Cool-Down Lap: Scintillating racing comes to Bristol from a botched plan
Aug. 26, 2012: Commentary
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
Jeff Gordon remembers vintage Bristol from 1991 B.C. -- Before Concrete, that is.
Gordon
got his first look at Bristol Motor Speedway as a teenager racing in
the NASCAR Nationwide (then Busch) Series. Back then Bristol was an
asphalt track -- and the optimum
racing line was much closer to what fans saw Saturday night than at any
other time in the intervening 21 years.
"I
can remember being up on the spotters' stand, watching the Cup race and
just enjoying the heck out of it," Gordon said Saturday after running
third behind Denny Hamlin and
Jimmie Johnson in the Irwin Tools Night Race at the .533-mile track.
"Darrell
(Waltrip) -- and I think maybe Davey (Allison), Ernie Irvan -- those
guys are just running up against the wall, diamonding the race track. It
was hard to pass. You did
slide jobs on guys when you got runs, and that's what we had tonight."
To
hear Gordon tell it -- and he's one of a handful of active drivers who
actually raced on and remember the asphalt surface -- the racing at
Bristol this weekend mirrored that
of 1991 and before. A year later, Bristol resurfaced the track with
concrete, and it was on concrete that Bristol built its reputation as
the premier short track in America.
With
concrete, Bristol became a one-lane racetrack. Drivers hugged the
bottom and used their bumpers to pass. The action was hot and the
tempers hotter.
That
was the nature of Bristol in its glory years. That's why Bristol
tickets were essential elements in wills and divorce litigation. That
was the Bristol that track owner Bruton
Smith vowed to restore after a yawner of a race in March that played to
a half-empty house.
He failed.
But
let's go back for a second. The action at Bristol had suffered markedly
since 2007, when Smith introduced graduated banking to the concrete
surface, concurrent with NASCAR's
introduction of a new-generation racecar.
Two-wide
and three-wide racing replaced the one-groove root-and-gouge. The March
race was merely the tipping point where as many fans stayed home as
showed up for the race. Smith
had to do something.
The
solution was to grind two degrees of banking from the top lane of the
race track. In theory, the idea was to make the outside grove
undrivable, which, in turn, would force
cars closer together through the turns and increase the level of
contact and action.
The plan failed miserably, to the astonishment of Smith and everyone who competes in the sport and reports on it.
Kasey
Kahne began to venture into the high groove early in the race, and
other drivers soon followed suit as their spotters began telling them
that the high line was working.
Cars stuck like glue to the layer of rubber that accumulated at the top
of the track, providing a drive-off akin to that of the "cushion" at a
dirt track.
Not only was the top lane drivable, it was hands-down the fast way around Thunder Valley.
"They're
grinding the track so no one will run up there?" crew chief Chad Knaus
radioed sarcastically to Johnson before the race was 100 laps old.
"That didn't work out," Johnson replied matter-of-factly.
"They'll have to move the wall down," was Knaus' facetious response.
No,
they won't. Even if the Saturday's racing resembled ancient asphalt
Bristol, rather than the "old" Bristol Smith promised, the action left
nothing to be desired.
So
even if the plan backfired and created a racing line where none was
supposed to exist, it's time to leave well enough alone and enjoy the
"failure."
ITAL/The opinions expressed are solely those of the author/ITAL
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