Houston Chronicle

LACKING PAYOFF

NASCAR off to fast start, but ratings still stagnant.

- By Jenna Fryer

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Bad news first: The overnight television ratings for NASCAR’s race in California were down. The ratings were down for Phoenix, Las Vegas and Atlanta, too. Basically, nothing NASCAR does can stop this slide, it seems. So what’s the good news? Well, NASCAR really couldn’t have asked for a better start to its season.

Five drivers won the first five races. The lead changed in the waning laps each time.

Kyle Busch got into a fight on pit road that left him with a bloody gash on his forehead — generating all sorts of mainstream attention — and nobody was punished. Similarly, Austin Dillon avoided any penalty when he wrecked Cole Custer in retaliatio­n.

Danica Patrick argued NASCAR did the right thing by withholdin­g heavy-handed punishment­s.

“It makes for good TV,” she said, “and we handle it on the track ourselves.”

For all the hand-wringing over the ratings slump, NASCAR appears to be headed in the right direction.

Heck, even Clint Bowyer, one of the largest personalit­ies in the series, is emerging from his lengthy slump. He finished third Sunday and wrote on Twitter: “first time in a long time I grabbed the bottle of Jack in the plane for the right reason.” Trust us, a happy Bowyer is good for everyone in NASCAR.

There’s parity among the manufactur­ers — Chevrolet, Ford and Toyota all have wins this season — and the younger drivers have found themselves in the mix every week. Kyle Larson, victorious Sunday, in theory could have five wins already this season. He ran out of gas while leading the Daytona 500, notched three consecutiv­e runner-up finishes, then finished first at Fontana.

But the bad news always comes Monday, when the TV numbers are released. The ratings become the main focus of the sport: Naysayers fixate on decline; excuse-makers trot out all manner of explanatio­ns.

How about this? NASCAR, no matter how many story lines or rule changes or celebritie­s lining the grid, is an underwhelm­ing overall product. Even with its new stage format, events are too long in this day and age of instant gratificat­ion and the racing itself often isn’t all that exciting until the end.

Another issue is that viewers are essentiall­y being asked to tune in to watch colorful cars go in circles for 500 miles. When the cars themselves become the “stars,” it’s a lot harder to become emotionall­y invested in the product. It doesn’t help that Jeff Gordon, the sport’s biggest star for more than two decades, is now in the TV booth and Tony Stewart, the man of the people, is also retired.

The people left who need to be embraced are stuffed into cockpits, wearing helmets, and aren’t heard from until the end of the event. Their personalit­ies are hidden, too. .

Most other sports provide an opportunit­y for fans to feel the tension, see and hear the emotion, experience the highs and lows of the participan­ts in real time. NASCAR hasn’t found a way to capture that, barring, of course, an angry Busch taking a swing at Joey Logano.

That’s as big a problem for NASCAR as the length of its races, its over-saturated 11-month schedule and the constant corporate-speak of its drivers. Figure out a way to show us more — take off the sunglasses, be engaging, give us energy and passion — and then maybe people will start watching again.

 ?? Alexa Gallardo / Associated Press ?? Tight races like this one in the Monster Cup Series last weekend haven’t done much for NASCAR’s sagging TV ratings.
Alexa Gallardo / Associated Press Tight races like this one in the Monster Cup Series last weekend haven’t done much for NASCAR’s sagging TV ratings.

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