Brian France gives midseason state of the sport at Daytona
July 5, 2014
By Seth Livingstone
NASCAR Wire Service
DAYTONA
BEACH, Fla. – If NASCAR Chairman and CEO Brian France could change one
thing about 2014 it might be the lousy weather that’s haunted the NASCAR
Sprint Cup Series schedule.
With it
raining again at Daytona hours before the scheduled start of the Coke
Zero 400, France addressed the national media for the first time since
the implementation of the
2014 Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup qualifying format and rules
package. He said the sport is pleased with the results despite its share
of challenges.
“I
think we can all see the benefits of changing the importance of winning
(races),” France said. “It has changed the racing on the track. The
drivers are telling us that.
They’re taking different kinds of chances. They’re going for wins when
they would have played it safe, otherwise.
“I think that (competition) is just going to get more intense as we close in on Richmond and set the (Chase) field there.”
France
predicted that the new format for crowning a champion, in which four
drivers will vie for the title in the final race of the season, will
also be a major positive.
“We didn’t want to have a bad race or two take somebody out early on in the Chase,” he said.
France conceded that there are still tweaks to be made, notably with the revised rules package for 2014.
“We’re
not where we want to be on that and we’re embarking on a lot of work – a
lot of science, technology and innovation … to get the very best racing
product that we can
on all of the tracks. That’s obviously a fundamental goal and
responsibility at NASCAR.”
Nasty
weather and going head-to-head with Olympic and World Cup coverage have
been among the challenges in 2014 as NASCAR has dealt with up-and-down
TV ratings and less-than-capacity
crowds at some venues.
“Some
markets are doing better than they did last year, so it’s a mixed bag,”
France said. “There are some markets that have had a lot of pressure and
Dover is one of those.
“But
when you go around and really look at it and all the digital interests
that we have today on devices – and that’s obviously not scored
currently – we’re real pleased.
When you combine it all up, even with our challenges, we’re still not
off that much. We’re never pleased when our ratings aren’t growing at
the rate we would like, but we understand that circumstances will always
have us going one way or the other from time
to time.”
Overall, France said he is pleased with the economic state of the sport.
“We’re
on a nice, steady ground and sponsorship is coming back for us,
thankfully,” he said. “The business is sound and we’re going forward.”
France
said the sport is already looking ahead to 2015, when NBC and Fox will
share a new television contract and a new sponsor for the NASCAR
Nationwide Series is expected
to come onboard.
“I
think in the coming weeks we’ll be getting to the end of that
(sponsorship) process and we will be in very good shape when the dust
settles,” France said.
Speaking
at Daytona International Speedway, where the $400 million-plus Daytona
Rising renovation project is in full swing, France said he wouldn’t be
surprised if other venues
follow suit to attract fans.
Noting
that Daytona is where NASCAR kicks off its season, France said that
facility “needs to be a spectacular place to come for our fans."
Adding
new seating options, escalators and social media zones in the manner of
Daytona might not make sense at every NASCAR track. But France
speculated that every facility
will take note of the updates.
“I
think every track has to have its own identity and has to do what it
thinks is important in the marketplace they compete in,” he said. “Will
(Daytona Rising) be something
other tracks want to emulate? I think it will.”
With
the Daytona project being privately financed, France suggested that
state and local municipalities would be well-served to help finance
similar improvements that attract
fans in other markets.
“Unfortunately
for our industry, the speedways don’t enjoy the public financing
component that almost all major sports enjoy,” France said. “We’re
hoping that gets better-balanced
over time – in other words, that communities, local governments, states
will help grow these facilities like they do other stadiums and
arenas.”
France
hinted of more changes ahead for the sport, noting that future rules,
such as new engine specifications, must be “relevant,” not only to
current manufacturers, but manufacturers
who might consider entering the NASCAR arena.
He also
said NASCAR remains cognizant of lowering the cost of racing so it does
not present a barrier for new teams to enter the sport or prevent
smaller teams from competing
effectively.
“Lowering
the cost of racing, getting parity where teams can come in and have
success, and making ourselves more relevant to manufacturers and
partners is all part of the NASCAR
business model,” he said.
France
predicted “robust discussion” about possible schedule changes for the
2015 season and beyond. Though not specifically addressing a Fox Sports
report that Darlington
Raceway could host the second race of the season, France said that
weather concerns, a new television partner and the new Chase format are
reasons enough to consider shifting some races to new dates.
“We’ll be releasing that (2015 schedule) in September,” France said.
One thing France does not envision changing is the site of NASCAR’s title-determining venue, Homestead-Miami Speedway.
“Historically,
we’ve liked to do it in South Florida,” he said. “The weather is great
that time of year. It’s a good market for us and the track – and this is
an important
thing – is by any definition the best mile-and-a-half track that the
drivers believe they have. They can really race hard and compete hard
and that matters. When you factor all of those things in, we’re going
to be in Homestead for the foreseeable future.”
No comments:
Post a Comment