
09-12-2006, 02:27 PM
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 | Guest | | Join Date: May 2006 Location: West Virginia
Posts: 1,666
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This Chase will prove a point Darrell Waltrip / AllWaltrip.com
Posted: 2 hours ago' Folks, I believe this year's Chase will prove a lot of points. (Ha, ha! That's funny. Prove a lot of points.)
Seven drivers are in the Chase this year that weren't in last year's Chase. While two of those drivers took part in the first Chase, who knows if any of the seven drivers paid attention to the way last year's Chase went? The young drivers in their first Chase — Kyle Busch, Denny Hamlin, Kevin Harvick and Kasey Kahne — like to race hard. They'll win several races. This Chase is going to prove whether you can race hard, win races and win the championship or just take the conservative approach and try to finish every week.
Here's what I'm afraid will happen. Once again, the most consistent driver — not the one that wins the most races — is the guy that will win the championship. The guy that wins the title could be just like Tony Stewart last year. He won't win a Chase race; he'll just get good, consistent finishes.
At Richmond, it was fun to see who was in and out of the Chase. Who would have ever thought that Tony Stewart wouldn't have made the Chase? At one time, it looked like Jeff Gordon wasn't going to make it, and then at another time, it looked like Dale Earnhardt Jr. would be the odd man out. That 26th race epitomizes what the Chase should be. Headed into the last 10 races, you've got 10 guys that are thinking championship and will apply the same philosophy that they used during the first 26 races to get into the Chase. They don't want to beat themselves so they take the conservative approach. That's why the 10 guys in the Chase need their own point system. If NASCAR gave Chase points on the 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 scale, drivers can go for the win. If they have a blown engine or get in a wreck because they're racing too hard, they're not going to lose 100 points in one race. A 10-point system will keep the Chase standings tight. If a driver falls out of a race early, he only loses 10 points. He's still in the hunt, and everybody stays close. When you've got a point system like that, the pressure is off. You just race as hard as you can to get the best possible finish you can.
If a driver falls out of one race this year, they'll fall out of the Chase hunt because quality drivers like Jeff Gordon, Matt Kenseth and Mark Martin will get consistent finishes. They may not get wins, but they'll get consistent finishes. The way the Chase is currently constructed, you're going to have to prove to me that consistency isn't what it takes to win the championship.
This year's Chasers will do the same thing that Kenseth did when he forced NASCAR to create the Chase. The sanctioning body had to do something to liven up the last part of the season. Well, NASCAR's going to have to do something to liven up the Chase.
NASCAR has a tough job trying to keep critics happy while making rules that are good for everybody. They don't make rules that are good for one or two. They make rules that are good for everybody, and they do a pretty darn good job of it so I'll be anxious to see any potential tweaks that they make. If it were up to me, drivers would win and be in the Chase. Once they're in, they would have their own point system. You're going to hear guys say, "Oh, we don't like that. We don't want to do that." Those are the guys that figure they're going to finish all of the races and not win any of them.
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I don't agree with the own points system for the chaser's. The only changes I want to see is more points for a win and points for won poles. The cream will come to the top. We might even get a real racing champion.  |