Albuquerque Journal

NASCAR rooting hard for exciting 500

Declining TV ratings, fan interest of great concern

- BY JENNA FRYER ASSOCIATED PRESS

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — The good news for NASCAR is that all signs indicate Dale Earnhardt Jr. has a legitimate shot to win the Daytona 500.

A victory for NASCAR’s most popular driver, in his return to racing after a concussion sidelined him the second half of last season, would be a massive boost for the sagging series. Earnhardt’s star power has been one of the bright spots of Speedweeks and his strength on the track has been obvious every time he’s behind the wheel of his Chevrolet.

Earnhardt was part of a Hendrick Motorsport­s qualifying sweep for Sunday’s season-opening race. Chase Elliott

won the pole, and Earnhardt will line up next to him on the starting grid. Elliott added a win in a qualifying race, and Earnhardt led 53 of 60 laps in a second qualifying race before he was passed at the end.

So the Hendrick cars have speed, the drivers aren’t cowering from the Toyota teamwork that dominated last year’s race, and they are ready to go bumper-to-bumper with the Team Penske fleet.

It means Sunday could be a strong opening day for NASCAR, particular­ly if Earnhardt can pull off his third victory in “The Great American Race.” He’s not ready to call himself a favorite, and thinks he’ll have his hands full with the Joe Gibbs Racing group and Penske drivers Joey Logano and Brad Keselowski.

“Watching the last several plate races, I think the Gibbs guys have the market cornered on the favorite,” he said. “The Penske guys are really strong. So I think it’s their race to lose. The Hendrick cars are going to be up there trying to mix it up.”

NASCAR needs Sunday to go off without a hitch.

The series is under heavy scrutiny because of sliding attendance and television ratings, plus the title sponsor deal with Monster Energy came in at a fraction of what NASCAR was looking for when it began shopping the naming rights almost two years ago.

NASCAR celebrated its deal with Monster in a Las Vegas, Nev., announceme­nt, and has hitched its wagon to the hope that Monster can attract a younger demographi­c and raise the excitement level at all the events. But there’s been no television advertisin­g and NASCAR was even the subject of a critical examinatio­n in the Wall Street Journal.

NASCAR has countered with a JGR announceme­nt that defending race winner Denny Hamlin and FedEx have signed long-term extensions, while Team Penske locked in Logano and Shell-Pennzoil through 2023.

Sunday’s race will launch a new advertisin­g campaign on Sunday called “Ready. Set. Race.” and a crash-filled 30-second TV ad was revealed Saturday to promote the 500.

In an effort to add excitement to the racing all events will be run in segments this year. It means the Daytona 500 won’t exactly be a 500-mile race of attrition, but will instead be cut into three parts. There are points on the line for each segment.

Some fans, particular­ly longtime watchers, are horrified at the gimmicks NASCAR is using, but a rising crop of young drivers are eager to give it a try.

 ?? TONY RENNA/JOURNAL ?? NASCAR is hoping that its new racing rules will help generate additional interest in its 2017 season.
TONY RENNA/JOURNAL NASCAR is hoping that its new racing rules will help generate additional interest in its 2017 season.

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