Wednesday, July 08, 2015

The Frontstretch Newsletter: NEW! Check Out Our Podcast!

THE FRONTSTRETCH NEWSLETTER
Presented by Frontstretch.com
The Best Seat at the Track, The Best View on the Net!
Jul. 8, 2015
Volume IX, Edition CXIV

~~~~~~~~~~
FRONTSTRETCH PODCAST MAKES DEBUT! Check out the first edition of our Frontstretch podcast, our new weekly spot designed to bring you the best in racing coverage and analysis. This week, the trio of Matt Stallknecht, Aaron Bearden, and Mike Neff look back on the horrifying Austin Dillon wreck and what NASCAR can do to fix the situation going forward. Plus, we'll have a look at why Dale Earnhardt, Jr. is back as the plate race king and an inside take on Kentucky testing this week. LISTEN/DOWNLOAD HERE

For sponsorship opportunities surrounding the new podcast, please contact us at frontstretcheditors@googlegroups.com.
~~~~~~~~~~
What to Watch: Wednesday

- Today, Sprint Cup teams are scheduled to pull into Kentucky Speedway for a rare open test of the rules that will debut this weekend.  No TV coverage will be available.  However, the sessions (3-5 and 6-8 p.m.) will have timing and scoring available at nascar.com.

~~~~~~~~~~
Top News
by the Frontstretch Staff

NASCAR Announces Rule Package Changes for Indianapolis, Michigan, Darlington and Richmond

During a teleconference late Tuesday afternoon, NASCAR Senior Vice President Steve O'Donnell announced additional rule changes that will affect four more races after Kentucky.  Darlington will feature a low downforce configuration recently experimented with during a tire test.  Indianapolis and Michigan will feature a high downforce configuration while Richmond will debut a new tire for the track designed by Goodyear.  Read more

Buddy Baker Diagnosed With Lung Cancer, Steps Away from SiriusXM Hosting Duties

Tuesday, former Cup Series racer and current SiriusXM NASCAR Radio personality Buddy Baker announced that he has an aggressive form of lung cancer.  As a result, he is stepping away from radio duties, effective immediately.  Read more

Have news for The Frontstretch? Don't hesitate to let us know; email us at phil.allaway@frontstretch.com with a promising lead or tip.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Today's Featured Commentary
The School of Hard Knocks
Professor of Speed
by Mark Howell

There is an old adage, or at least a belief, in engineering that the road to improvement is paved with failure.

Flawless performance teaches an engineer nothing worthwhile. It is only through terrible (and sometimes tragic) consequences that the faults in a vehicle can be discovered. Once such faults have been revealed, they can then be addressed and corrected.

That leads me to the current state of NASCAR and the plight of restrictor plate racing at Daytona International Speedway.

The horrific events Monday morning caused NASCAR Nation to once again rise up and debate the merits of plate racing at superspeedways. For all those who argued that plate racing was a necessary evil at Daytona, there were those who called for wholesale change in either motors, aerodynamics or both. Serious damage to the catchfence from Austin Dillon's late-race/early-morning wreck also brought calls for change, as in the notion that perhaps a redesign of the protective barrier was needed. Monday's mayhem was not the first time fans were injured by debris thrown into the grandstands.

Monday's wreck was all too familiar.

Ryan Newman led the outcry from drivers declaring that the dangers of plate racing were just too high, and especially at Daytona, where such violent accidents injure fans, destroy equipment, and – sometimes – kill drivers. Newman cited Dale Earnhardt's fatal crash in 2001 as an example of just how bad things can get.

And yet video footage of such violent incidents grabs the attention of mainstream media outlets. No doubt Dillon's flight into the fence was shown repeatedly on the Monday morning news programs. Had Dillon not wrecked like he did, news of the Coke Zero 400 would likely have been trumped by fluff pieces showcasing the best new recipes for summer side dishes.

It's not like such accidents at the "Birthplace of Speed" are anything new.

Think back to the early days at Daytona when Lee Petty flew over the fence and out into the parking lot. Think back to 1988 when Richard Petty flew and rolled against the catchfence on lap 106 of the Great American Race. Think back to 2000 and the NCWTS event where Geoffrey Bodine flew his Ford F-150 into the fence in a ball of fire.

The engine from Bodine's truck wound up in turn 1. Most who witnessed the wreck assumed Bodine was dead. But thanks to good safety equipment and a solid roll cage, he survived with relatively minor injuries. (Five fans were hurt during the incident.) Jimmie Johnson assumed the same thing about Austin Dillon Monday morning, with much the same result. Dillon was both shaken and stirred, but he walked away. Once again, five fans were hurt during the incident.

So was Ryan Newman correct in saying NASCAR got what it wanted?

Not if race fans were injured in the process. Think back to Daytona 2013 and Kyle Larson's XFINITY car tearing through the catchfence. The engine block of his Chevy wound up on the wrong side of the track and over two dozen fans were hurt. NASCAR and speedway personnel repaired the fence, though and it was business as usual.

Until the wee hours of Monday morning, that is. Another stock car required a rollback, another catchfence required serious repairs, and another five fans required medical attention.

This trend cannot be what NASCAR wanted, but it is ultimately what NASCAR got.

It's foolish to assume automobile racing is safe. That's a notion too obvious to consider. But maybe it's also foolish to assume that restrictor plates make for better races on superspeedways. That issue's been hotly debated since the 1980s. And maybe it's foolish to assume that changing the rules for horsepower and aerodynamics will improve racing across the series.

More horsepower and less downforce should give drivers more control over their competitive success. Putting drivers back into the performance equation will hopefully give NASCAR Nation what it wants.

The problems plaguing NASCAR 2015 demand rapid and serious improvement, and these issues go above-and-beyond the near tragedy we witnessed in the pre-dawn hours of Monday morning.

Can that road be paved with lessons learned? I guess we'll have to wait until this weekend at Kentucky to find out.

Dr. Mark Howell is a contributor for Frontstretch. He can be reached via e-mail at mark.howell@frontstretch.com.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
TODAY AT FRONTSTRETCH:
by the Frontstretch Staff

by Greg Davis

by Amy Henderson

compiled by Michael Mehedin

as told to Phil Allaway

compiled by Brett Winningham

by Tom Bowles
~~~~~~~~~~
FRONTSTRETCH TRIVIA:

