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30 Jan 2022, 21:27 (Ref:4096746) | #1 | ||
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You can’t get excited about a race with these safety car and stoppage rules
It amazes me how people get excited about a race with such rules. The way Safety Cars procedures make sure anyone 1, 2, or 5 laps behind the leader is put back on the lead lap after 1, 2, or 5 SC. Basically, any car without huge issues will be there at the end of the race, ready to fight for the win. 23 hours of nothing and a 1-hour Sprint.
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30 Jan 2022, 22:21 (Ref:4096747) | #2 | ||
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It's only the last lap of any race that's actually important, so why not just have every race as a one-lap sprint.
Takes away all the 'nothing' that would normally precede the last lap, and then we can all get on with our day. |
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31 Jan 2022, 00:14 (Ref:4096748) | #3 | |||
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"Sprint" races need to be more than one lap as there needs to be time for the field to shuffle itself to the actual finishing order. "Endurance racing", which (Daytona 24, for instance) was originated to determine not only who was fastest, but, also, who could endure. I used to love true endurance racing, when it was indeed who could design the fastest car that could endure whatever time/distance was necessary (which was what any form of auto racing was about, for that matter). Now, in any form of auto racing, there are so many gimmicks to keep the fields artificially close for two reasons, neither having to do with the roots of the "sport" (now just a show.....an infomercial, so to speak). There are so many regulations for the vehicles that they smother potential innovation in hope that the vehicles will be as close in performance as possible. Also the "sporting" regs. are merely orchestration for the same, "better" (closer, in reality) racing. The above, all to attract the lesser attention spanned/uninitiated "fan" to the show; satisfying sanctioning bodies pocketbooks and the sponsors' desire/need for more eyeballs/ears on their rolling billboards for as long as possible. The REAL sport of auto racing is gone I'm afraid. |
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31 Jan 2022, 07:25 (Ref:4096796) | #4 | |||
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Quote:
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31 Jan 2022, 07:33 (Ref:4096797) | #5 | ||||
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Yes. Quote:
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31 Jan 2022, 08:35 (Ref:4096801) | #6 | |
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I think Ganassi would disagree about "23 Hours of nothing"
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31 Jan 2022, 09:09 (Ref:4096802) | #7 | ||
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I admit to don't know how procedures changed but even a decade ago in ALMS and in general in most of north america motorsport series SC periods are longer because cars are allowed to unlap to place right behind the car they were following no matter how big gap was before SC. It's quite common to see daytona 24H finish with so small gaps between running for victory cars, nothing strange at all. |
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31 Jan 2022, 09:42 (Ref:4096804) | #8 | ||
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personally dont see an issue with the rules.
Its a good balance between endurance racing and keeping the race entertaining...it also removed any issues of being fair/ not fair with pitstops etc bare in mind too that until the safety car with an hour ago, we had a full 6ish hours of green running...4 grand prix lengths. |
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31 Jan 2022, 09:43 (Ref:4096805) | #9 | ||
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31 Jan 2022, 12:26 (Ref:4096825) | #10 | ||
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31 Jan 2022, 14:04 (Ref:4096832) | #11 | ||
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"23 hours in which you just need to stay alive, no matter how slow you are or if you need to take 2, 3 or 5 laps to repair something" would be a more accurate headline. I just made it concise.
