Change limits subjectivity in enforcement of restart rules
Sept. 15, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
JOLIET,
Ill.--NASCAR announced a significant change to its rules for restarts
at the drivers' meeting before Sunday's GEICO 400 NASCAR
Sprint Cup Series race at Chicagoland Speedway--a change that will no
longer require he lead driver to arrive first at the start/finish line.
Here's how it works:
The
lead driver, who controls the restart, must put power down in a restart
zone defined by red lines on speedway walls. The length
of the restart zone is pit road speed times two. In other words, if pit
road speed is 45 mph, the length of the restart zone is 90 feet.
Once
the lead car has restarted within the zone, the flagman will display
the green flag, and racing resumes. Cars must stay in their
respective lanes until they reach the start/finish line, but the
second-place car is now allowed to arrive first.
In
the regular-season finale Sept. 6 at Richmond, Carl Edwards was first
to the stripe on the final restart by nearly a full car length
over race leader Paul Menard, who had spun his tires. NASCAR opted not
to penalize Edwards with a drive-through, recognizing that Menard had
issues on older tires.
It
was a judgment call nevertheless, and NASCAR president Mike Helton said
on a pre-race interview on ESPN that the sanctioning body
made the change "to narrow up the subjectivity that NASCAR might or
should be able have to make a call."
"The
difference now is," Helton said, "we've taken away some of the
subjectivity where we've had to make a call on whether or not that
second-place car legitimately or should be able (to beat the
first-place car to the line)--(as) in the case of the 99 car (Edwards)
last weekend, where our interpretation of what happened on the restart
led us not to react to the 99 car."
HENDRICK LAUDS FRANCE'S DECISIVE ACTION
Naturally,
team owner Rick Hendrick had reason to rejoice when Jeff Gordon was
added to the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup on Friday.
But
Hendrick was particularly impressed with the way NASCAR chairman and
CEO Brian France handled the decision, which amounted to an
executive order.
"I
think NASCAR… I think Brian France did a great job," Hendrick said
Sunday at Chicagoland after the drivers' meeting for the GEICO
400. "He stepped up, and he said, ‘I made the decision, and this it's
the way it's going to be.'
"It
sounded like Bill (France Jr.)--‘I'm going to make sure this doesn't
happened, and this is the way we're going to race from here
on.' I applaud NASCAR for what they've done. I think everybody in the
garage… if we could go back and run Richmond over, it would be a lot
different."
France
included Gordon in the Chase based on evidence that other teams had
colluded to change the finishing order in a way that elevated
Joey Logano into the top 10 and knocked Gordon out of the 10-race
playoff.
In the interest of fairness, and based on the totality of the circumstances, France added Gordon as a 13th driver on Friday.
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