- 26,911
- Houston, Texas, USA
- JMarine25
After a real race is complete (24 Hours of Le Mans), NASCAR races a track that is wonderful for road racing in America- Sears Point. Or as it's commonly called nowadays, Infineon Raceway. The race remains the Dodge/Save Mart 350 hosted by the NASCAR Nextel Cup series. When I was first into NASCAR, my favorite driver, Jeff Gordon, was able to win five consectutive road races. It's still a record in the series. Everyone is expected to be a stellar NASCAR racer in just about every track they race, right? Well with some teams, no. Some drivers just aren't road racers in NASCAR. So teams have some "hired guns" to take the place of oval racing veterans. I think they are even called "wringers," the term for a road racing star substituting for a NASCAR oval racer. So this is the question I ask all of you- do you think it is a good idea for inexperienced NASCAR racers to hire road racers for the road racing events?
I'll start.
A number of NASCAR stars have gone to racing schools like Bob Bondurant's School of Driving for road racing experience. People will criticize that a racer learns how to compete in left and right turns, but chooses oval racing for a pro life in racing. One person really p*ssed me off about road racing. NASCAR star Jimmy Spencer once said that if he were in charge of road courses, he'd (indirect quote) "tear them down and use them as bomb testing sites." Even if I raced ovals for a living, I still know that I want to be challenged on road courses as well as ovals. I am a dedicated road racing guy. I've loved road racing all of my life and would never trade it for some oval action. I likely wouldn't even race an all-or-mostly oval racing series full-time if I wasn't committed to ovals. I wouldn't race a road racing series if I wasn't committed to road courses. I applauded NASCAR when they race at Sears Point and Watkins Glen (though I like Sears Point better). I even applauded NASCAR when they raced outside of America on a road course with another former F1 course in Mexico City. NASCAR Busch racers are going to have to compete on Sears Point and Watkins Glen in Cup, so this is a nice proving ground heading into the other events. I think NASCAR Busch once raced Lime Rock Park, which is my idea of short track racing.
How many of you realize that I didn't fully answer my own question up to this point? Well this is where I sound off. If you ask me, you're a racer when you step up to the plate in any discipline of motorsport. Any circuit racing series will throw in these extra challenges. So you need to be ready whenever called for action. As much as I don't care much about NASCAR, they are doing nothing wrong with the oval and road racing challenge. I'm not going to say they don't need to run road courses. This is just testament to the fact that even though ovals is the name of the game, they are still racers. I'd rather be reminded of my racing roots by testing left and right turns than to just say I'm a racer and fail in the challenge of road racing. Why should I hire a road racing expert to help me in road racing an oval racing car when I can't road race myself in this scenario? I think (then) CART had the best formula for a combination of road racing and oval racing. Champ Cars race around road courses, street courses, and ovals. That's great parity in racing challenge. You need to be good in road and oval racing to do successful in Champ Car since there is a nicer balance of the two disciplines. I'd do go-kart racing to aid in road racing skills. Sure, I'm racing a 10 or 20hp hunk of metal around a very short and narrow track. But Memo Gidley said in Road and Track Magazine that you can learn everything about racing a Champ Car in a small go-kart. Attend the racing schools. Do some go-karting on road course tracks. Be a better driver on the road. Do some practice runs in road racing... and you'll be just fine in NASCAR doing road courses. Or you can just pull a Jimmy Spencer and p:censored: out of road races in NASCAR. I think racers should be able to get some extra training without the aid of some other established road racers. It doesn't hurt to boost your experience in racing even if road courses aren't raced often. If you really just CANNOT do road racing, then you're free to find someone else to do it.
Simple. Now it's your turn, GTP people.
I'll start.
A number of NASCAR stars have gone to racing schools like Bob Bondurant's School of Driving for road racing experience. People will criticize that a racer learns how to compete in left and right turns, but chooses oval racing for a pro life in racing. One person really p*ssed me off about road racing. NASCAR star Jimmy Spencer once said that if he were in charge of road courses, he'd (indirect quote) "tear them down and use them as bomb testing sites." Even if I raced ovals for a living, I still know that I want to be challenged on road courses as well as ovals. I am a dedicated road racing guy. I've loved road racing all of my life and would never trade it for some oval action. I likely wouldn't even race an all-or-mostly oval racing series full-time if I wasn't committed to ovals. I wouldn't race a road racing series if I wasn't committed to road courses. I applauded NASCAR when they race at Sears Point and Watkins Glen (though I like Sears Point better). I even applauded NASCAR when they raced outside of America on a road course with another former F1 course in Mexico City. NASCAR Busch racers are going to have to compete on Sears Point and Watkins Glen in Cup, so this is a nice proving ground heading into the other events. I think NASCAR Busch once raced Lime Rock Park, which is my idea of short track racing.
How many of you realize that I didn't fully answer my own question up to this point? Well this is where I sound off. If you ask me, you're a racer when you step up to the plate in any discipline of motorsport. Any circuit racing series will throw in these extra challenges. So you need to be ready whenever called for action. As much as I don't care much about NASCAR, they are doing nothing wrong with the oval and road racing challenge. I'm not going to say they don't need to run road courses. This is just testament to the fact that even though ovals is the name of the game, they are still racers. I'd rather be reminded of my racing roots by testing left and right turns than to just say I'm a racer and fail in the challenge of road racing. Why should I hire a road racing expert to help me in road racing an oval racing car when I can't road race myself in this scenario? I think (then) CART had the best formula for a combination of road racing and oval racing. Champ Cars race around road courses, street courses, and ovals. That's great parity in racing challenge. You need to be good in road and oval racing to do successful in Champ Car since there is a nicer balance of the two disciplines. I'd do go-kart racing to aid in road racing skills. Sure, I'm racing a 10 or 20hp hunk of metal around a very short and narrow track. But Memo Gidley said in Road and Track Magazine that you can learn everything about racing a Champ Car in a small go-kart. Attend the racing schools. Do some go-karting on road course tracks. Be a better driver on the road. Do some practice runs in road racing... and you'll be just fine in NASCAR doing road courses. Or you can just pull a Jimmy Spencer and p:censored: out of road races in NASCAR. I think racers should be able to get some extra training without the aid of some other established road racers. It doesn't hurt to boost your experience in racing even if road courses aren't raced often. If you really just CANNOT do road racing, then you're free to find someone else to do it.
Simple. Now it's your turn, GTP people.