During those 23 hours, we saw cars like #60 (winner at the end of the race) dropping one lap and #10 (second) dropping two. Both of them had to make no effort to catch the lead lap back again. Also, we saw some drivers pushing to the limit, showing great overtaking skills, and taking more risks to open gaps that meant absolutely nothing. You could start the race 10 laps down, or be 5 laps down halfway through the race and, if you run the remainder of the time free of big issues and without making any heroic effort and you have the exact same chances of winning the race that those in the lead. You could also roll 2 seconds off the pace for the first half of the race and have those same chances of winning too. Where is the value of delivering reliable and fast performance through a 24 hours period there? |
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31 Jan 2022, 14:48 (Ref:4096844) | #12 | |||
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I don't think anybody would say IMSA has the best safety car procedures, and nobody will say they like them, but you have to keep in mind how we got here. I can't recall all the details, somebody else please fill in if you do, but prior safety car regulations had an issue with class separation, and depending on your exact track position and when the safety car was deployed. It was a regular occurrence to have a class leading car gain a lap on the rest of its competitors simply by where they were on track. This ruined many a race in the eyes of the teams and fans alike. So the current scheme was developed with input from the teams to make the procedure more fair. There are probably ways to improve the system, but some of the things used around the world, like Code 60, have been said to be not possible in the US due to insurance regulations. Some of the advantages of the current system include less messy restarts (I know it doesn't seem like that, but it's true). By allowing the faster cars to the front and separating the classes, you don't have a situation where the green is waved and a prototype is trying to cut through gt and lmp3 traffic that are in their own race. Having a car dart through like that on restarts caused problems with the old IMSA system. |
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31 Jan 2022, 14:57 (Ref:4096846) | #13 | |||
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I agree that IMSAs safety car procedure eliminates some of the endurance aspect by allowing cars to get their laps back, but it also eliminates a lot of other issues too. tbh, its the least of all the evils, provides exciting races. And as noted above, theres not the garentee of safety cars....they ran the entire Roar 2 hour race without one.... |
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31 Jan 2022, 16:44 (Ref:4096878) | #14 | |||
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And a few years ago there was a Daytona race with hardly any caution, can't remember if it was the year with a small grid or the one before that. |
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31 Jan 2022, 17:16 (Ref:4096882) | #15 | ||
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I will just wait for Daytona 2023 and come here to see who is willing to bet 100 USD that there are not going to be Safety Car periods. I will bet my house on my side.
A team could literally be off the pace by two seconds a lap for half of the race (or probably more) while saving tires, fuel, engine, the risk of overtaking in difficult parts of the track, etc... and still have its race chances intact. To me, at least, that makes following the first 20 hours of the race totally dull, just waiting to see if someone brakes the car or crashes. |
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31 Jan 2022, 18:53 (Ref:4096894) | #16 | |
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I appreciate the different flavours I guess. I'm certainly glad this ruleset doesn't apply to Le Mans. I guess I like how Le Mans feels more like an organic journey that evolves rather than a series of sprints. That said LM also has its own issues.
Watching Daytona I find it hard to stay super invested in the mid-section for reasons listed above. But then when the final hour hits you're glad you've got some battles and close racing. It's apples and oranges - I think there's room for both approaches. |
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31 Jan 2022, 19:13 (Ref:4096899) | #17 | |||
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….just a different ethos and great that we can have both. |
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31 Jan 2022, 21:15 (Ref:4096910) | #18 | |||
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And when people sit down to watch this racing they are doing so with a decent level of knowledge of this. Accepting the compromises that have been made and watching for what it is. The positives, for them, of Daytona, sports cars, camaraderie (competitors, 10-10ths members), or even the physical experience of being there, outweighs the negatives. But it is an interesting topic, and I’ll give my view on it in a minute, and it deserves to be discussed. Last edited by Adam43; 31 Jan 2022 at 21:24. |
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31 Jan 2022, 21:39 (Ref:4096912) | #19 | ||
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Let’s start with the ideal. We don’t have cautions and the race pans out with no influence from them. That would be great.
What about safety? And back in the day we had something closer to the “ideal”, but how? Broken cars would be left by the side of tracks. Marshals would clear up on a hot track with, at best, maybe a local yellow. etc… I really don’t want that. And here is our first choice. What approach do we take to safety? Of all the options we’ve gone relatively conservative here. Note I don’t say too conservative, just of the all the choices from full risk to no risk we are on the conservative side. I certainly would not disagree with that approach to safety. The compromise here does not involve VSC (or similar) for IMSA. There will be knock ons to insurance and viability of the future of the series. Then we have fairness. How do we treat the pit stops and the wave rounds? To try and minimise the impact of luckily stopping at the right time, or the chaos of diving in to the pits (another safety consideration), the pits are closed and then opened for each kind of car. I can’t think of a better way. It will still favor some over others, but this reduces the impact and likelihood of that. Then there is the wave-round. You have a choice to let the procedure, like at Le Mans, cause a big gap in positions, suddenly making it a full lap difference (or 1/3 lap at Le Mans) depending where the leaders are and the timing of the caution. Or you wave round and people can gain chunks of time. Which is fairer? Here the choice is to minimise the chance of losing out rather than minimising the chance of gain? Would it be fairer the other way round, well that is just a point of view. I wouldn’t have wave rounds, but when I think about it my reasoning is no better than the opposite. I’d like to try and maintain gaps people had built up, but it isn’t great at that. It would at least leave cars between you and the leader and mean you still have to overtake. As everyone will probably stop this mixes this up anyway and my argument isn’t as good. It would remove some time faffing around behind the car and mean we get back to green quicker, which would be nice. But thinking about the whole of getting everyone bunched up, pits closed and opening, it isn’t that important. I have my views on which is fairer, but it isn’t simple. Neither approach is by any means perfect. What about the show? Is it for the show that this is chosen? I don’t know. There are reasons to have this situation anyway. A few years ago I would say that there was more influence of the show (I’d love to see some stats on number and length of caution periods over the years). I feel that has eased in the current mini-era in which we are in. I’m not going to claim that they is none of this, but the driving forces behind why IMSA has the approach above is, in my view, clearly more of the other reasons above. I was say their priorities are safety, fairness, and then show. Conclusion IMSA have chosen a level of safety. Inherently this introduces a compromise with how the race is run and the impact on the sporting fairness. To solve this you can go one of two ways, a solution that is more likely to unfairly penalise a competitor, or one that is unfairly benefit a competitor. They’ve gone with later. And finally, we know this effects the “show”, but that impact is less than it was. And one final point. You don’t often get a winner that doesn’t deserve it. Or, at least, not for the reasons above. We already have a lot of randomness in Motorsport; weather, punctures, illness, caught up in someone else’s accident, etc… You adapt and play the cards that are dealt. |
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31 Jan 2022, 22:06 (Ref:4096914) | #20 | ||
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I agree with much of what you said Adam, and I'm trying to think of other methods that would be fair and safe, but really scratching my head.
