Brian France On 2013 Season: 'We Had A Good Year'
Dec. 5, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
LAS
VEGAS -- In his annual "state of the sport" news conference Thursday at
the Wynn Las Vegas, NASCAR chairman and CEO Brian France
summed up the 2013 season succinctly.
"We
had a good year," said France, who addressed a smorgasbord of
accomplishments and issues the sanctioning body achieved and dealt
with between the introduction of the new Gen-6 race car at the start of
the season and Jimmie Johnson's sixth NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
championship in November.
But
France's question-and-answer session with reporters was as much a look
ahead as it was an examination of the past. Darrell Wallace
Jr.'s NASCAR Camping World Truck Series victory at Martinsville, the
first for an African-American in one of NASCAR's top three touring
series in 50 years, not only was a milestone for the sport but a
harbinger for things to come.
"You
saw a mix of things coming for the future, young drivers coming up
through various series, who are going to be with us -- Kyle
Larson being one at the Cup level, beginning next year," France said.
"Darrell Wallace having a bit of a breakout year for himself, first time
in a national series, in the Trucks, getting a win, strong just about
every weekend -- a bright spot in diversity
for the future for a very talented young man."
France
was emphatic in expressing NASCAR's continuing commitment to provide
the most competitive racing in the motorsports realm.
"The
number one thing we had to judge in the Gen‑6 car was acceptance by the
manufacturers, the teams and the drivers,"
France said. "That's the number one thing. And then, obviously, we want
to get more lead changes and we want to get closer, tighter
competition. I'd love a photo finish every weekend if I could pull a
lever up in the tower to create that -- I'm obviously kidding.
"The
point is that we're going to be working all the time on getting the
competition (better). Lead changes are going
to be a huge part. I think that is a big measuring stick. But it's not
the only one. Safety is in there in a high place, acceptance, all kinds
of things."
France also addressed the September race at Richmond and the attempt by Michael Waltrip Racing to manipulate the outcome.
NASCAR
responded by penalizing all three MWR drivers, effectively knocking
Martin Truex Jr. out of the Chase. On Friday
of the following week, the sanctioning body added Jeff Gordon as an
unprecedented 13th competitor to the 10-race playoff as a driver who was
unjustly deprived of a spot by the MWR manipulation.
"Every
sport that's large and competitive faces moments where your credibility
and other things are tested," France said. "And the question
is 'How do you respond?' I think our team and our group did a very good
job under the circumstances, and obviously made some tough decisions."
On a personal level, France was angered by the events at Richmond.
"I
was very angry about it," he said. "But I also knew that I'm a student
of -- as you guys know, of sports. I don't
know if I'm the biggest sports fan in the company. I kind of say I
am. But I had seen -- and I knew that if we dealt with it, if we dealt
with it really straight on, that we wouldn't have a long‑term blemish.
"It was going to be really tough, especially for the teams that got penalized, losing sponsors. That was no fun for
anybody. But I knew that our credibility would be preserved if we did the right thing and we acted swiftly, and over time.
"So
I wasn't ever worried about that. But of course we were
disappointed. But that's just the nature, I guess, of competitive
sports. You've
got human beings trying to do their best, and sometimes they cross
lines they shouldn't cross."
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