Teams didn’t appear to be enamored with it and NASCAR officials admit it didn’t produce the desired results.
The high drag aerodynamic package used this past weekend at Michigan International Speedway by Sprint Cup Series teams won’t be rolled out again, in a competitive environment, until the 2016 season at the earliest. And by then, it’s likely the platform will have undergone numerous changes.
“We’re really proud of the industry coming together, but we certainly would have liked to have seen some more out of the race package,” Steve O’Donnell, NASCAR Executive Vice President and Chief Racing Development Officer, said Monday morning on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio’s “The Morning Drive.”
“We’ve said repeatedly with each and every package we put together, we want to look at the ability to pass throughout the field and the ability to have multiple lead changes at the front, and we didn’t get that on Sunday.”
Matt Kenseth (Joe Gibbs Racing) dominated Sunday’s Pure Michigan 400, leading 146 of the race’s 200 laps. Teammate Kyle Busch won last month at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, where the high drag package debuted.
Kenseth was “certainly the class of the field,” according to O’Donnell, who added that officials “don’t want to take anything away from what Matt and the team did.”
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Kenseth was one of eight leaders at MIS in a race that saw the lead change hands 16 times. On the same track with a different rules package earlier this year, there were more leaders (11) and lead changes (17) in a race that was cut short after 138 laps due to rain.
“You saw some ability to pass in the middle of the field and the ability to pull up,” O’Donnell said of Sunday’s race. “But certainly the challenge of the leader getting away out front was one we all see and the fans see as well so we’ll look at that and what can we do to continue to get after it and improve the racing and make progress in that area.”
Kenseth’s strong performance at Michigan hasn’t been the only one to occur this year. Busch led 163 of 267 laps at Kentucky Speedway in a race that featured a new low downforce aero package and one that was hailed by the majority of the teams. A similar platform is scheduled for next month at Darlington Raceway.
“Ultimately we’ve got to make a call on the rules package,” O’Donnell said. “We did that so that’s our call and we own that. It’s one of those things, you go back and you look at what may have worked and what may not have worked. We’ve got to make adjustments there, and we’ll do that.
“I think we’ve shown that we’re a pretty nimble industry in terms of being able to come into a race and try different things. Kentucky was certainly a success. Michigan, we’ve got work to do so we’ll do that, and I have no doubt with the folks in this industry that we’ll continue to improve upon things.”


