Wednesday, March 16, 2016

The Frontstretch Newsletter: Phoenix Ratings Down Slightly, No Sweat

THE FRONTSTRETCH NEWSLETTER
Presented by Frontstretch.com
The Best Seat at the Track, The Best View on the Net!
Mar. 16, 2016
Volume X, Edition XXX
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FRONTSTRETCH JOBS: SALES & BRANDING MANAGER

Frontstretch is seeking a dynamic, creative individual to head our sales team. The individual would be responsible for the following:
– Engaging new partners and taking the lead in brokering agreements for sales & advertising across all Frontstretch outlets: Website, Newsletter, Podcast, and video content
– Responding to exposure inquiries from potential advertisers
– Working with our social media team to enhance the marketing and branding experience for our advertising clients

The position will be a direct report to our Business and Financial Manager, a position that also will work closely with the Majority Owner and Social Media team. A fast-growing website whose writers have won multiple NMPA Awards, the Frontstretch is well-positioned for success in 2016 and has a healthy audience of over seven figures per year. The role, while initially commission-based offers a generous percentage and perks down the road for this startup company. Frontstretch management has, in many cases been in place for nearly a decade before becoming a for-profit website and we're excited to welcome the right person into this family atmosphere.

Interested parties should email tbowles81@yahoo.com with a short note on why they're interested and their current resume.
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What to Watch: Wednesday

- Today should be a relatively quiet day in the world of NASCAR.  If anything breaks, we'll be sure to have it for you at Frontstretch.
 
- In sports cars, the first official practice sessions at Sebring International Raceway are underway for support classes ahead of Saturday's Mobil 1 12 Hours of Sebring.  The IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship teams do not practice until tomorrow, but the Continental Tire SportsCar Challenge has two practice sessions on tap today.

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Wednesday's TV Schedule can be found here.

Top News
by the Frontstretch Staff
 
Overnight TV Ratings Again Down in Phoenix

Overnight ratings are out from Sunday's Good Sam 500k and they continue to show the story of decreased ratings.  The race drew a 3.6 overnight rating, down slightly from last year.  Read more
Entry List: Auto Club 400
 
NASCAR has released the entry list for this weekend's 400 mile race at Auto Club Speedway.  Once again, 39 cars are entered, meaning that no one will fail to qualify.  Read more
 
Entry List: TREATMYCLOT.com 300
 
For Saturday's 300 mile XFINITY Series event, 43 teams are entered, meaning that three will have to make the long haul back east without racing.  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.
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Today's Featured Commentary
The Great Debate
Professor of Speed
by Mark Howell

As the 2016 NASCAR Sprint Cup season begins to unfold, it's clear that the new low downforce rules package is a rousing success fully capable of saving America's most popular form of motorsports.

Or is it?

It depends on where you get your information.

According to Mike Cranston of the Associated Press, last Sunday's Good Sam 500 at Phoenix was proof positive that the new configuration is revolutionizing NASCAR. In his article about Sunday's "overtime" photo finish, Cranston stated that the event marked "another success for NASCAR's new downforce and aerodynamic packages. Used for the first time on a mile-track, it helped produce plenty of passing and only a handful of tire issues on long green-flag runs."

Race winner (and perennial Phoenix favorite) Kevin Harvick led 139 of the race's 313 laps, according to NASCAR statistics. That figures out to Harvick leading about 44% of the event. Despite the .010 margin of victory for the No. 4 Chevrolet (the second such finish we've seen thus far in 2016), Sunday's race had only four different drivers at the front of the field.

So does that constitute good racing? Are photo finishes equal to 312 earlier laps of dominance shared among four teams? If the new rules package makes for more competition and better racing, why, then, are we seeing the same old names in the same old finishing positions?

Kevin Harvick has four top-tens and a win. Kyle Busch has four top-fives. Brother Kurt has four top-tens. The usual suspects sit atop the current Cup standings, with Austin Dillon being the only fresh face among the top-ten in points. Granted, we've seen some solid runs from rookies Chase Elliott and Ryan Blaney, but is that because of the new low downforce car, or their impressive gene pools and youthful talent?

