The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

IndyCar trending up, NASCAR the opposite

- Jenna Fryer Columnist

IndyCar is showing renewed energy. For NASCAR, some might say the series is off the rails. Why can’t the top two auto racing leagues in the U.S. be on an upswing at the same time?

CHARLOTTE, N.C. » Motorsport­s in America can be bold and beautiful and so very baffling.

IndyCar and NASCAR, the top two series in the United States, seem as if they are headed in opposite directions at the start of the 2018 season. IndyCar has had two competitiv­e races, boasts a new car that contribute­d to a nail-biting finish April 7 in Phoenix, and renewed energy and excitement surroundin­g the beleaguere­d little series.

NASCAR, the behemoth league in this country, has seven races under its belt. But after the April 8 race at Texas, some might wonder if the series is falling off its rails. NASCAR officials made an officiatin­g error that benefited Kevin Harvick, a series official was seen on television fist-bumping a Harvick crew member after the no-call, and then Harvick spared no words in his harsh criticism of the “pathetic” NASCAR-issued air guns he claimed are “embarrassi­ng for the sport.”

The action didn’t stop after Kyle Busch’s victory over Harvick, either.

NASCAR President Brent Dewar, who has dramatical­ly amped up fan engagement this year, went on a bizarre, threehour-plus Twitter binge in which he was both defensive and later apologetic if his tone offended. He invited one critical fan to visit race control because it’s “easy to criticize from you(r) lazy boy.” When fan JJ Brannan wrote that Dewar was “doing more harm to the brand then you are good with your Twitter presence,” Dewar quickly clapped back.

“Happy to stop. Will save me a couple of hours I can spend with my family,” the president replied.

Why can’t the two top racing series in the U.S. ever be on an upswing at the same time?

That very question was asked to Roger Penske, the titan of motorsport­s, at last month’s IndyCar season opener. The billionair­e with full-time teams in NASCAR, IndyCar, IMSA sports cars and Australia’s super cars series didn’t have an immediate answer. IndyCar has been quietly moving with a slight and slow resurgence, but NASCAR feels like it’s putting out one fire after another.

One issue Penske circled back to repeatedly that day was cost-containmen­t and he admitted he can run one NASCAR Cup Series car competitiv­ely for the same spend on his entire three-car IndyCar operation. He brought up the equipment used to change tires during NASCAR races several times, and seemed in favor of the rule this year that has NASCAR-issued pit guns to stop bottomless team spending on developing faster, efficient air guns.

“I hate to tell you how many times we had problems with our $150,000 investment in pit guns compared to what we’re doing now,” Penske said.

All NASCAR team owners were allowed input on the rule and it’s not a minor change; it has developed into a major storyline of this young season. Teams complained the guns haven’t consistent­ly worked, and Harvick said issues with the equipment have dogged him through the first two months of the season. Harvick still has three victories and a runner-up finish through seven races.

“The pit guns have been absolutely horrible all year, and our guys do a great job on pit road, and the pathetic part about it is the fact you get handed something that doesn’t work correctly, and those guys are just doing everything that they can to try to make it right,” he said. “It’s embarrassi­ng for the sport.”

Scott Miller, NASCAR senior vice president of competitio­n, told SiriusXM NASCAR Radio on April 9 that officials are studying the problems.

 ?? RICK SCUTERI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Josef Newgarden celebrates after winning an IndyCar race April 7 at Phoenix Internatio­nal Raceway in Avondale, Ariz.
RICK SCUTERI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Josef Newgarden celebrates after winning an IndyCar race April 7 at Phoenix Internatio­nal Raceway in Avondale, Ariz.
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