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NASCAR Mustang? NASCAR Challenger? Maybe closer than you think...

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OK, so I used to be a big NASCAR fan and used to love watching that black #3 Chevy. Since that wreck at Daytona I still watch a  few races but not like before. I will usually watch the Bristol, Texas, and Talladega races if I don't have anything else to do. When the truck races came out in the mid 1990's, I watched some of them and seemed like a pleasant escape from the normal NASCAR event.

 The natural progresion for today's cup driver is to go from the Truck Series, to the Nationwide (formerly Busch series) to the "Car of Tomorrow" sporting Sprint Cup series with all of the stars that have names and car numbers that wave on flags and adorn every soccer moms rear minivan window across america. Don't even get me started on the cartoon rodents on the broadcasts that seem to get more TV time than the cars either.

 Despite what you think of NASCAR and its followers, they are actually proposing an idea that may bring some life to the series. Look at this article from Fox Sports....

ANN ARBOR, Mich. - NASCAR is bringing sexy back — and in the case of race cars, it's long overdue.

If the Car of Tomorrow comes to fruition in the Nationwide Series in 2010, the vehicle list will include "pony cars" from the manufacturers that choose to use the series to market those models to the public.

That includes the iconic Mustang — the quintessential pony car.

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  • Check out the NASCAR community
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    On Saturday when a NASCAR official spoke of the new NNS COTs, he beamed. It had been a long time since someone from the sanctioning body's side of the sport was genuinely enthusiastic about the styling of a car.

    And when he mentioned "Mustang," my ears perked. A Mustang? A true American sports car for NASCAR competition? And a Challenger, too?

    I must be dreaming.

    "Ten-fold better than a Cup car," the official said of the designs, which must be submitted for approval by June 26 according to the NASCAR Rule Book.

    The new cars are expected to be closer to stock than any vehicle that the sanctioning body has run in the top two series since the dreaded term "aero-matching" rolled off spin-doctor tongues in 2000.

    Despite opposition to a common template platform from both General Motors and Ford, NASCAR turned the Sprint Cup division into a high-dollar IROC Series where all the cars were similar — and the fans turned away. Field managers warned league principals that loss of brand identification would be detrimental not only to the manufacturers, but to the sport itself.

    Manufacturers reportedly poured more than a half-billion dollars into the sport last year through factory and technical support to the teams, track support, vehicle programs and advertising. Yet NASCAR turned its back on Detroit with each generation of its race car as it morphed further away from what was on the showroom floor.

    Yes, the new Sprint Cup car has proved to be safer. After the initial blow of scrapping entire fleets of the old car, the new model will be more cost efficient. The level of competition with the new car — at tracks other than intermediate and two-mile venues — has picked up considerably.

    But the majority of core NASCAR fans have never embraced this car. The evidence of their displeasure can be measured in the dramatic drop in attendance, souvenir sales and television ratings, all of which started long before the economy tanked.

    Now NASCAR is feeling a similar pain in its pocketbook. And the sanctioning body is responding by offering an olive branch in the form of a sleeker, sexy race car to entice the fans back to the stands. A car, which will hopefully revive the "Win on Sunday, buy on Monday" mentality with fans so automakers and sponsors can continue to enjoy a return on investment in the sport.

    Rather than admitting their mistake in the Sprint Cup Series, NASCAR will begin filtering elements of the Nationwide cars back to the Cup model. The cockpit is expected to remain the same to maintain the integrity of the safer vehicle but the car will take on a sportier appearance.

    Currently, only Ford and Dodge will compete with models that differ from Cup. Despite Chevrolet rolling out the new Camaro to dealers, there doesn't seem to be an urgency to promote that brand or the Malibu in NASCAR other than for pace cars at this time. Toyota has discontinued its two-door Solara, so expect the Camry nameplate in NNS.

    The days when racers bought cars from the showroom floor, made a few modifications and were ready to race are over. But developing a car that appeals to both fans and manufacturers is a step in the right direction.

     

    Will this mean we can see stock appearing Mustang's, Challengers, and Camaro's beating on each other all across the country? Possibly, but I would rather see them do more road course racing like the old IMSA series than just stay on the ovals. Maybe you will be able to watch these "pony cars" battle it out on Saturday nights on TV instead of just at the local drag strip in the near future.

