Credit where credit is due.
NASCAR listened to its drivers, teams and fans and made meaningful changes to its superspeedway package for Daytona International Speedway and Talladega Superspeedway.
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Beginning with the regular-season finale at Daytona, NASCAR will reduce engine output from 510 horsepower to 465 horsepower while cutting the rear spoiler from 7 inches to 4 inches. The goal is simple: reduce drag, allow cars to make bigger runs and create more opportunities to pass without relying solely on the draft. NASCAR estimates single-car speeds will increase by roughly 3 mph, while overall pack speeds should remain about the same.
In other words, this is exactly what superspeedway racing has needed.
For the past several seasons, Daytona and Talladega have become exercises in patience. Drivers spent much of the race saving fuel, riding in line and waiting until the closing laps before anyone dared make a move.
The aura never disappeared.
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The racing simply wasn’t living up to it.
Contrast that with EchoPark Speedway in Atlanta.
Atlanta has become appointment television. Drivers can move around the track, build runs and actually race one another instead of waiting for pit strategy to shuffle the field. Every lap feels like someone is trying to make something happen.
Now NASCAR is trying to bring some of that philosophy back to Daytona and Talladega.
That’s a smart move.
Less drag should make it easier for drivers to separate from the pack, build momentum and complete passes without depending entirely on the car in front of them. The smaller spoiler should also reward drivers willing to make bold moves instead of simply riding around until the final restart.
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Will it be perfect?
Probably not.
Superspeedway racing is incredibly difficult to balance. NASCAR has to create exciting racing while keeping speeds within a safe window. That’s never an easy equation.
But this feels like a significant step in the right direction.
NASCAR deserves praise for recognizing there was a problem instead of pretending everything was fine.
The sanctioning body experimented with stage lengths earlier this season to discourage fuel saving. When that didn’t deliver the desired results, it kept working instead of settling.
That’s how the sport improves.
Daytona and Talladega already possess some of the greatest atmospheres in motorsports. The Daytona 500 remains one of the biggest events in American sports, while Talladega continues to produce some of NASCAR’s most unforgettable moments.
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The magic has always been there.
Now the racing has a chance to match it again.
If these changes perform the way NASCAR expects, the sport’s two biggest drafting tracks may soon deliver the kind of edge-of-your-seat racing fans have been asking for.
That’s a win for everybody.
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