their beautiful song. |
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26 Feb 2012, 18:37 (Ref:3031545) | #19 | ||
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Just slip in Road America. They already have a slot in Nationwide so it's not a wild decision that would upset the oval people and Road America is a sporty enough track to keep the roadcourse people grinning. No, I don't believe roadcourses should be flooded into the NASCAR schedule although it would be interesting to find an Avus like track in America and see them race on such a really wide street circuit.
Nothwithstanding last years season finale, the problem is the oval-racing isn't as punchy and satisfying as it used to be in the 80's and 90's. It has been quite often pedestrian in fact maybe the new rules will go some way to redress this. |
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26 Feb 2012, 20:03 (Ref:3031590) | #20 | |
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Would be a good 3 or 4 road courses, it is enough but I do not get disappointed if they had more.
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26 Feb 2012, 21:16 (Ref:3031626) | #21 | ||||||
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I'd pick Mosport or Montreal first, Austin second, Road America third. Like many of you say, I'd add a road race to the Chase in September, and perhaps a second date in April or August.
Laguna Seca is unlikely because Sears Point is too close (to Laguna Seca and to Nascar). Quote:
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Agree. To me, the list is Daytona, Bristol, Talladega and Charlotte, for the tradition (mind that I don't watch Nascar races). |
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26 Feb 2012, 21:25 (Ref:3031634) | #22 | |
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How about NJ Motorsports Park?
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26 Feb 2012, 21:58 (Ref:3031655) | #23 | ||
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Bathurst with Local yellows available. Watch Ambrose perform then
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26 Feb 2012, 23:33 (Ref:3031684) | #24 | ||
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I think there should at least be two road races in the Chase. Road America is perfect for stock cars, actually, because long straights.
They do Infineon (Sears Point), Watkins Glen, Montreal, and Road America. I'd call Montreal a street circuit, so I don't see any problem with a track such as Long Beach and St. Petersburg. I reconsider my statement "Long Beach would be a crash fest". If they all dived into turn 1, yes. If they were smart, no. One thing I must add is they do Trois Rivieres (street course in Quebec) in NASCAR Canadian Tire Series, and that's just fine. As far as more generic tracks go, I really think Austin could be a track they could realistically race on. I think Nationwide could go to Lime Rock, with the first chicane only being used. It would be pretty awesome, and I, frankly, disagree that courses like these could not be good for racing. Think about Lime Rock. Long-ish front straight, with plenty of time to jump on the brakes and pass into Big Bend. The esses would be a time where you could get a run on a driver out of the corner, and into the first chicane, you could outbreak him. Then out of the that onto the back straight we go, down to west bend, where you could get another run on him going into the Diving Turn and then finally set him up into turn 1. It would be very hard on the breaks, but very gratifying, I think. I do iRacing and I'm planning to run a NASCAR (Nationwide) Road Series. A lot of people like the idea of Lime Rock! New Jersey (Lightning) would be perfect. Small-ish, with some nice straights and bends. Miller probably would be a nightmare, but K&N Pro Series went there, so we know it is possible. I see no problem with Barber. There are a bunch of long straights, it would cater to most NASCAR fans because it is all very tight in there, as far as the back and front straights being near each other so people can get a bird's eye view of the action, and there are a lot of beer drinking, hillbilly, NASCAR people around Alabama. Perfect track for NASCAR! Road Atlanta would be awesome. I have to draw back on Laguna Seca, as it is really tight and does seem to produce "parade racing". But Road Atlanta could be really good for NASCAR, and as most NASCAR fans are in the south, it would cater to their location. Sebring would actually be pretty awesome. And I think, speaking of Florida, maybe they should do a Daytona road course in place of Daytona in July, or the same for Phoenix or Pocono. I like the idea of Portland. They did a race there in the truck series a couple of times... it worked out fantastic! I think they could race at Willow Springs (California), because that is a fairly open, fast track. I wish we could do Lake Garnett or Lake Afton, in Kansas, since I've been to those, but I just can't see those happening, as they're about as wide as a golf trail. In fact, Afton IS a golf trail. Hallett could be OK, but I don't know if they have proper facilities. Finally, I think Belle Isle could be PERFECT for a NASCAR race. Fast, and not too windey. Finally... I think they should do an out-of-continent exhibition race. I like the idea of going back to Suzuka again... perfect track for NASCAR. |
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26 Feb 2012, 23:36 (Ref:3031688) | #25 | ||
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One roadcourse for the chase is a must. That there isn't one is a big oversight. That's where you could insert Road America.
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