How To

How to Watch a NASCAR Winston Cup Race

Contributor
By eHow Contributing Writer
(8 Ratings)

NASCAR has become the premier auto racing series in the United States. Fans follow their favorite drivers in a noisy and colorful 34-race quest for the Winston Cup. The pageant begins each year with the Daytona 500 in February and ends at Atlanta in November.

Difficulty: Easy
Instructions

Things You'll Need:

    The Cars

  1. Step 1

    General Motors, Ford, DaimlerChrysler and Toyota are the competitors in NASCAR.

  2. Step 2

    Remember General Motors fields the Chevrolet Monte Carlo and the Pontiac Grand Prix.

  3. Step 3

    Check the nose of the two. The Grand Prix has a distinctive two-piece grille opening.

  4. Step 4

    Look for cars marked with the famous Blue Oval. That's the Ford Taurus, a four-door model competing in NASCAR.

  5. Step 5

    Watch for new competitors or changes in the automakers that compete. Dodge reentered the fray in 2001 with the Dodge Intrepid and Toyota started competing in 2006.

  6. Step 6

    Remember all the cars are "purpose built"--they're specialized race cars with tube frames, roll cages and other safety features covered with sheet metal similar to the "stock" models.

  7. The Drivers

  8. Step 1

    Remember you'll see drivers young and old behind the wheel. Speeds may approach 200 mph and temperatures in the race cars may rise above 140 degrees, but training, conditioning and experience allow these athletes to succeed well into their 40s.

  9. Step 2

    Watch for Jeff Gordon, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Dale Jarrett, Mark Martin, Matt Kenseth, Rusty Wallace, Tony Stewart, Jeff Burton, Ward Burton, Bobby Labonte, Terry Labonte, Kurt Busch, Kyle Busch--just a sample of the sport's biggest stars.

  10. Step 3

    Check out the young guys, who compete for the Rookie of the Year award.

  11. The Race

  12. Step 1

    Note most NASCAR Winston Cup races start with 43 cars on the track.

  13. Step 2

    Understand that the 43 participants are set by qualifying sessions held before the race.

  14. Step 3

    Remember many fans follow a favorite driver rather than a car or team.

  15. Step 4

    Check out the colorful paint jobs. The distinctive markings are usually mandated by sponsors, companies that feel NASCAR offers an excellent method of advertising.

  16. Step 5

    Note car numbers are assigned by NASCAR and are kept by a car owner throughout his participation in the sport.

  17. Step 6

    Understand that NASCAR competitors race on oval tracks ranging from a 1/2 mile to 2 1/2 miles in length, and that strategy varies according to track size and race length.

  18. Step 7

    Watch for the NASCAR races each year on "road courses" at Sears Point, California, and Watkins Glen, New York, where the big stock cars take on the sports car venues.

  19. Step 8

    Remember most NASCAR races are 300 to 500 miles in length, but race speeds of up to 190 mph mean races last no longer than a football or baseball game.

  20. Step 9

    Watch how closely the cars run together on the longer tracks. Running two or more cars in a line close together is called "drafting," which uses aerodynamics to allow a group of cars to run faster than a single car.

  21. Step 10

    Understand that pit stops are both exciting and important. The cars come to a precise stop, and the crew will change all four tires and add 22 gallons of fuel in about 18 seconds.

  22. Step 11

    Note that strategy plays a central part in a winning race. Conserving fuel, saving wear on tires and avoiding wrecks on the track are as important as driving fast.

  23. Step 12

    Watch the flagman. A green flag means the race is under way. A yellow flag means there's debris or a wreck on the track and the cars must slow down. A black flag waved at a driver means his or her car is a hazard, and must be taken to the pit area. A checkered flag represents a winner.

  24. Step 13

    Remember season-long performance puts a team in the running for the Winston Cup, the trophy for earning the most points during the year.

Tips & Warnings
  • NASCAR prides itself on being the "fan friendliest" of sports, with easy access to drivers. It's still possible to secure a "pit pass," but added pressures on the drivers means much less interaction.
  • Listening to live scanner traffic at a racetrack is not for tender ears. The pressure for teams to win is enormous, and passions--as well as language--can be intense.
  • Youngsters should wear ear protectors while around race cars. Race cars operate with unmuffled engines and can generate harmful noise levels.

Comments  

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on 2/15/2007 My family are big NASCAR fans. One track we went to we were able to meet Tony Stewart. He was a big jerk so now we don't root for him. Generally we stick to our "family" driver Dale Jarett, and then each of us siblings have our own favorite driver. Its real fun to get into.

Anonymous

Anonymous said

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on 11/22/2005 Watch the tracks. There are banked tracks and flat tracks. The banked ones are faster than flat ones. A banked race such as Bristol can be as fats as 150+ m.p.h. A flat track can get that fast, however, not as easily. Banked track races are very fun.

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