zzdcar
Home
/
Reviews
/
Racing
/
Tony Stewart Puts NASCAR Chairman On Blast For Not Being At The Track
Tony Stewart Puts NASCAR Chairman On Blast For Not Being At The Track-September 2024
2024-02-19 EST 22:11:35

Tony Stewart pointed out a major flaw with NASCAR in an interview with Dave Moody on Sirius/XM Radio: series chairman and CEO Brian France just isn’t there at the track. That might explain .

According to , Stewart told Moody that drivers rarely actually see Brian France at the track, and that they get the impression that France doesn’t hear their side of issues facing the sport. Stewart explained, as quoted by USA Today:

I want to see Brian France at the track more. I want to see him walking through the garage more. I want to see him being more active than just showing up and patting the sponsors on the back and going up in the suite.

I want to see him down there in the trenches with everybody and understanding what’s truly going on. I think that’s where he needs to be for awhile.

If anyone’s going to call out France’s no-show behavior, it should be Stewart. In addition to being a longtime driver, he also runs the All-Star Circuit of Champions sprint car series and owns Eldora Speedway, where the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series runs the Race Not Called The Mudsummer Classic Anymore For . Stewart’s also a constant presence even in the lower tiers of oval racing, be it in helping young talent or grooming the track at the Chili Bowl.

Point being: here’s a dude who’s all over the sport of oval racing, and he’s even saying Brian France doesn’t come around enough. That’s a problem.

Stewart is also retiring this year and I’d imagine whatever PR filter he had in the past is completely toast by now. (All the better.)

“Nobody wants to disrupt the apple cart, nobody wants to make Brian mad,” Stewart told Moody, as quoted by USA Today. Stewart mentioned that he doesn’t care about the repercussions when putting the series’ leadership on blast, but it’s worrying to him that so many drivers do (). When drivers aren’t giving honest feedback to any level of the series’ management, that management isn’t getting the necessary information to lead the sport.

NASCAR Chairman and CEO Brian France aired quite a bit of interesting information in his annual…

Brian France takes a more hands-off approach to managing NASCAR than his father and grandfather did, according to USA Today. Stewart believes that Brian’s reliance on executives to handle many daily decisions and his infrequent appearances on race weekends has been bad for the sport.

One example Stewart cited was NASCAR’s new drivers’ council. While France maintains that he wants the drivers to be able to say what they want in meetings without fear of repercussions, Stewart told Moody that he feels as if France is missing a lot by not being there. As quoted by USA Today:

I would like for [Brian France] to be there because the stuff I’m talking about, I want to know before I leave that room that he understands. I want to see he cares enough to be there, not sit there and get a report from somebody.

I know Brian France cares. But I think there’s a lot of things that get lost in translation between a driver going to talk to somebody in the [NASCAR office] trailer to the time it gets to him. Who knows what it sounds like by the time it gets up there — or if it even gets up there. ... He doesn’t have to say anything. We just want to know that he’s hearing what we’re saying.

Stewart also cited last year’s as another example of France’s overreliance on executives to make decisions about the racing. France was so convinced by vice president of racing development Gene Stefanyshyn that the intensely dull high-downforce rules package was the way to go that he argued with Stewart over Stewart’s push for the low-downforce setup that was more popular among drivers. Stewart elaborated, as quoted by USA Today:

I sat there in my head thinking, “Wait a minute. You’re standing up for a guy [Stefanyshyn] who’s never worked on a race car, never been on a race team and now is making decisions on what the rules package is going to be versus guys who have been driving a race car for 20 or 30 years. You’re telling us that guy is smarter than we all are?” That’s where Brian France and I disagree.

Fortunately, the low-downforce package that many drivers wanted , but it sounds like that was somewhat of an uphill battle.

Between this and the prohibition against “comments derogatory towards the racing product,” I’m noticing a theme here. You can’t lead a racing series by proxy, via overly positive comments filtered through a game of executive telephone.

In order to understand the series you’re tasked with leading, you need to be in the pits, among the teams and willing to listen to critical comments about pressing issues within the sport. Otherwise, the yes-men will railroad through changes that no one outside of NASCAR’s leadership seems to approve of.

Contact the author at .

Comments
Welcome to zzdcar comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Racing
Listen To In-Car Audio From Race Cars While You Work
Listen To In-Car Audio From Race Cars While You Work
If you follow racing in the U.S., you probably already know about the . Most of the episodes are too much of a distraction to put on as background noise while you work, but a couple of recent entries in his series have been working incredibly well for me....
Sep 23, 2024
You've Probably Never Heard Of The Coolest Canadian Car Ever Built
You've Probably Never Heard Of The Coolest Canadian Car Ever Built
Name a car from the early 1960s built by a famed racing driver with curvy, lightweight aluminum bodywork, a big American engine, and a reputation for being unruly and fast as all hell. Your first thought was probably the famed Shelby Cobra, did you know there was a who...
Sep 23, 2024
After Delivering 8 Seasons At The Back Of The Grid, Haas F1 Team Dumps Guenther Steiner
After Delivering 8 Seasons At The Back Of The Grid, Haas F1 Team Dumps Guenther Steiner
The partially North Carolina-based squad has determined that after , it needs to mix things up a little. The team’s firebrand has been following an abysmal 2023 season which saw the team score just four points-paying finishes. The team’s , where scored a fourth-place finish, but that season too...
Sep 23, 2024
Get Ready To Spend All Your Money On Retro Formula 1 Merch
Get Ready To Spend All Your Money On Retro Formula 1 Merch
Fellow nerds, get ready to open your wallets, because I’ve found what may be the greatest store of all time. With designs from Formula 1 teams like , you’re sure to find something that fits your particular nostalgic niche. I’d like to introduce you to Racing Retro. I first...
Sep 23, 2024
Race Team Would Rather Create A Fake AI Woman Rather Than Hire A Real One
Race Team Would Rather Create A Fake AI Woman Rather Than Hire A Real One
In another unsurprising example of motorsport’s inhospitable mindset toward hiring competent women, the Racing team has announced a new partnership with Ava Rose, a literal , who will... engage with fans? Share knowledge about technology? “Navigate the cutting edge of innovation to create positive change” (whatever that means)? I...
Sep 23, 2024
Local Businesses Want Compensation After Allegedly Losing Money During Formula 1 Las Vegas Grand Prix
Local Businesses Want Compensation After Allegedly Losing Money During Formula 1 Las Vegas Grand Prix
If you listen to Formula 1 or local officials from Las Vegas and Clark County, you’d probably think November’s inaugural Las Vegas Grand Prix was a success. Some sources estimated that the city of Las Vegas made over $1 billion in revenue from the event — but there were...
Sep 23, 2024
Copyright 2023-2024 - www.zzdcar.com All Rights Reserved