Search
Close this search box.

Partner

CHRISTIE: Saturday Night Showed NASCAR Doesn’t Need Gimmicks to Produce a Compelling Race

RICHMOND, VIRGINIA – SEPTEMBER 12: Brad Keselowski, driver of the #2 Western Star/Alliance Parts Ford, Joey Logano, driver of the #22 Shell Pennzoil Ford, and Martin Truex Jr., driver of the #19 Bass Pro Shops Toyota, lead the field during the NASCAR Cup Series Federated Auto Parts 400 at Richmond Raceway on September 12, 2020 in Richmond, Virginia. (Photo by Sean Gardner/Getty Images)

Saturday night’s NASCAR Cup Series Federated Auto Parts 400 at Richmond Raceway went caution-free, aside from the regularly scheduled competition caution and two Stage break cautions, yet the race was not dull, it was not boring and there was plenty of passing on the track throughout the duration of the event.

It was a refreshing race. For once, we saw an actual race play out in a natural manner without. It was a rare occasion where you didn’t walk away from the television broadcast feeling like watching the first 90-percent of the race was pointless. Too many times, you watch a NASCAR race these days and become invested in what’s happening, only to see the entire race get flipped on it’s axis within the final 10 laps due to a late-race caution followed by a frantic green-white-checkered finish, where guys just push, shove and crash each other out of the way.

Don’t get me wrong, I love the occasional wacky finish like Kentucky Speedway, where rookie Cole Custer went four wide out of nowhere to take the win in a green-white-checker finish, but when you get finishes like that each week, it gets ridiculous and almost feels scripted as it happens so often. Sure, you get close finishes, but only because some kind of unnatural element made it be so.

Saturday night’s race was a great change of pace and without a doubt, this proves that the endless cycle of gimmicks added to the NASCAR rule book in an effort to make the races more ‘entertaining’ are unnecessary.

Five drivers led more than 40 laps on the night and there were more lead changes in this race (19) than there were combined in the two Richmond races a season ago (14).

Sure, Brad Keselowski nearly led half of the race (192 laps led of 400), but there were varying pit strategies throughout the night as there was significant tire fall-off, which put a premium on fresh rubber. However, it also gave teams toward the back new hope at stealing a win by limiting themselves to less stops at the risk of more laps on the track on older tires.

Ultimately, the less stop strategy did not pay off, but the fact that the race lent itself to more than one strategy was compelling to keep up with.

Add into the equation that there were several legit players for the win — including an unexpected rise of Playoff Cinderella story Austin Dillon, who now has two top-five finishes to start the Playoffs, and you had something special.

Not only that, but even without a 15-foot tall spoiler and some added horsepower, Keselowski — or whoever the given leader was at the time — didn’t get too strung out. At the end of the race, Keselowski had just a 1.5-second lead. Without the help of a debris caution. The race was truly captivating from start to finish.

There was no NA18D package, no big crash, no wave arounds, no green-white-checkered finish and no cautions other than the scheduled ones from NASCAR. Yet, the race was still incredible.

Maybe, just maybe, NASCAR should get away from the business of entertainment and get back to the business of sports because Saturday night’s race at Richmond was one of the more entertaining events of the season for me. For one night, I felt like I was watching the NASCAR of my youth and I loved every minute of it. This is what I originally fell in love with back in 1993.

share it
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Reddit

One Response

  1. And Saturday night’s race was about one of the WORST races I have ever watched. In fact, all of the races at Richmond this past weekend sucked.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Latest Post

Money In The Bank Grid 2024 UARA
Erik Jones, Carson Hocevar Among Early Entries for Battle at Berlin in August
Rick Hendrick pace car driver for the 2024 Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway NASCAR Cup Series Chevrolet Camaro ZL1
Rick Hendrick to Pace the Field for Brickyard 400 in Chevrolet Camaro ZL1
IMSA Mazda MX-5 Cup race at Martinsville Speedway details How to buy tickets 2024 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour Series double header Virginia is for Racing Lovers 300
Martinsville Speedway Hosting 100-Lap IMSA MX-5 Cup Race in October
ARCA Menards Series Indianapolis Raceway Park IRP entry list race preview 2024
Spinning Circles At IRP, Previewing the Circle City 200
IROC partners with True Value in brand's return at Lime Rock Park 2024 Ray Evernham drivers that will be at IROC exhibition at Lime Rock
True Value Returns as IROC Partner; Drivers Announced for IROC Exhibition at Lime Rock Park
NASCAR penalty report Pocono Raceway RJ Otto Cordell Cahill 23XI Racing Bret Holmes Racing Phil Gould Niece Motorsports
NASCAR Issues Two Indefinite Suspensions for Substance Abuse Policy Violations

Join Our Newsletter

Ready to have NASCAR news hand-delivered to your email daily?

Related Article