The Final Word – Indianapolis was the best darn broadcast of the year

There are times when everything just comes together. Sunday was one of those times, as ESPN began their portion of the season with the best broadcast of the year. They had a track that lent itself to a majestic visual display, cameras located in positions that presented the action in a most appealing and thrilling fashion, and a result that kept you watching to the final lap. In short, the Brickyard 400 was as good as it gets.

[media-credit name=”Brian Douglas” align=”alignright” width=”257″][/media-credit]Talent is good, but daddy’s money is pretty good, too. It gave Paul Menard a leg up in getting his racing career underway, but that did not come with any measure of respect from the fans. After Sunday’s victory, his first in Sprint Cup, on that particular track, the lad has finally arrived. Ham and eggers don’t win at Indianapolis, and now he sits in one of the wildcard positions for the Chase. Right at this moment, life is pretty darn good for Paul Menard.

Good finish to the event, thanks to a late charge by Jeff Gordon who picked his way through the field to wind up second. It was good to see both Regan Smith and Jamie McMurray right behind to provide each with a strong result. Dale Earnhardt Jr is now 10th in the standings, with a 19-point cushion over Denny Hamlin, who with a win looks very strong to wind up claiming that other wildcard spot.

Did anyone hear Rusty Wallace on Sunday? Me neither. 15 minutes away, and a day before, he was part of that horrid Nationwide broadcast from Lucas Oil Raceway. The venue and the announcers, along with camera location, can and do make a difference. As much as I like ole D.W. and the team of Petty and Dallenbach, I liked what I heard from Allen Bestwick, Andy Petree and Dale Jarrett. Now I’m trying to think of when the last time was I had anything good to say about the ESPN coverage. I think the answer is…never.

From Indianapolis the boys venture east to Pocono, a track that is a rounded corner triangle that I always believed was configured in a way that should provide more entertaining racing on television than it has. Maybe the good folks at ESPN have finally discovered how to present the action in a fashion that will remind us of what we saw this past weekend. It is a venue that has had nothing but A-list winners for more than a decade. It is a list that includes such names as Gordon, Biffle, Hamlin, Stewart, Edwards, and Johnson.

While Edwards, Johnson, Kevin Harvick, Matt Kenseth, and the Busch brothers look comfortable to make the Chase, there are others still digging to make sure they are there at the end. There are no shortage of story lines to follow, so there are plenty of reasons for hard core fans to be watching. The secret now is to present something on television that causes even the more pedestrian among us to stop and give it a look. Enjoy the week.

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The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of SpeedwayMedia.com

Ron Thornton
Ron Thornton
A former radio and television broadcaster, newspaper columnist, Little League baseball coach, Ron Thornton has been following NASCAR on this site since 2004. While his focus may have changed over recent years, he continues to make periodic appearances only when he has something to say. That makes him a rather unique journalist.

6 COMMENTS

  1. I actually thought espn’s coverage of the brickyard left a lot to be desired. Camera covering one car for several laps whiles the commentators were talking about a different driver, cameras covering the top 4-5 cars single file and the commentators calling it a battle while on the edges of my tv screen i caught glimpses of cars going 2-3 wide into the corner during a real battle. I love Ned Jarrett but dont you think his 12 lap long interview should have happened during pre-race? DW might make a good commentator if he’d stop his shameless self-promotion and relentless cheerleading for Kyle Busch and Toyota. Bright side to all this is we dont have Digger being forced down our throats.

    • Hey, DMan, maybe I just got excited that for an entire race I did not have to fight the desire to mute the sound and go Sirius. I loved the visuals more than anything…which might be credited to the track layout than the actual coverage, but I’ll take it. As for Ned, I agree, but there are some folks I can make allowances for. He is one.

  2. The last time you had anything good to say about ESPN was probably when Benny, Ned and Jenkins were there.

    As much as I liked the team Sunday, they never get as technical about the problems with cars like DW and Larry Mc get. They seem to get inside the cars when they announce. No offense to Dale and Andy.

    As far as mumbles Petty and (I never had an original thought)Dallenbach, they don’t even belong in the same story with the other two teams.

  3. Why must daddy always have to be mentioned?? The average 20 something getting in a cup car would make it a paper weight. He has earned where he is. He could have done it like 40 others of the ones driving now. What will you say about the Dillon boys? Golden or silver spoon?
    Daddys money has nothing to do with his talent.

    • Actually, Jim, until recently I thought that Daddy was the only reason Paul was there. That is no longer the case. Plus, I had hoped he had enough money to pay me to shut the h*** up. Instead, his son proved he belonged. Foiled again!

  4. I like Fox broadcasting best because of D.W. This is a great improvement for ESPN, which I couldn’t stand doing the races. Have always liked Allen and Andy finally a good combination actually looking forward to the final races if they keep this lineup. TNT did a terrible broadcast, for the 1st time in 10 years I didn’t care about watching.

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