There was a lot of empty seats at the Nascar race in Bristol yesterday and I'm curious to see what the turnout is this weekend at California Speedway.
I noticed that too. Perhaps NASCAR has finally saturated it's market.
I have long maintained the live experience of ALL sporting events (not just NHRA) is rapidly losing ground to TV.
I know once 5.1 surround and DVD's became available, Theater attendance started it's way down (doesn't help that Hollywood turns out mostly copies of foreign films, live versions of every comic book character known to man, and remakes of perfectly good films, and then Cable channels like HBO create GREAT original content to watch which further kicks film in the teeth)
If they can ever capture the sound of racing, it might make a difference in attendance, but until then, it's the economy and aging fan base more than anything else. I haven't been into crowds....ever....but was more willing to deal with them 20 years ago compared to now. The current group of generations have had several failed motorsports attempts. (Drifting, Import Drags, Arena Rally etc)...they always end up either outgrowing the bubblegum motorsports crammed down their throats, or they mature and seek out the "real" motorsports. Sorry to any import lovers here, but I'm mostly poking fun at "drifting"....ugh....a couple generations of people have grown believing motorsports is "judged" for style.
Speaking to those over 50 now....
The NHRA has to rediscover the drama that hung so heavy in the air during events of the 60's and 70's. Trying to copy NASCAR is a failed strategy.
I am anti-NASCAR Sprint Cup (love almost every other motorsport though, including Sprints, Modifieds and Super Modifieds), but Bristol is one of the very few NASCAR events I would ever go see if given the chance. Back in the very early 70's, sometime between FED's at Fremont and Big Money NHRA shows in Pomona, I fell in love with asphalt modified short track racing in Danbury Connecticut. There was something magical about a bunch of locals cutting up Pintos (and other small cars) and slapping them on homemade chassis. They would turn the stadium lights off as they came down to take the green, leaving only the track illuminated and 20 or so very loud and nasty cars coming at you. You are SO right...when the NHRA got NASCAR envy it really turned to crap. The countdown is one of the worst ideas ever. They forgot what made Drag Racing unique and exciting, but then, "they" aren't Drag Racing fans or racers, they are typical Suits.
What needs to happen is some Microsoft Billionaire adopt drag racing and create their own sanctioning body. Outspend NHRA into oblivion. Consolidate all of the sanctioning bodies, and then create a real national championship which pulls qualifiers from every track in the country. Everything from Nitro bikes to Nostalgia classes, to the current NHRA classes, and Fuel Altereds. Less "National Events" and more regional racing. Make the fewer National Events actually mean something besides being a marketing vehicle. Grow the fan base instead of cruising along like some Prom Queen who has no Prom to attend.