NASCAR Chairman and CEO: ‘Teams just elevate … when there is more on the line’
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NASCAR Chairman and CEO Brian France said he expects one of the four teams contending for this year’s Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup championship to win the title by winning Sunday’s race at Homestead-Miami Speedway.
The Ford EcoBoost 400 (3 p.m. ET, ESPN) is the 36th and final race of the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season, and the finale of the 10-race Chase.
Denny Hamlin (Joe Gibbs Racing), Kevin Harvick (Stewart-Haas Racing), Joey Logano (Team Penske) and Ryan Newman (Richard Childress Racing) are competing for the title, having survived and advanced through three previous rounds to reach the championship event.
Because the points were reset after every round, each of the four drivers enter this weekend’s event tied atop the standings. The driver finishing highest in the race will be crowned champion for 2014.
"That’s the coolest part of what’s happened here — and I’ll be really surprised if one of those four teams doesn’t win the race," France said Wednesday on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio. "Anything’s possible, who knows? But the way … history has gone, teams just elevate, athletes elevate (their game) when there is more on the line. And it’s exciting to watch."
France referenced Tony Stewart‘s stirring win at Homestead in 2011, a victory that earned the veteran a third Sprint Cup title, calling it "one of the best performances I’ve seen from a driver."
"He had to win the race, had to beat Carl Edwards and did just that," France said.
Changes to the Chase format this year expanded the field to 16 teams and divided the Chase into three three-race segments — the Challenger Round, Contender Round and Eliminator Round — followed by a one-race Championship Round.
Chase eligible drivers scoring a win in each round automatically advanced to the next round, with four drivers lowest in points being eliminated. The remaining spots in the field for each round were determined based on points earned in that round.
While Harvick and Logano advanced thanks to timely victories — Logano at Loudon and Kansas, Harvick at Charlotte and Phoenix — and accumulating the points needed when they didn’t win, others weren’t as fortunate. Former champions such as Jimmie Johnson, Jeff Gordon, Matt Kenseth and Brad Keselowski all eventually were knocked from contention, leaving some to question the process.
"I would say that with any format that we would ever devise, with the exception of if we qualify that with a ‘you have to win to compete for the championship,’ that’s auto racing," France said. "That happens.
"Talk to Rusty Wallace, who won more races (than anyone) in a given year, talk to Bill Elliott, talk to all the past champions, past competitors in NASCAR who had a stellar season but they weren’t the best on any given day.
"This format, you’ve got to be the best all the way through. There is no format that we’re going to devise that weights it so much that if you win so many races that you’re going to somehow automatically going to be the champion. … In my view, this is the best balance in auto racing. There’s no question about it. You’ve still got to win and move on, still got to do a lot of things."
Hamlin has just a single win (at Talladega earlier this year) while Newman has yet to win since joining RCR prior to the start of the 2014 season. Yet both have managed to advance and now find themselves with a chance to win their first Sprint Cup title.
"Ryan Newman did everything he needed to do to put himself in position to be a champion, and those are all great things for us," France said.
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