Q: Speaking of records, Mike Bliss set a record of his own when he won the then-Craftsman Truck Series Kroger 225 at Kentucky Speedway in 2002.  What was this record?

Check back Thursday for the answer, here in the Frontstretch Newsletter!

Tuesday's Answer:

Q:  In 1981, Mike Mosley won the Gould Rex Mays Classic at The Milwaukee Mile from 25th on the grid.  In doing it, Mosley made history.  What was this achievement?

A:  For Mosley, it was his last major victory and his first since 1976.  He won the race in a stock-block Eagle-Chevrolet V8.  It is the only time that a stock-block engine ever won in CART.  In fact, it is the only time in CART prior to 1987 that a non-Cosworth powered car won.  Winning from 25th is also a record for the series.  The final laps can be seen here.
~~~~~~~~~~
COMING TOMORROW
In The Frontstretch Newsletter:
We'll have any news that breaks in the world of NASCAR. In addition, John Potts returns with another interesting commentary and Phil Allaway gives his own thoughts on NBC's debut in Daytona.

On Frontstretch.com:
Phil Allaway checks in with Benny Gordon, who finished a career-best fifth at Daytona in the XFINITY Series. Plus, Toni Montgomery is back with another look at the NHRA in Nitro Shots.
-----------------------------
Talk back to the Frontstretch Newsletter!
Got something to say about an article you've seen in the newsletter? It's as easy as replying directly to this message or sending an email to editors@frontstretch.com. We'll take the best comments and publish them here!
©2015 Frontstretch.com

--
--
Feel free to forward this newsletter if you have any friends who loves
NASCAR and great NASCAR commentary. They can subscribe to the Frontstetch by visiting http://www.frontstretch.com/notice/9557/.
 
If you want to stop your Frontstretch Newsletter subscription, we're sorry
to see you go. Just send an email to
TheFrontstretch+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com from the address that you
recieve the Frontstretch Newsletter.

---
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "The Frontstretch" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to thefrontstretch+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

No comments:

Post a Comment