
We had our first taste of the Car of Tomorrow in restrictor plate mode this week at Talladega, and while the racetrack is as wide-open and boulevard smooth as it was last spring, the cars are definitely different.
So our first race with the COT at Talladega next month is going to be a lot different than what we've seen in the past with the races in the old car.
What we saw in almost two days of testing, before the rains came, you could pretty much throw a blanket over all 43 cars -- they all pretty much ran the same speed. When you have that, you don't have to be the best drafter in the world to work your way to the front -- it will depend on what line you're in.
So I guess in some ways that might be just like what we've had recently.
The only bad thing about these cars is you can't see out of them, at all. Before, as a racecar driver, you kind of want to look ahead, as far as you can; and to do that, you look through the windshield of the car in front of you to see if there's a wreck going on -- so you have time to react -- or to see what line is moving ahead better.
But now, with these big greenhouses and these wings, you can't see anything. All you can see is the back bumper of the car that's right in front of you -- so it's a little bit harder, as far as that's concerned.
Your eyesight is cut down to a very, very bare minimum. It seems to me that was what all the drivers were fussing and complaining about the most when we were down there testing.
I don't really know if there's any way to fix it or not. NASCAR was talking about maybe doing something with the wing -- maybe using some kind of different material -- to where it's more clear or whatever.
But the greenhouses are still so big, that you just can't see through them with the wing there, like you used to. You just can't see anything.
To compare it to what the normal, average everyday race fan might experience; it would be like going down the interstate in a sports car tailgating a tractor-trailer -- and you can't see anything around him.
You've pretty much got to take the truck driver's word for it and to trust him to make the right decisions about what he's doing, that will affect both of you.
That's pretty much the way we're going to have to race at Talladega, because you can't see for yourself any more -- and that's how us racecar drivers make our living. We understand looking ahead and making decisions and seeing what line's going to move before it even starts moving.
Now, you've pretty much got to wait and see what the car in front of you does.
It does make you change your thought process and what you're doing. You've just got to draft differently than what you've done in the past; you've got to change up what you've been doing. And you've got to make sure you're on the bumper of a guy you really trust.
And you've got to make sure he's on the bumper of a guy he really trusts. It's just that if something happens in front of us there -- it's going to be too late to try to miss it; whereas before, you could see two guys really racing hard in front of you, maybe side-drafting too much and you might say 'uh, they might cause a problem.'
So you'd pick a different line or drop back a little bit, to do something to make it where if they did get in trouble, you could miss it. Now, you can't see any of that going on -- you just see what's right in front of you. So it definitely was a lot different, and it was pretty hairy.
I mean, these cars were right on top of each other. It reminds me of the old rules we used to have, five or six years ago with the wicker and stuff on the top of the cars.
No car can get away -- we're all going to be right there on top of each other. I saw some cars start last in a 20-car draft and lead five laps later-- and be running 20th in the next five laps. (Continued)
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| Race | Site | Start | Finish | Status | Rank |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Daytona | 30 | 6 | running | 11 |
| 2. | California | 38 | 24 | running | 16 |
| 3. | Las Vegas | 3 | 14 | running | 10 |
| 4. | Atlanta | 2 | 18 | running | 13 |
| 5. | Bristol | 3 | 27 | running | 13 |
| 6. | Martinsville | 18 | 24 | running | 14 |
| 7. | Texas | 15 | 17 | running | 16 |
| 8. | Phoenix | 21 | 34 | running | 17 |
| 9. | Talladega | 39 | 15 | running | 15 |
| 10. | Richmond | 40 | 27 | running | 16 |
| 11. | Darlington | 17 | 21 | running | 17 |
| 12. | Charlotte | 3 | 36 | running | 20 |
| 13. | Dover | 7 | 26 | running | 20 |
| 14. | Pocono | 15 | 21 | running | 20 |
| 15. | Michigan | 39 | 35 | running | 21 |
| 16. | Sonoma | 12 | 14 | running | 22 |
| 17. | Loudon | 23 | 33 | running | 22 |
| 18. | Daytona | 22 | 33 | running | 22 |
| 19. | Chicagoland | 31 | 33 | running | 23 |
| 20. | Indianapolis | 17 | 28 | running | 23 |
| 21. | Pocono | 14 | 32 | running | 23 |
| 22. | Watkins Glen | 23 | 17 | running | 22 |
| 23. | Michigan | 5 | 32 | running | 23 |
| 24. | Bristol | 21 | 29 | running | 25 |
| 25. | California | 6 | 35 | running | 26 |
| 26. | Richmond | 9 | 27 | running | 26 |