Ten races into 2016, new rules, close racing have drivers excited about the NASCAR product
May 4, 2016
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
Who knew at the time that Denny Hamlin’s razor-thin margin of victory in the Daytona 500 would be emblematic of the 2016 season?
With
a bold move off Turn 4, Hamlin got to the finish line roughly six
inches ahead of Martin Truex Jr. The official margin of victory was .010
seconds, tied for seventh closest
in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series since the advent of electronic timing
and scoring in 1993.
Two
weeks later, Kevin Harvick would duplicate that winning margin when he
triumphed in a drag race to the stripe against Carl Edwards at Phoenix.
NASCAR
drivers and fans alike have heralded the quality of racing this season,
and there are plenty of statistics to reinforce their empirical
observations. Seven of the first
nine featured victory margins of less than one second, the exceptions
being Atlanta, which ended under caution after 28 lead changes, and
Texas, where Kyle Busch pulled away to win by 3.904 seconds after 17
lead changes.
The
seven races decided by less than a second are the most through nine
events since the introduction of electronic timing and scoring.
Three
races this year have set records for green-flag passes for the lead, a
loop data statistic that includes intra-lap passes: Atlanta (44), Auto
Club Speedway (51) and Bristol
(40).
The
10th race of the season, Sunday’s GEICO 500 at Talladega Superspeedway,
featured 213 green-flag passes for the lead, the second most since the
inception of loop data in
2005 and only the second time that number has topped 200. The record of
219 was set at Talladega in October 2013.
The
bottom line is that 2016 already has seen a ramped-up level of
competition that has drivers routinely extolling the quality of the
racing. On more than one occasion, Dale
Earnhardt Jr. has climbed from his car after a race and waxed eloquent
about the fun he’s having this year.
The question is “Why?”
By
all accounts, the new lower-downforce competition package NASCAR has
implemented this season has made a huge difference. For one thing,
Earnhardt says, it feeds into the
egos of the drivers.
“Man,
they are way harder to drive,” Earnhardt told the NASCAR Wire Service.
“This seems weird to me, but it’s what you want. I don’t know if that
makes sense to someone who’s
not a race car driver, but you want it to be hard, because all the guys
in the garage think they’re the best driver in the garage. And the
harder we can make it, the better shot each one of them thinks they’ve
got at winning, right?
“So
all of us are like, ‘Make it harder; make it harder, because that helps
me.’ That’s pretty much the mentality in there. And so, I think you see
in my conversations with
the fans a little bit, they’re seeing the cars move around. That’s
something they hadn’t seen in a while. They’re seeing the drivers
wrestle with the cars a little more, which is important, to having a
more exciting product.
“And
if they can figure out a way to capture more of that, particularly with
the television audience, I think we will be going in the right
direction. But, yeah, the cars are
way slicker, they’re harder to drive, they slide around on top of the
track whereas in the past, they felt forced into the track and felt much
more comfortable.”
Another
contributing factor is the job Goodyear has done in matching tires
chosen for particular tracks with the lower-downforce rules package.
Drivers and crew chiefs have
long advocated for greater fall-off throughout a fuel run, and the
racing this year has enhanced that aspect of competition.
The
new package also has reduced the effect of “aero-push,” which in the
past inhibited drivers’ ability to approach and pass a slightly slower
car.
“I
think the biggest thing I’ve noticed is just the ability to race well
in traffic, the ability to run fast behind a car,” Truex said. “If you
run a guy down, you don’t hit
that wall (of air) three or four cars back and just can’t go as fast as
you were going before. It gives you a lot more options in traffic, a
lot more passing going on.
“A
few years ago, when we had a really lot of downforce, when they dropped
the green flag for the race and if you were mid-pack, you were out of
control and you couldn’t go
anywhere, and I’ve seen a lot less of that. Obviously, the tires are a
big, big part of what we’re doing with the low downforce with the tires
wearing out and the car slowing down as the run goes on. It’s really
opened up a lot of opportunities.”
Tire
management, too, has become a much more important issue, because the
lower downforce has given Goodyear the latitude to bring generally
softer compounds to the track.
“We’ve
seen some of the races where guys that maybe aren’t some of the fastest
cars or don’t have really good speed throughout the weekend all the
sudden 15, 20 laps in a run,
they start coming to the front because their cars handle well,” Truex
said. “So it’s just given guys a lot more opportunities to pass and to
make the racing exciting.
“I
feel like it’s been a lot more fun to drive the cars. It’s been a lot
more fun to race with people, moving around, finding new grooves, and I
thought ‘Just look at what
we saw at Richmond…’ That was the first time in years that we’ve run
anywhere except for the bottom, you know?
“We
ran all over the track and that’s just highly unlikely for Richmond
typically, so I think it’s been really good. I feel like the races have
been exciting and a lot more
fun than past years, and I think they will just continue to get better
as we take downforce off and make the tires softer yet.”
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