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Kyle Busch says NASCAR fans from the 1990s probably went away

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carolinakid

carolinakid

Joined
Oct 20, 2021
Messages
39,046

NASCAR drivers Kyle Busch talks the 1990s race fan versus today’s fan​

NASCAR is in a new era. It sort of started with the Car of Tomorrow. Fast forward just a few more years, and the sport now looks drastically different.

First, the Next Gen car has leveled the playing field. Cars are identical from team to team, far different than the cars of the 1990s.


But, a bigger change from then to now is the tracks themselves. The short tracks were all but erased from the NASCAR schedule, replaced by a string of similar 1.5-mile speedways, nicknamed cookie-cutter ovals.

The drivers themselves have also changed. Kids are now making it into the sport. Gone are the days of the working man making his way into the sport. Instead, a line of young drivers with boat loads of money are climbing the NASCAR ladder.

The costs of the sport have caused that. Teams need money to survive and it’s easier to survive, especially in the lower divisions when a driver is paying his way and funding the team.

In the modern era, even Cup drivers have to pay to drive when they race in lower divisions. How would a no-name kid make it without funding?

But, that same driver didn’t build a fan base to get there like they used to. And, maybe that’s a problem as fans come to the racetrack to see their favorite driver…


The tracks, the cars, the type of drivers, it’s all different. Basically, everything has changed. The sport looks very different to a fan. Sure, a few of you stuck around but it’s hard to believe many are still here…

Kyle Busch talks NASCAR fans in the 1990s​

“You have die-hard fans of NASCAR, the Jeff Gordon, Dale Earnhardt, Rusty Wallace, Terry Labonte, Mark Martin, Harry Gant, you name it. The guys from the 90s. Our world today in 2024 is a lot different fan base following along,” Kyle Busch stated ahead of the race at Bristol Motor Speedway.

“I don’t feel like we were able to transition a lot of the fans that were fans of those drivers that I just mentioned into a William Byron fan or a Kyle fan.”

“They kind of probably went away and just stopped following as much. Which is hard to say because honestly when you look at NASCAR, the fans love the drivers.”

How much did Kyle Busch sell his NASCAR team for?


Comparing NASCAR to the NFL​

“Driver star power, that’s what brings people to the racetrack. When you look at the NFL, for instance – those players on that team change so often. You guys think my pit crews’ names changing every week is a lot, look at the roster changes of NFL teams and what they go through with their 53 man roster.”

“But fans are fans of the team and a lot of times, I’ll throw out a name, Jacksonville for instance. The last few years, they’re coming back because of Trevor Lawrence, right? They’ve got somebody back that has brought the team back into the forefront.”

“But, before that, their stadiums were empty, you know what I mean. You can find the same struggles across different sports, is what we see sometimes.”

The fans from the 1990s might be mostly gone. But, they would have loved Sunday’s race at Bristol Motor Speedway.
 

chuckythegoat2

chuckythegoat2

Joined
Sep 26, 2023
Messages
1,686
i just dont get on the super speedways they ride side by side all day just waiting for the big one, call me old school but this to me is not nascar racing
ckid, living in Nascar country, you're knowledgeable about this stuff.

I've seen some good racing. But it's been a while.

1) Do you consider any of the top drivers to be compelling personalities?

2) What could they do to make the racing more viewer-friendly?
 

carolinakid

carolinakid

Joined
Oct 20, 2021
Messages
39,046
Chucky imo there is a lot they can do, but with today safety rules it will never be change imo, all the stages are bs to me that not nascar, it seem to me they really dont want a car or 2 these days to get away from the pack, this is not nascar racing to me either, it just a whole new ball game today.Today nascar would have never made it from the start like the old nascar did and took off, cars all look the same , no name drivers it should be change to a different name as to most here this is not the real nascar but a water down thing
 

BigJay

BigJay

Joined
Oct 28, 2021
Messages
15,407

NASCAR drivers Kyle Busch talks the 1990s race fan versus today’s fan​

NASCAR is in a new era. It sort of started with the Car of Tomorrow. Fast forward just a few more years, and the sport now looks drastically different.

First, the Next Gen car has leveled the playing field. Cars are identical from team to team, far different than the cars of the 1990s.


But, a bigger change from then to now is the tracks themselves. The short tracks were all but erased from the NASCAR schedule, replaced by a string of similar 1.5-mile speedways, nicknamed cookie-cutter ovals.

The drivers themselves have also changed. Kids are now making it into the sport. Gone are the days of the working man making his way into the sport. Instead, a line of young drivers with boat loads of money are climbing the NASCAR ladder.

The costs of the sport have caused that. Teams need money to survive and it’s easier to survive, especially in the lower divisions when a driver is paying his way and funding the team.

In the modern era, even Cup drivers have to pay to drive when they race in lower divisions. How would a no-name kid make it without funding?

But, that same driver didn’t build a fan base to get there like they used to. And, maybe that’s a problem as fans come to the racetrack to see their favorite driver…


The tracks, the cars, the type of drivers, it’s all different. Basically, everything has changed. The sport looks very different to a fan. Sure, a few of you stuck around but it’s hard to believe many are still here…

Kyle Busch talks NASCAR fans in the 1990s​

“You have die-hard fans of NASCAR, the Jeff Gordon, Dale Earnhardt, Rusty Wallace, Terry Labonte, Mark Martin, Harry Gant, you name it. The guys from the 90s. Our world today in 2024 is a lot different fan base following along,” Kyle Busch stated ahead of the race at Bristol Motor Speedway.

“I don’t feel like we were able to transition a lot of the fans that were fans of those drivers that I just mentioned into a William Byron fan or a Kyle fan.”

“They kind of probably went away and just stopped following as much. Which is hard to say because honestly when you look at NASCAR, the fans love the drivers.”

How much did Kyle Busch sell his NASCAR team for?


Comparing NASCAR to the NFL​

“Driver star power, that’s what brings people to the racetrack. When you look at the NFL, for instance – those players on that team change so often. You guys think my pit crews’ names changing every week is a lot, look at the roster changes of NFL teams and what they go through with their 53 man roster.”

“But fans are fans of the team and a lot of times, I’ll throw out a name, Jacksonville for instance. The last few years, they’re coming back because of Trevor Lawrence, right? They’ve got somebody back that has brought the team back into the forefront.”

“But, before that, their stadiums were empty, you know what I mean. You can find the same struggles across different sports, is what we see sometimes.”

The fans from the 1990s might be mostly gone. But, they would have loved Sunday’s race at Bristol Motor Speedway.
KB is correct with a lot of what he’s said here.

I always felt the pivotal date was when Dale Sr. died Feb. 18, 2001.

His death, along with many of the changes NASCAR made in the years following that Kyle Busch outlined, drove a lot of the old-school fans away.
 

BigJay

BigJay

Joined
Oct 28, 2021
Messages
15,407
Don’t really care for the product but there is good racing left

Im a racing fan so ill watch any type

Can’t bullshit and say Atlanta wasn’t an amazing finish

View attachment 30587
Agree Cudi. I’m a racing fan and I watch all types. There have been some pretty good races this year, and some boring ones per normal.

I actually really enjoy the trucks series. I’m thinking about going trucks/Xfinity day in Austin on Saturday weather permitting.

I usually like F1 as well but Max has become so dominant the races are usually over once he takes the first-lap lead.

And IndyCar series is decent but their scheduling is idiotic. Their races are difficult to find on tv oftentimes they schedule opposite races I’d rather watch.
 
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