Kyle Busch believes 1990s NASCAR fans ‘went away’ after star drivers left the sport

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carolinakid

carolinakid

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Oct 20, 2021
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Mandatory Credit: Gary A. Vasquez-USA TODAY Sports© On3
We hear it all the time about how NASCAR isn’t the sport it used to be. Kyle Busch, at least in part, subscribes to that notion. In many ways, it isn’t the same sport.

There are pros and cons to those changes but one thing is obvious, there is a lack of star power. Yes, you have Chase Elliott, the most popular driver in the sport. Compared to Jeff Gordon, Dale Earnhardt, Rusty Wallace, and others – he isn’t in the same ballpark in terms of broad popularity. Neither is Kyle Busch or anyone else.


Part of that has to do with the sports culture in America. The boom of the NASCAR industry led the sport to reach astronomical heights in pop culture. It also led to bloated stadiums and tracks that had too many seats than they knew what to do with.

Kyle Busch talked to the Kansas City Starabout “star power” in the sport. For him, things have just changed and a lot of fans just didn’t keep up with the changing times.

“I’m not sure what it is, but you have the die-hard fans of NASCAR, of Jeff Gordon, Dale Earnhardt, Rusty Wallace, Terry Labonte, Mark Martin, Harry Gant … you name it — guys from the ‘90s, mid-90s, late-90s, all of that,” Busch said, via The Star. “Our world now, today, of 2024, is a lot different fan base that’s following along. I don’t feel like we were able to transition a lot of the fans that were fans of those drivers into a William Byron fan, into a Kyle fan or whoever.


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“They kind of all probably went away, just stopped following as much. Which is hard to say because honestly, when you look at NASCAR, the fans love the drivers. The driver star power, that’s what brings people to the racetrack, is the drivers.”

It definitely didn’t help the sport when Dale Jr., Tony Stewart, and Jeff Gordon all kind of made their exit stage left about the same time. A lot changed in the sport between 2015-2020. At least now, it feels like NASCAR has momentum, it’s building its brand once again.

Will it ever reach the level where 10 million people tune into the races each week? No. Probably not. That doesn’t mean that Kyle Busch and others can’t help grow the sport and build their fanbases.
 

carolinakid

carolinakid

Joined
Oct 20, 2021
Messages
36,977
they going to keep the 2 by side crap for 500 miles until someone get kill in one of the big ones before they change the rules imo, this not racing in my book, they want to keep the cars all together to try and hold the fan interest, again this is not racing
 

djefferis

djefferis

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Jan 8, 2024
Messages
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Fans went away because the “sport” became more obsessed with corporate sponsorship and less about its fans. Drivers were no longer drivers - they were talking billboards who simply could do nothing that would upset the suits.

A few guys could get away with doing what they wanted and not being viewed as being “controlled” by the corporate sponsors and NASCAR - but as they went away - the new crop wasn’t able to sustain their ability to get away with saying/doing things that might get them in hot water with sponsors. It was just Earnhardt - guys like Bill Elliott, Tony Stewart ect - they had the name and the following that allowed them to be both driver and marketable.

Today’s NASCAR is simply trying to recreate the glory days - while ignoring what made those days great. Non cookie cutter tracks - allowing “unique” personalities and an “outlaw” attitude that prevailed throughout the tracks. In a way it’s like baseball in the 70s - let’s build a bunch of similar concrete bowls - let’s make the players look and act like role models and above all else - let’s not miss an opportunity to make a dollar if it’s available.

The marketing of merch is ridiculous- a special paint scheme for EVERY race these days - not just the “big ones” - it’s as bad as the 8 alternate uniforms teams use now. Price stuff reasonably and have drivers focused on doing more FREE events meeting fans. Better yet - use some of the legacy names in fan fest events to get people back in the game.
 

djefferis

djefferis

Joined
Jan 8, 2024
Messages
949
and dont even get me going on all these stages crap in racing, who in the hell came up with that

People who got tired of seeing their driver lead 160 laps and then losing a race either via their own stupidity or some other jackass who had nothing to lose making an ill advised pass and taking out a bunch of cars.

Same mindset as passing out participation trophies - telling people you were doing soo good - sure you lost - but you were the “winner” 1/3 of the way through - so here’s some points and a “stage winner” ribbon.

I mean all the major sports do it right ? The Olympics give medals to the halfway race winners now right ? The KY Derby announces winners at each pole…it’s just the new way of racing.
 
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