Comments

 

john said:

Yeah they should of done something like that a long time ago! And since toyota is in now why not bring in nissan and there new GTR (Skyline in Japan) !!! They call them Godzilla and thats because they destroy just about everything they get ahold of!!!

June 17, 2009 11:52 AM
 

Charles Kelly said:

It is about time NASCAR is thinking about the fans. Now they are doing the double file restarts, they should have a new rule, "Only true V8 2 Door cars with a production limit of 10000 or more". They have strayed far away from the Stock Car that they have lost touch with the general public's reality of a stock car. When the NHRA has Pro Stock cars that look like Stock Cars going over 200 mph with the best safety equipment in the industry, NASCAR could do the same with the Mustang, Challenger, and Camaro. It would bring more of a real element back to NASCAR. Dare I say "Win on Sunday, Buy on Monday".

June 17, 2009 2:58 PM
 

chi hair tools said:

Thanks for posting the article, was certainly a great read!

June 17, 2009 9:51 PM
 

scott s said:

I'm with Charles Kelly.  Where I'm from NASCAR was called "stock car" racing.  There's nothing stock about the "car of tomorrow" bs in the Nextel, Sprint, whatever, series, not even the body shape.  What a joke.  At least if they run the Pony cars in the Busch series, (or whatever they call it now), they'll be using cars that are available with V8 and rear drive.  Pony cars traditionally haven't run NASCAR, but since they're just about the only V8 rear drive American cars we have left, I'd say it's a move in the right direction.  Maybe I'll start watching again.  Until then, I vote for more coverage of the Grand Am cup cars.

June 22, 2009 5:32 PM
 

Evan said:

Wow, im super impressed, my dad is a huge Nascar fan, and i liked it for a long time but i hated how every car was the same, the sound of seeing Mustangs, Challengers, and maybe Camaros duking it out is just what the doctor ordered to make me an avid fan of the series.  Yeah Toyota is there, no i dont really think they should be, but hey i guess it shakes up the competition.  Im 50-50 on the road coarse idea, i hated the new cars because they were all the same and it reminded me of every other racing series out there where every car was the same, having almost all oval tracks is the last real trademark the series has left, so while i think it would hurt the true feel of the series, i do like how it would help the performance aspect.  Really when it comes down to it, if they put these Mustangs and Challengers in, i would totally be all over the series, i would become a hardcore fan overnight, just work on getting the Camaro and a good Toyota candidate in there, and set it up for Sprint as well as Nationwide, if all that is done this idea and the Nascar series might actually push out Football and become my favorite sporting event.  All for it.

July 3, 2009 8:11 AM
 

rjn26 said:

Charles and Scott S - Mustangs, Camaros, and Challengers yes Grand Am Cup- Koni Challenge - Mustang Challenge races all need more coverage.  Isn't this actually TransAm of the late 60's.  That would be great!  Heck bring back the real Cougar, Cuda, and AMX's too!  Who needs NASCAR when you have TransAm?!  

July 15, 2009 11:23 AM
 

dalesy said:

What this article fails to mention is that all these cars will be templated; which means they will all be clones....like the Cup cars. Have you seen the pictures? They all look alike, except for the decals. There's no cool looks of the Challenger or Mustang....no Camaro at all. Thanks to GM for not choosing to butcher the body of the Camaro to conform to Nascar's 'cracker box' format.

They just don't get it. They keep making excuses why people aren't going to the races anymore...too early, too late, the economy...blah, blah. What they just don't get, is people don't want to see a bunch of decals racing each other. There's no real "my car can beat your car" challenge anymore; they're all the same. Even the tracks have been neutered. Look at how exciting Bristol and some others used to be. Now, they just drive around. There are manners. Can you imagine? There is now more concern with gas mileage than with winning. And now they're going to do the same thing with the 'pony cars' and expect a different result? Not happenin'.

October 10, 2009 8:05 AM

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About btaylor

Been around cars and the car culture my whole life. Built up a 1957 Chevy truck for my first vehicle when I was 14, with a straight 6, split mainfold and 3 one barrel carbs. (It sounded like an angry Cessna!). I have owned a 1997 Camaro, a few trucks and currently drive a 1997 Supercharged Regal GS and the wife drives a 2007 Suburban LTZ. I have a 9 year old girl and a 7 year old girl and a 7mo girl! I love to play Little Big Planet, Madden football and Singstar on my PS3, golf and just about all sports. Go Mavs, Stars, Rangers and Cowboys!!!