By Dan Kattan – NHsportsradio.com
I have spent years debating about the “Start and Park” drivers in the NASCAR’s Sprint Cup Series with several people. At different times I have taken positions on both sides of the discussion. Various given events have made me feel there can be a value to teams attempting to make the race and driving for just a short time. However, at other times I have felt strongly about not allowing the “Start and Parks”. Today is one of those days I say, do away with S&P drivers.
The argument lately is that these drivers are just trying to get track time looking for sponsorship and showing that they can run each week, even if only for a little while. I applaud the effort, but the reality is they are not competitive, they are not interesting to watch, and who in their right mind would give them fifteen million dollars to fund a team without showing they can attempt to contend for the win or even finish the race.
To me these drivers should be running in the Nationwide series. Yes, I understand that it costs almost as much to run Nationwide as it does to run Cup. Yes I understand the payouts are so much less in the Nationwide series so it is not really cost effective, but here is where my strategy begins to work itself out. Take the money from the last five payout slots in the NASCAR Sprint Cup race and give that money to the top ten non-cup drivers who finish in the Nationwide race each week.
This does 3 things:
- It takes the “Start and Parks” out of the Sprint Cup races making the finishing spots more important because there could be more cars on the lead lap.
- It gives drivers with talent the ability to showcase that talent where it is appropriate and catch the eye of potential sponsors by being successful in the Nationwide series.
- It gives nice paydays to teams that are trying to develop and move to the Sprint Cup ranks. It truly builds a team based feeder system in NASCAR. Something it sorely lacks right now.
This is my view from Atop The Pitbox . Let me know what you think.