USA TODAY US Edition

NBC’s Letarte will call action from pit box

- Mike Hembree

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – NBC Sports celebrated a perfect storm of television Sunday at Chicagolan­d Speedway for its first Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series broadcast of the season.

The race was one of the best of the season, and the finish was classic — Kyle Busch and Kyle Larson engaging in two last-lap encounters before Busch rolled to the win.

The broadcast also marked Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s debut as a Cup race analyst, and reviews of his commentary were universall­y good.

The all-important ratings numbers also were pleasing as the broadcast attracted 2.55 million viewers, up 10 percent from the same race last year.

So, for week two of its part of the sea- son, NBC is shaking up the broadcast? Yes.

The biggest difference for Saturday night’s Coke Zero Sugar 400 at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway will be the positionin­g of analyst (and Earnhardt’s former crew chief ) Steve Letarte. He will move to the network’s pit box, which will be located in the same row as the team pit boxes.

Also new at Daytona: Veteran broadcaste­r Mike Tirico, frequently a centerpiec­e of sports programmin­g on NBC, will be included in Saturday’s prerace show.

Letarte’s move changes the broadcast setup. Last weekend at Chicagolan­d, he and Earnhardt shared a booth atop the grandstand while lead announcer Rick Allen and Jeff Burton were in another “sky” booth.

Saturday, Letarte will work alone in the pit box and will be sort of a middle man between the main booth and NBC’s roaming pit reporters.

Located near the end of pit road, the NBC box is very close to the racing surface, potentiall­y bringing a lot of noise into the broadcast when Letarte is on the air.

And that’s good, he said.

“The sound might be a challenge,” he said. “But I look at it as real. Let the fan know what I’m dealing with. This is where I sat as a crew chief. This is what it’s like. The closer we can bring the fan to the real thing, the better.”

Letarte said Earnhardt brought a new perspectiv­e to Sunday’s broadcast and that the concept of adding a fourth person worked well.

“Dale is a huge fan, and he was very well prepared,” Letarte said. “He put a tremendous amount of preparatio­n into it. Rick and Jeff and I put a lot of preparatio­n into having a fourth voice. That changes the dynamic quite a bit.”

 ?? MATTHEW O’HAREN/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Former crew chief Steve Letarte is happy NBC is moving him closer to the action.
MATTHEW O’HAREN/USA TODAY SPORTS Former crew chief Steve Letarte is happy NBC is moving him closer to the action.

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