Dale Jr.

Personally, I think he should retire from driving while he is healthy. The concussion problem that pulled him out of the car this year is something that never completely heals. One hard hit and it could start again, with even worse symptoms. And take even longer to heal or the symptoms could stay forever. It would stink to see him looking like some punch drunk boxer for the rest of his life.

 
Personally, I think he should retire from driving while he is healthy. The concussion problem that pulled him out of the car this year is something that never completely heals. One hard hit and it could start again, with even worse symptoms. And take even longer to heal or the symptoms could stay forever. It would stink to see him looking like some punch drunk boxer for the rest of his life.
While I don't necessarily disagree with this, I'm to selfish to say that I wish he would retire. It just wouldn't be the same without him. I remember when Earnhardt Sr. died it took a couple of years for me to get back into Nascar. I'm not saying I wouldn't watch because I watched every race this year even though he missed half the season. It just wouldn't be as exciting to me because I'm a die hard Earnhardt fan.

 
Big changes announced to by nascar...

MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES

FAQ FOR NASCAR'S 2017 RACE FORMAT ENHANCEMENTS

By Staff report | NASCAR.com |

January 23, 2017 at 06.00 PM

RELATED: Full coverage of announcement | Official NASCAR press release

NASCAR's race enhancements announced Monday detailed how and why races will be run in stages in 2017. Below are answers to some of the potential questions.

How many stages are in a race?

Three -- Stage 1, Stage 2 and the Final Stage. Stage 1 and Stage 2 will reward drivers who are leading, or in the top 10, at the conclusion of each stage. The Final Stage will determine the race winner.

What is Stage 1?

The green flag begins the race, and therefore Stage 1. Its length is approximately 25-30 percent of the event's total length -- it is different for each race, dependent on track size and race length -- with the ending marked via a stage checkered flag (the stage can end under caution, if necessary).

Who benefits most?

Drivers who are running first through 10th at the conclusion of Stage 1 will receive stage bonus points, starting with 10 points for first place, nine points for second place, down to one point for 10th place. Additionally, the driver who finishes Stage 1 first will receive one playoff point to carry into the postseason, should that driver qualify. Those can add up quickly over the course of a season.

What about Stage 2?

At the conclusion of Stage 1, there is a caution period for drivers to come down pit road (innovative strategies will be crucial under these enhancements.) Stage 2 will then begin with a drop of the green flag for the restart. Its length is approximately 25-30 percent of the event's total length -- it is different for each race, dependent on track size and race length -- with the ending marked via a stage checkered flag (the stage can end under caution, if necessary).

What about Stage 2 bonus points?

Same as Stage 1: Drivers who are running first through 10th at the conclusion of Stage 2 will receive stage bonus points, starting with 10 points for first place, nine points for second place, down to one point for 10th place. Additionally, the driver who finishes Stage 2 first will receive one playoff point to carry into the postseason.

What about the final stage?

Following another caution period, which gives fans another natural break in the action, the final stage begins with another green flag drop and restart. Drivers then race for the event win ... and the five bonus points that come with it.

How are points distributed?

The final stage produces the race results, so the end of the final stage is the end of the race. Whoever crosses the start/finish line first at the checkered flag is the race winner. Race points are then awarded to the entire field based on finishing order. The winner receives 40 points. Second place receives 35 points, third place receives 34 points, fourth place receives 33 points ... down to one point for drivers who finish 36th-40th.

There no longer will be a bonus point for leading a lap, or a bonus point for leading the most laps.

And the winner?

The race winner receives five bonus points toward the postseason (this is up from three last year under the new enhancements), plus postseason eligibility. If a driver leads at the end of both Stage 1 and Stage 2, and then wins the race, then he or she would receive seven bonus points to carry into the postseason.

 
Activity
No one is currently typing a reply...

About this thread

Slo_Ride

5,000+ posts
Regulator
Thread starter
Slo_Ride
Joined
Location
ATLANTA
Start date
Participants
Who Replied
Replies
972
Views
73,854
Last reply date
Last reply from
Slo_Ride
1778578257023.png

Glen Rodgers

    May 12, 2026
  • 0
  • 0
Screenshot_20260511_212804_Amazon Shopping.jpg

Blackout67

    May 11, 2026
  • 0
  • 0

New threads

Top