The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

NASCAR revamps format for races

Competitio­ns will be divided into stages, with points awarded for each.

- By Jenna Fryer

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — NASCAR is dramatical­ly changing its format for the upcoming season, cutting every race into stages that reward points in hopes of making every lap matter and keeping fans interested.

The overhaul announced Monday assigns three stages to every race. The top 10 drivers at the end of Stage 1 and Stage 2 will be awarded points on a 10-through-1 scale. The third portion of the race will be for the overall victory, and although traditiona­l point scoring will be applied for that stage, the win will be worth 40 points. The rest of the field will be scored on a 35 to 2 scale, and positions 36 to 40 will only receive 1 point.

All bonus points accumulate­d through the 26-race regular season can be used in the 10-race playoff, which will no longer be called “The Chase.”

“There are no off weeks, every race matters, not only that, every lap of every race matters,” said Denny Hamlin, one of the many drivers who participat­ed in the panel that created this new format.

NASCAR spent nearly seven months working with a wide range of industry stakeholde­rs to come up with the changes. Heavily involved were television networks,

retired drivers Jeff Gordon and Jeff Burton, current drivers from the driver council and team and track executives. Monster Energy, which signed last month as the title sponsor for NASCAR’s top series, was only informed of the shakeup in the last few weeks.

“If we created motorsport­s today, this is exactly how we would have done it,” said 2012 champion Brad Keselowski. “Just wait until you see it on the race track. It’s the best racing you’ll ever see in your life.”

The new format begins with the Feb. 26 season-opening Daytona 500.

NASCAR was energized by the changes, particular­ly the stages that will allow for a commercial break that doesn’t occur during greenflag racing. Segment winners will be interviewe­d during the breaks, and NASCAR likes that it creates a pause that gives fans a chance to reset.

“As a driver, I’m happy to be rewarded for how I performed and not how I finished,” said Dale Earnhardt Jr.

Race distances will not change under the format, which will apply to all three national series. Had NASCAR run the system this past season, Jimmie Johnson still would have won the title, but Martin Truex Jr. would have advanced one more round through the playoffs based on his two victories in the first round.

“Since NASCAR started, there has always been change,” said Hall of Famer Richard Petty. “This new format just adapts to the current and next generation of fans. It’s something to help create more excitement during the races. You have to put on a good race, a good show where people want to watch at home and enjoy coming to the track. Having two additional winning moments is a good step in that direction to keep the drivers competitiv­e and fans excited throughout the race and season.”

Mike Joy, FOX NASCAR play-by-play announcer, said the change brought racing more in line with other sports like football (quarters), baseball (innings) and hockey (periods).

“The idea of trying to get the viewer in front of a TV set for 500 miles of straight competitio­n has proven difficult in this century,” Fox said. “People are consuming sports differentl­y than ever before, and every sport is discussing evolving to suit the target audience. This racestage format provides a better alternativ­e than shortening races, because fans will still get their money’s worth with just as much competitio­n as previously.”

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