NASCAR broaches sweeping changes to qualifying format
Oct. 6, 2012
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
TALLADEGA,
Ala. -- As was discussed during a Saturday morning meeting with drivers
and crew chiefs at Talladega Superspeedway, NASCAR is expected to drop
the rule that provides
guaranteed starting positions in Sprint Cup races to the top 35 in
owner points, starting next year.
Instead,
the sanctioning body is expected to return to the sort of provisional
system that characterized the qualifying format before the top-35 rule
was introduced. Also under
consideration is a return to a random drawing for qualifying order.
Currently,
qualifying order is set by the top speeds registered in the first Cup
practice session, with the slowest car going out first and the fastest
qualifying last. Under
this system, teams often manipulate or sandbag practice speeds to
ensure a qualifying draw they consider advantageous.
NASCAR
officials said an announcement should be forthcoming later this month,
probably within the next seven to 10 days, but Jimmie Johnson provided
insight into the types of
changes that may be coming in a question-and-answer session with
reporters during Saturday's time trials for Sunday's Good Sam Road
Assistance 500 at Talladega Superspeedway.
Johnson
said he liked the current system for determining qualifying order
because it forced drivers to earn their spots in the draw. But he
conceded that the change to a random
drawing will allow teams to use their tire allotments more efficiently.
"It
might alter five or six spots on the grid, but I don't think it will
completely turn things upside-down," Johnson said. "I guess, in the end,
in the spirit of making it exciting,
maybe that's the angle NASCAR has, and we've got to keep an open mind
to that as well."
Ryan
Newman said a reversion to a provisional-based qualifying system
probably won't be significant because it's concurrent with the
development of NASCAR's new-generation race
car. In large part, the top 35 rule was instituted to protect top stars
and their sponsors, but with field sizes potentially smaller, that's
less of an issue.
"My
two cents is I don't think it's going to be a big issue at all to start
the new season, because, with the new cars, I don't see us having an
extra surplus of cars. . . . I
don't see 48 or 50 cars (trying to qualify) each and every week,"
Newman said. "I see 43, maybe 44 type deal, so I don't think it's going
to be a deal breaker for many people at all."
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