Presented by Frontstretch.com
The Best Seat at the Track, The Best View on the Net!
Feb. 24, 2015
Volume IX, Edition XVIII
Tuesday's TV Schedule can be found in Couch Potato Tuesday here.
by Aaron Bearden
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Sitting in the Stands: A Fan's View
by S.D. Grady
Was the Daytona 500 a great race?
Well, I wouldn't go and give it a six pack. Maybe four brews. However, I did not walk out of the living room at the end of the day angry with the existence of the 2 1/2 mile superspeedway, as has become my habit every February and July. While there was a largish wreck on the last lap, the three-wide pack racing with cars bouncing off each other's doors earned a few heart-racing squeaks out of me over the last half-hour of the Great American Race. And after doing some preseason research this year, it is that pack racing that really did garner my adoration back in the day. I got to remember what it was like to sit on the edge of the couch for hours on end as I waited for somebody to slip an inch more than they could possibly control.
Sunday's version of the season opener held most of the hallmarks of those races the broadcasters so often harken back to, when they're trying to convince the new viewing audience NASCAR is the end all of spectator sports. We had Jeff Gordon sit on the pole in his final appearance as a driver at the track. The Hendrick, Gibbs and SHR crowd looked like they were ready to dominate the day and then, there was a plethora of young guns saddled up anxious to take away the trophy from the big boys. Two of the sport's stars were sidelined -- Kurt Busch, with his suspension while his little brother was injured in the XFINITY race Saturday. Danica and Denny set themselves up for potential excitement after exchanging words on pit road, post-Denny spinning Danica for the nth time. There were lots and lots of storylines for the FOX crew to chew on for the day.
Follow all that up with some engine failures, the new pit road penalty system and a couple minor spins. That made the day move along until we reached the crucial final 50 laps, when drivers had to stop playing with strategy and just put their nose where it wouldn't fit. What followed was some of the best plate racing I've seen in years.
All of this excitement adds up to remind me that, Daytona is a track capable of putting on a spectacular show; one that fuels the speedy demon in me, without necessarily raising the "WTF was that?" monster. However, Kyle Busch was injured the day before in a wreck that just shouldn't have resulted in such a serious outcome.
Yeah. Every year I and other writers spend thousands of words denigrating the plate tracks for their financial drain on the sport. Why do we run somewhere that is guaranteed to suck millions out of the operating budget? And this year, we had to add the brilliant concept of knockout qualifying so we could destroy even more cars before race day arrived. The barrel rolls, frightening impacts with walls and general wadding up of steel should be enough to make us reconsider the location of NASCAR's Super Bowl. But no.
Well then, how about when a driver suffers a compound fracture simply because it was too expensive in the first place to install SAFER barriers all the way around the track? That's an acceptable price to pay?
Every year, I walk this line of love and hate in regards to Daytona. Every year, it gets harder to watch it all. I dislike being angry, and as usual, I'm angry. It just took a day for it all to settle in. The three-wide racing mitigated the reaction only so much -- nothing can stop me from hitting my head when I think of Kyle Busch watching the 500 from his hospital bed.
But we're free of the monster, at least for another five months. By then, our memories will have softened toward these past ten days and Kyle might even be back in his car. Oh, wait. We've got Talladega to endure first. Never mind. I'm just destined to be an angry woman as long as we run at these places, and I imagine I'm far from the only one.
At least I'm looking forward to Atlanta. It's just as fast as Daytona (imagine that) but lacks the horror. Sounds good to me.
Sonya's Scrapbook
In his sophomore year of 1994, Jeff Gordon struggled to make his arrival in the Cup Series truly felt. While he won the Coke 600 and the inaugural Brickyard 400, he found the wall often. However, early in the season of '95, Gordon was making it plain he had every intention of taking home his first Winston Cup that year. The Purolator 500 at Atlanta Motor Speedway was the fourth race and it would be Jeff Gordon's second win of the season, leading 250 of the 328 laps. This victory followed two poles at Rockingham (win) and Richmond.
At Atlanta, only four cars were on the lead lap when the checkered flag fell, something we just don't see these days. Those four teams? Jeff Gordon, Bobby Labonte, Terry Labonte and Dale Earnhardt, Sr. All champions!
S.D. Grady is a Senior Editor for Frontstretch and runs a NASCAR blog called the S-Curves. She can be reached via email at sonya.grady@frontstretch.com. Follow her on Twitter at @laregna and on her Facebook page (she's an author, too!) at https://www.facebook.com/Author.SDGrady.
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TODAY AT FRONTSTRETCH:
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FRONTSTRETCH TRIVIA:
Monday's Answer:
Q: Unlike FOX Sports' NASCAR pit reporters, ESPN requires all pit reporters to wear firesuits in the pits. The reason for the move dates back to a race at Atlanta in 1989. What happened?
A: Back in 1989, the Motorcraft Quality Parts 500 at Atlanta Motor Speedway was the one points race that ABC televised each year (they also aired The Winston at Charlotte Motor Speedway). Compared to other outlets, they had different rules for reporters. Pit reporters were expected to wear regular suits in the pits. That was the scenario when Richard Petty made a pitstop. Dr. Jerry Punch was in the pit, calling the stop in a regular suit when a large quantity of fuel spilled out. Then, Petty's car backfired, creating a huge blaze. When ESPN returned in Darlington, Punch and the other pit reporters were in firesuits.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
COMING TOMORROW
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