Code 60 is brought up often, but when you have track vehicles out there it can be problematic if there aren't gaps in traffic. Trying to get a big truck, or snatch tractor across the track and back to its parking spot could be a dangerous situation for the equipment, and race, drivers. I am hoping somebody comes up with a better solution in the future, but for now we have to deal with the fact that safety cars under multi-class racing structures are complex to operate! |
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31 Jan 2022, 22:33 (Ref:4096917) | #21 | ||
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What was wrong with the procedure adopted by ALMS in the last few years of its existence, i.e.the safety car picking up the first class leader that passes pit exit after the double yellow comes out? That effectively eliminates the possibility of (class) leaders gaining a lap on the field and is still rather straight forward and can be executed rather quickly.
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31 Jan 2022, 23:30 (Ref:4096920) | #22 | |||
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Doesn’t it only eliminate that possibility in one class? Hence the chance that the other three classes an unfair loss of lap will occur. Gaps shrink with any FCY, so that’s the same. Other cars are inbetween (lapped or other classes) unless you wave round.
What about the pit stop part. Do you still close the pits and open? This adds time to the procedure, but is probably more often fair in that someone doesn’t luck in, or suffer, from just having stopped. Current Procedue It might be worth just recapping the current procedure. I believe the criteria for having the full procedure is as follows (it was mentioned on IMSA radio, although not all the commentators seemed familiar with it!). If there is less than 30 minutes left in the race or it is less than 30 minutes since the last full FCY procedure of pit stops and wave rounds then they will not run the whole procedure. It would be good to confirm this. If they do the full procedure then race control will do something like this: Quote:
http://results.imsa.com/Results/22_2...lysis_Race.PDF This document also shows how long was under yellow (6 hours) and what the average green period was (about an hour) and the longest (just under 5 hours) and the shortest (under 7 minutes) It is not really dependent on the actual accident, but could be longer for a big problem. Please correct or add missing details. |
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1 Feb 2022, 08:23 (Ref:4096938) | #23 | ||
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It would be possible to do the pass arounds for class separation without crediting cars with laps back, wouldn’t it? At least then it would mean something to have gained or lost laps during green running.
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1 Feb 2022, 12:41 (Ref:4096965) | #24 | |||
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But in all honesty I think the teams like the ability to gain a lab back, whenever they talk to a driver or team owner during the race they always mention the procedure. We may be able to come up with a better solution, for fans, but if the teams and series like the status quo we can't really say much about it. |
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1 Feb 2022, 13:04 (Ref:4096969) | #25 | |||
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Makes me think of Le Mans 1966. What about those that lost a lap due to where the safety car came out, do we let them back round? Or those that lost out because of when their pit stop fell relative to the incident? Doesn’t help that. It also doesn’t reduce the amount of time under yellow. But it means people don’t gain a lap back on the scoring. Is that the only change? I need joeb’s matchbox cars! It would mean you could wave round and get the classes back together. This could be a safety thing. So that fast and slow cars aren’t mixed together for the restart? If the aim is to just not let people get a lap back maybe it is simpler to just not have a wave round? For this years Daytona 24 I don’t recall getting a lap back as being significant to the result. Although it has been in previous years. |
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