My Window Net Came Loose in Turn Three
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Did you see the ARCA RE/MAX Series race from Kansas Speedway Saturday? Former Formula One driver Scott Speed won the thing but he had to come back from a black flag for a window net infraction. According to Speedās crew chief, Patrick Donahue, there was no attempt to find a competitive advantage in tweaking the nets - even though Speedās teammate nearly had the same fate. Nope, it was simple, human error, which I am intimately familiar with. I work with Steve.
Both Donahue and Speed were guests ON PIT ROW last night. Scottās interview was short but memorable - ākick assā according to Speed himself. Listen to it Thursday at 7pm edt at RaceTalkRadio.com.
So things got a little loose ON PIT ROW and now they will get Loose in Turn Three. TZ from Do You NASCAR?, Bruce of NASCAR Bits and Pieces and I will hash out some NASCAR opinion and you are REQUIRED to comment. Please.
Would NASCAR be better off if it had never instituted restrictor plates?
Charlie: In the era BCoT - Before the Car of Tomorrow - races at Daytona and Talladega were contested by plated cars and were pretty much universally complained about by owners, writers, bloggers and the drivers who drove the cars. Fans usually gasped in wonder at the close, three and four wide racing and the big wrecks that the plates promoted. I would say that more casual fans got their vision of what NASCAR is by seeing highlights of plate races than anything else.
Restrictor plates brought NASCAR more excitement and more fans per race than any other innovation the Frances tried. Plates also, almost certainly, saved lives at Talladega and Daytona, where unrestricted cars would have ended up in the stands at some point without action to slow the cars down. Plates are a good thing.
Bruce: I agree with Charlie. Without plates, it would have been a matter of time before a car ended up in the stands. I go back to pre-plate days, remembering a car pulling around another car on the backstretch of Talladega and doing itās own backflip at 200+ mph. Thank God it wasnāt in the bootleg in front of the stands.
And for the record, Iāve always liked plate races. Even if the drivers donāt think itās racing, it has to be some form of racing requiring the same degree of experience or the same names wouldnāt be up front in most of them.
TZ: Interesting question for me, because hereās the dealā¦restrictor plate races TYPICALLY bore me to tears - at least with the old car, anyway. And, really, I think my grudge against the plate races started back in 2003 when I made the trip out to Daytona to watch Greg Biffle win the race on fuel mileage, though I know thatās not really the norm. Itās just in the past thereās not a ton of passing, and the guys for the most part always seemed to play it overly safe through the first 7/8ās of the race but that doesnāt seem to be the case this year.
But really, even before this year, the plate races have been a great commodity for NASCAR to carry. Much like the road courses they bring a certain level of diversity to the schedule that really helps keep things interesting. I enjoy being able to watch a different type of race each week.
Once more, thatās what we think. What do you think? Let us know what your thoughts are on these two topics too.
TZās post at DoYouNascar.com : NASCAR recently took a win away from a driver in the Camping World Series on technical inspection grounds. Should this be the new practice?
Bruceās Bits and Pieces post : Does Dale Earnhardt Day merit all the attention it gets on April 29th?
Photo credit: Icon Sports Media, Inc.






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