The Denver Post

NASCAR defends drama-free final four, vows to do more to promote young stars

- By Jenna Fryer

NASCAR on Friday dismissed the sentiment that this weekend’s championsh­ip finale lacks the pizzazz and star power of a major event.

The final four — Kyle Larson, Christophe­r Bell, Ryan Blaney and William Byron — is the youngest since the winner-takeall format began in 2014 and Larson is the only previous Cup Series champion among the contenders.

Larson and Bell are longtime dirt track rivals but have settled any simmering disputes while Byron dates Blaney’s younger sister. The drivers have acknowledg­ed Sunday’s showdown at Phoenix Raceway lacks the hype of years past, but NASCAR pushed back as the weekend arrived.

“We have a playoff system that I believe is the toughest in sports,” NASCAR President Steve Phelps said. “Think about the style of racing that we have, and the incredible competitio­n that we have on the racetrack and the variety that our drivers had to go through.

“They raced on dirt. They raced on concrete. They raced on asphalt. They raced on short tracks, street courses, road courses, superspeed­ways,” Phelps continued. “Is there another racing series on the planet that can say that? I don’t think there is. We’ve got the best racing in the world, and I think it’s the most competitiv­e racing in the world and when we crown that champion on Sunday, that champion is going to be very deserving.”

Nobody is questionin­g the versatilit­y required over NASCAR’S 38-race season, which began this year at Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum in February.

Still, Blaney unprompted lamented that the final four had “no bad blood, no rivalry, no one’s mad at each other in this one.” Retired driver Dale Earnhardt Jr., part of NBC’S broadcast team for the race, even said the final four were “just not very dynamic or aggressive.”

This year’s playoff field, average age of 28 with Larson at 31 the oldest, is missing five-time most popular driver Chase Elliott because he didn’t make the field. Cup champions Joey Logano, Kevin Harvick and Kyle Busch were all eliminated early, young fan favorites Ross Chastain and Bubba Wallace were knocked out and regular-season champion Martin Truex Jr. and divisive personalit­y Denny Hamlin fell short last week.

The four left standing are softspoken drivers and, with the exception of Larson, have never won anything as big as a Cup title. Bell is back in the championsh­ip for the second consecutiv­e year, but Blaney and Byron are making their first appearance­s. Larson is the 2021 champion.

Steve O’donnell, NASCAR chief operating officer called Larson and Bell two of the best racers in the world and praised the final four for “what they do to represent our sport.”

He acknowledg­ed NASCAR could do more for its young stars and said industry leaders are actively discussing increased engagement and storytelli­ng. NASCAR has an agreement with Netflix for a docuseries about this year’s 10-race playoffs that will air in early 2024.

“I think we have a big opportunit­y as a sport because we have a crop of young drivers for fans to come in and embrace,” he said. “Now we have to do the job, as do they, to say, ‘Hey, come root for me, come along for the ride.’ It’s a lot of young drivers that we need to have fans embrace and latch onto and show them why.”

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