Dayton Daily News

Kenseth left without a car for next season

- By Jenna Fryer

Matt CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Kenseth, a future Hall of Famer, likely has two races left as a famous driver.

The final seat in the carousel of job options will be filled Wednesday when Stewart-Haas Racing is expected to announce Aric Almirola as its new driver.

A two-time Daytona 500 winner and former series champion was passed over for a driver with one victory in 242 starts. It is yet another seat that didn’t go to Kenseth, who has become the odd man out in a free agency period that has focused far more on salaries and sponsorshi­p than talent.

Kenseth, who told reporters over the weekend that he will take time off in 2018, is hardly alone. Danica Patrick has nothing lined up for next year. Same for reigning Daytona 500 winner Kurt Busch. Greg Biffle quietly went away at the end of last season, and Carl Edwards announced his retirement after coming 10 laps shy of winning the title a year ago.

All but Patrick started in a robust economic period for NASCAR, where teams were flush with sponsor dollars and could basically hire any driver they wanted. Jack Roush was the fat cat in the early 2000s, and he’d hold gong-show-style auditions for drivers. Kenseth, Busch, Biffle and Edwards all became stars in Roush’s system.

But the math has changed considerab­ly. Sponsors are paying far less for the right to advertise on a car, and they are increasing­ly difficult to get. In the days of exploding popularity, a top team might spend $30 million to run a race car. Most of that money came from sponsorshi­p, and top drivers were making $10 million per year.

Now owners are running teams for half of what they did 15 years ago, and driver salaries are slowly being adjusted. If an owner can’t get a driver that financiall­y matches the sponsorshi­p level, then the owner has to pay expenses out of pocket.

Brad Keselowski is widely regarded as the driver of the Miller Lite car, but Team Penske last week revealed its sponsorshi­p program for the No. 2 car in pieces, and it only includes 11 races with Miller Lite as the primary sponsor. Discount Tire was sold the rights to be on Keselowski’s car in next year’s Daytona 500 and season finale at Homestead, as well as eight other events.

Still, Penske was able to do what few others can manage right now: afford a highpriced driver.

Kenseth struck out time and again in a search that began when Joe Gibbs Racing told him it was bringing developmen­t driver Erik Jones in-house next season, a decision that cost Kenseth, 45, a spot in the lineup.

The 19-year Cup veteran didn’t get rides at Hendrick Motorsport­s, which will see Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Kasey Kahne depart after the season. Alex Bowman and William Byron apparently will drive next year for something like $500,000 in salary.

It is clear that sponsorshi­p budgets have been decreased, reflecting in many ways television viewership for NASCAR races and attendance at various tracks.

 ??  ?? Driver Matt Kenseth says he will take time off in 2018.
Driver Matt Kenseth says he will take time off in 2018.

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