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BackWhen drivers complain, just shut up and listen (cont'd)

But at times, it takes objection from competitors to make a sanctioning body aware of an issue. Complaints from Champ Car drivers helped prevent what could have been a disaster in 2001, when a race at Texas Motor Speedway was called off just hours before its scheduled start. The combination of high banking and high speeds led 21 of 25 drivers to complain of dizziness while on the track. The G-forces felt in the cockpit, officials discovered, were high enough to cause blackouts.

The cancellation led to a lawsuit, but every driver walked away. Granted, that's an extreme case, an unprecedented mixture of 24-degree banking and 240 mph speeds. But that same year, there was another perilous situation that had drivers complaining. No one did anything about it, and the results were tragic.

Jason Smith/Getty Images

NASCAR making changes to COT

After Kevin Harvick's foam fire at Martinsville, along with several issues at Bristol, NASCAR has ordered changes to the COT which will create more airflow from the exhaust on the right side.

Almost to a man, drivers in NASCAR's premier series hated the aerodynamic package implemented for the Daytona 500 in 2001. The cars had rails along the top of the roof, flanges on the rear spoiler, and other physical tweaks that were designed to create more passing, but which competitors thought gave them less control. Nobody cared. Everybody was too busy watching the racing, a spectacular blend of slicing and dicing that held everyone mesmerized.

There was so much passing, so much action, that the drivers were just tuned out. Fans and media members loved it -- until Tony Stewart's vehicle went airborne along the backstretch, flipping over and landing on the roof of teammate Bobby Labonte's car. That was bad enough. Then on the final lap, Dale Earnhardt's black Chevy wiggled just a little too much in Turn 4. It veered high up in the banking and slammed into the concrete wall, killing the seven-time champion and igniting the biggest safety crisis in NASCAR history.

Looking back on interviews from that week, the signs were there. Drivers were nervous about that aerodynamic package from the beginning, but nobody listened. The racing was so good, so entertaining, that that the warnings of competitors rang hollow.

So let drivers complain. Let them knock on doors and ask questions and demand answers. Let them keep NASCAR honest by criticizing how the COT handles, what's being done about melting foam and bursting tailpipes, or anything else they feel compromises their safety or their ability behind the wheel. And everyone else can just shut up and listen.

The End

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