South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Another one bites the dust

- By Jenna Fryer

BRISTOL, Tenn. — Kyle Busch took a long pause to carefully choose how to describe visibility Friday in the first practice on the dirt at Bristol Motor Speedway.

“So far better, I guess?” Busch said. “But second half of that practice, you couldn’t see. You put one car in front of you and you can’t see. Two cars? You definitely can’t see. That’s going to be the toughest part, the dust.”

NASCAR brought the Cup Series back to the Tennessee dirt for a second consecutiv­e year as Speedway Motorsport­s transforme­d its Bristol bullring for a Sunday night race. It will be the first time NASCAR races on Easter Sunday in more than 30 years in a scheduling choice by Fox Sports to attract more eyeballs.

The race will run at night after the first dirt Cup race since 1970 last year had mixed results. The 30,000 tons of red Tennessee clay used to cover the concrete made Bristol a dustbowl that had dangerousl­y poor visibility when combined with the glare of the sun.

“We have to race at night,” said Joey Logano, who won the Bristol dirt race last year. “That was important. Because you just couldn’t even see the cars, and it was unsafe inside the car.”

Speedway Motorsport­s made changes to the track, as well, knocking 3 degrees of banking off to make it 16 degrees at the apron; the track gets progressiv­ely steeper closer to the wall. It was done to create multiple racing lines and prevent too much rubber grinding into one slick lane.

Reigning Cup champion Kyle Larson believes more could have been done, specifical­ly the removal of windshield­s. He feels NASCAR is wasting its time running a pseudo-dirt race and not adopting all of the elements that make the formula a fan favorite.

“If we’re not going to take the windshield­s out, then why are we racing on dirt?” Larson said on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio. “We just shouldn’t race on dirt if we’re not going to take the windshield­s out and actually have a dirt race with moisture in the track and being able to produce a real dirt race. I feel like we’re just wasting everybody’s time a little bit and not giving the fans and competitor­s what we all deserve.”

Larson and Austin Dillon last year were the two main drivers advising Bristol and NASCAR on track prep and both have argued the dirt can’t be watered down and made moist enough with the windshield­s because they’d become caked with mud.

Scott Miller, NASCAR’s senior vice president of competitio­n siad this week that racing without a windshield — which NASCAR tried during a test of the Next Gen car on dirt with driver Stewart Friesen — is too risky.

“The windshield is a critical safety component of our cars,” Miller said. “Highly developed laminate. Really resistant to intrusion of foreign objects. Until we can further vet the possibilit­y of not using a windshield, (we’re going to) stick with the safety element of what we’ve been doing.”

Larson said NASCAR replaced the windshield at the test with chicken wire and the mud that slipped through allegedly stung Friesen’s hands as he drove.

 ?? CHRIS GRAYTHEN/GETTY ?? Kyle Busch drives during first practice for the NASCAR Cup Series Food City Dirt Race on Friday at Bristol Motor Speedway in Bristol, Tennessee.
CHRIS GRAYTHEN/GETTY Kyle Busch drives during first practice for the NASCAR Cup Series Food City Dirt Race on Friday at Bristol Motor Speedway in Bristol, Tennessee.

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