Some analysts saw the race a bit differently.

Like Mike Hembree. In a piece he wrote for USA Today, Hembree suggested that last weekend's Cup race at Phoenix "was not a grand day for the debut of NASCAR's low-downforce aero package at a relatively flat track. Only three drivers — Kyle Busch, Edwards and Earnhardt — led laps in the first half of the race."

One idea here is certain: anyone and everyone (including me) can and will have a valid opinion regarding the low downforce package. Not that the new configuration is bad, but maybe it's not conducive to lots of passing at the front. While battles mid-pack appear to be fast and furious and numerous, fans seeking record-numbers of lead changes should not – for now, at least – expect too much in that regard.

Sounds like the situation we had that led to the new rules package in the first place....

If blown tires and bent sheet metal make for good racing, Phoenix treated fans to plenty. There was no need to worry about long green flag runs like we saw at Atlanta, either, since brake heat from negotiating Phoenix's flat layout led to several failures among a handful of potential challengers like Brad Keselowski, Kasey Kahne, and Ryan Newman. Cautions allowed teams the chance to work on subpar cars, while bringing pit strategy into the mix as the laps wound down.

Ultimately, track position trumped fresh right-side tires during the final yellow flag for Kahne's hard slap against the wall. Carl Edwards may have had two new Goodyears and a faster Toyota, but Kevin Harvick had a better line heading into the final corner.

Suddenly the premier series in NASCAR resembles Saturday night short track racing, the kind of competition where a gutsy driver with worn tires and a dream can slip and slide to victory.

And complaints in the garage area, at least from what I hear, have been few.

So, once again, how does NASCAR Nation define "good racing"?

Maybe the larger question is: is there really one attribute we can definitively label as "good racing"? Follow Twitter activity during and after races, and you'll see all kinds of reasoning as to what made a particular race "good" or not.

Good racing, like beauty, is truly in the eye of the beholder.

And now, it's off to California for Round Five of this debate….

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

compiled by Aaron Bearden

as told to Joseph Wolkin
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FRONTSTRETCH TRIVIA:

Q:  2007 was a terrible year for Michael Waltrip.  The fuel additive issue in Daytona effectively ruined his season before it started, then the string of DNQ's meant that he was in the hole points-wise all the way to June (after Daytona, he had -27 points by virtue of his 100 point penalty, then failed to make another race until Michigan).  By September at Fontana, Waltrip was at least making races on a regular basis, but the bad luck was still there.  What put him out of the Sharp Aquos 500 in Fontana?

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

Tuesday's Answer:

Q:  The 2007 Sharp Aquos 500 at then-California Speedway featured one of the hardest hits of Ricky Rudd's Cup career.  What happened?

A: Exiting turn 4 on lap 179, there was contact between Jeff Gordon and Jeremy Mayfield.  The contact turned Gordon into David Reutimann, who spun out.  Rudd was on the inside and got clipped in the right rear by the spinning Reutimann.  Rudd then spun and went hard into the wall on the drivers' side.  Further back, David Gilliland broadsided David Stremme.  The crash can be seen here.

Rudd suffered a badly separated shoulder in the crash, which forced him to miss five races.  Kenny Wallace took over the next weekend at Richmond and drove four races.  Kenny's older brother Mike drove at Talladega.  This was the only time that Rudd missed races due to injury in his entire career.

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COMING TOMORROW
In The Frontstretch Newsletter:
We'll have any news that breaks in the world of NASCAR.  In addition, we'll take a look at Pirelli World Challenge at Circuit of the Americas in the Critic's Annex and John Potts returns with some opinionated goodness.

On Frontstretch.com:
Toni Montgomery returns with her weekly look at the NHRA Mello Yello Drag Racing Series, Nitro Shots.
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