Posted on 05/22/2007 4:39:07 PM PDT by NormsRevenge
CHARLOTTE, N.C. -
NASCAR will use the Car of Tomorrow exclusively in 2008, a year earlier than planned.
The COT was scheduled to run 16 races this season and be phased into competition during the next two years. But costs skyrocketed while car owners tried to maintain two programs the current car, and the COT and NASCAR said Wednesday it will move up the date if teams agreed.
"The majority of car owners actually came to us and said 'Now that we are up and running the car, it doesn't make sense to have two parallel programs moving forward,'" competition director Robin Pemberton said. "It seems to us that everyone is working on the Car of Tomorrow now and ready to use it exclusively."
The COT was a seven-year project by NASCAR to design a universal car that is safer, less expensive and better for racing. It's been used in five events this season, all won by drivers for Hendrick Motorsports. The next COT race is June 3 in Dover, Del.
Most drivers have been critical of the COT, complaining about its handling and calling it difficult to drive, but they preferred going to one program.
"I don't like doing two different cars it's one or the other," Dale Earnhardt Jr. said this month. "I'd go full time to the COT right now. Why not? We're all struggling with it. We might as well get all the time we can with it week in and week out, even if it drives us all crazy."
Smaller teams have been satisfied with the results and think the COT has helped them compete with the big-budget operations.
"I think it does help level the playing field somewhat for the smaller teams," said Jeff Green, whose two top-10 finishes this season came in COT races.
"NASCAR is able to keep a tighter lid on some of the trick things teams can do, and I think that will benefit the teams that don't have the depth of resources some of the bigger teams have. I see it as a positive move all the way around."
But Jeff Gordon, winner of two COT races, is hesitant because the car has yet to race on a 1.5-mile track.
"Without being on a mile-and-a-half track, I don't see how we can just go completely forward with it," Gordon said. "I'm pretty optimistic about the way things are going right now. Obviously we're running good with it. But I still think there are things that need to evolve with this car that are not there yet."
Humpy Wheeler, president of Lowe's Motor Speedway, estimates the COT will save teams $1 million per car annually, thus helping smaller teams compete.
"While we will probably never again see the day when a young rookie like Ricky Rudd or Bill Elliot shows up at a track with a car they built in their home garage, we may see a return of the successful one-car operation," Wheeler said. "The end result is that in a couple years the playing field will be more level."
After two consecutive COT races, NASCAR returned to the old car for Saturday night's All-Star race a snoozer that saw just three lead changes over 80 laps. The old car will be used again at Lowe's Motor Speedway for this weekend's Coca-Cola 600.
Wheeler thinks races will be more exciting once the COT is fully developed.
"The Car of Tomorrow will eventually create the most dynamic change in racing in the long history of Nextel Cup," he said. "As drivers and crews continue to adapt, the racing will be more competitive and we will see a significant increase in side-by-side racing."
NASCAR has been pleased with the car through its first five events and cites an average margin of victory of .505 seconds compared with 1.286 seconds in the same five races last season as proof the car has improved racing.
It also says there have been six fewer did-not-finish results through the same race sequence, and 13 teams have used the same chassis for three of the five races.
NASCAR recognizes the car is a work in progress. Series officials had hoped teams would want to use the COT full time in 2008 because more use produces more information on how to make improvements.
"We feel like making this decision now gives teams an idea of what is coming and lets them put more resources into the new car," Pemberton said. "Teams can work on program for next year and everyone will be able to get a better grasp on the entire project."
The Toyota teams have been the loudest proponents for going strictly to the COT because focusing on one program could alleviate many of the manufacturer's struggles. Toyota's teams have struggled to make races this season, the automaker's first in the Nextel Cup.
"It will help us tremendously because we're a startup organization and it would help us streamline our efforts," said Michael Waltrip, who is running a three-car team. "It will save everybody money. It will be more competitive going forward and I look forward to it being all-in right away."
Nascar ‘MatchBox’ Racing 2008.. It’s Official.
Norm what is COT?
Sounds like outright Communism to me.....
Nascar has proposed and will now have all teams drive cars that are much more similar in design, look and feel in an attempt to cut costs incurred by teams..
It’s a standardization effort, still in its infancy.
There’s a whole bunch of info here
http://www.nascar.com/news/headlines/cup/cot/index.html
FYI: Car of Tomorrow
http://i.a.cnn.net/nascar/.element/ssi/story/2.0/news/headlines/cup/cot/new_era.pdf
I used to be opposed but I got tired of the tinkering throughout the season. Hopefully it will return the races to the drivers.
The claim is it will make the racing more competitive. We’ll see.
The Hendricks folks have cleaned up so far winning the first 5 COT races.
I know it’s just not practical, but I sure miss the days of “stock” car racing. When you could go to your favorite brand’s dealer and actually buy the exact same car they were racing on Sunday.
Having grown up in the Midwest and around a lot of small tracks as a kid, I hear ya. altho at that time, we didn’t have a lot of late models on the track.
The cars go around in a circle or oval. How difficult can it be (\sarc)
True, Watkins Glen and Infineon are the exceptions.
Whether the owners like 'em, I bet they are glad they will have only one model for the '08 season.
I suspect we’ll end up with IROC style cars to really level the playing field. They’ll also follow in the tracks of our public schools and do away with finishing positions, instead giving each driver and team a nice ribbon and plastic plaque to preserve their sensitive self esteem. The final touch will be to equally distribute the purse so as not to have a regressive tone to the winnings, subtracting from each purse any funds donated by those nasty capitolist sponsors. Now that’s a level playing field. Go fast, turn left. Nascar of tomorrow... NOT.
Amen to that!
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