Antelope Valley Press

Bristol avoided dirt mess it most feared

- By JENNA FRYER

BRISTOL, Tenn. — The pandemic gave NASCAR an overdue opportunit­y to break from the way things had always been done in the sport.

The traditiona­l three-day race weekend was scrapped as NASCAR scrambled to complete a season while following COVID-19 protocols. Practice was scrapped and few complained, the same for qualifying.

When the compacted oneday show helped NASCAR cruise through its schedule, a hotline opened and all ideas were welcome. A dirt race on the Cup schedule? At Bristol Motor Speedway?

Sure! Let’s give it a whirl! It sure sounded fun to put the Cup Series on a dirt track for the first time since 1970, but successful­ly executing such a wild idea seemed fraught with uncertaint­ies.

The risk was worth it to Marcus Smith, the CEO of Bristol Motor Speedway parent company Speedway Motorsport­s. He told The Associated Press he spent nearly $2 million to transform Bristol’s concrete bullring into a dirt track, and even as the track began to crack, the tires struggled to hold together and the drivers complained of a blinding dust, Smith insisted everything was great.

And when the race finally finished Monday night — a day late because after all the concerns about Cup cars suitabilit­y for dirt at Bristol, torrential rains caused

a postponeme­nt for flooding — everything indeed was just fine.

Sure, the red Tennessee clay turned Bristol into a dustbowl, described best when driver Corey LaJoie declared “visibility was zero out of 2 with the glare.” But nothing bad happened.

NASCAR staved off a rash of blown tires by adding mandatory cautions that also created extra track prep time. Bristol pulled an all-nighter after the Sunday rains to work the dirt so that it wasn’t engineover­heating-inducing mud. And when the dust got really out of control, NASCAR simply changed the rules in the middle of the race and switched to single-file restarts for the first time in probably a decade.

“I know some of our fans and the NASCAR industry isn’t used to seeing what happened during the race with the dust buildup,” said Steve O’Donnell, NASCAR’s chief racing developmen­t officer.

“If you experience that situation, to try and go single file to alleviate some of the dust and some of the visibility issues, that’s why we made that move.”

Joey Logano took the checkered flag in a decent overtime finish and fans who had been buzzing about a dirt race for months seemed genuinely satisfied.

That’s a win for Smith and Speedway Motorsport­s, which reconfigur­ed its oval at Charlotte Motor Speedway into a hybrid “roval” in 2018 for some added juice. The company just pulled off a dirt race at Bristol and for its next act will lease Circuit of the America’s in May to host NASCAR’s first trip to the Austin, Texas road course.

Justin Marks, a former driver in his first year of NASCAR team ownership, applauded the Speedway Motorsport­s effort on Tuesday. It helped that his driver, Daniel Suarez, finished a season-best fourth at Bristol with no previous dirt experience. But Marks is also part of a group in Nashville who later this summer will host an IndyCar race through the downtown streets, so he understand­s the challenges facing track promoters.

 ?? Associated Press ?? CLOUD OF DUST
Driver Aric Almirola (10) collides with Anthony Alfredo (38) during a NASCAR Cup Series auto race on Monday in Bristol, Tenn.
Associated Press CLOUD OF DUST Driver Aric Almirola (10) collides with Anthony Alfredo (38) during a NASCAR Cup Series auto race on Monday in Bristol, Tenn.

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