The New Old Bristol

[media-credit name=”David Yeazell” align=”alignright” width=”225″][/media-credit]Call it whatever you want but the Bristol Motor Speedway has a new surface with different racing we’ve never seen before at Bristol. Some people are referring to the new surface as a return to the “old Bristol” which featured one lane racing on the bottom and beating and banging. This new surface is similar to the “Old Bristol” -which was reconfigured after the 2006 season –but it is still similar to the Bristol surface that was reconfigured after the spring race this season. The Bristol surface that was present from 2007 to the spring of 2012 featured multi-groove racing mainly on the top and side by side action with little beating and banging.

This new surface Bruton Smith designed after fans were not happy with what racing at the Bristol Motor Speedway had become has a whole new style of Bristol racing. The newest surface at the track is similar to both surfaces Bristol Motor Speedway has had in the past. The new surface features one lane racing, like the original Bristol that fans had come to love, but the racing lane is not at the bottom like the original Bristol. The racing lane is at the top. With the racing lane at the top, it makes it near impossible to run the bottom lane and stay up to speed with the other cars. The Bristol surface that was reconfigured after this past spring race had its main racing lane at the top, like the current Bristol. That’s about all the similarity between the Bristol that was reconfigured after March and the current Bristol.

The newest configuration at Bristol is also similar to the “old Bristol” because of the beating and banging. We saw more cautions in the Sprint Cup Race Saturday night then we did in the whole entire spring race weekend in Bristol this year. Fans love to watch the beating and banging of the cars as they go around the track and that’s what fills the grandstands at Bristol. Bruton Smith’s ultimate goal of the reconfiguration of Bristol was to fill up the grandstands again and he succeeded. There was a noticeable difference of the amount of people in the grandstand in March than in August. The curiously of what kind of racing the new surface would bring also put fans back in the stands at Bristol.

The new surface has brought back almost the same type of racing we saw in the 90’s and early 2000’s at Bristol and that was the goal of this one million dollar project. Bristol’s classic racing is back and better than ever and expect a show full of drama every time we head to Bristol.

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

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

RacingJunk.com and Leaf Racewear Safety Equipment Giveaway

Latest articles

Ross Chastain, Shane van Gisbergen join JR Motorsports for part-time Xfinity campaigns in 2025

Chastain will pilot JRM's No. 9 Chevrolet entry for five Xfinity events in 2025, beginning at Circuit of the Americas in March, while teammate van Gisbergen will campaign in four road-course events, beginning at Mexico City in June.

Reaume Brothers Racing expands to fielding three full-time Truck entries in 2025

Reaume Brothers Racing (RBR) took to social media to reveal its acquisition of the No. 2 from Rev Racing as the team will field three full-time entries for the 2025 Truck season.

SMX WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES BEGINS WITH SUPERCROSS SEASON OPENER SATURDAY IN ANAHEIM LIVE AT...

The 2025 SMX World Championship series and Monster Energy AMA Supercross season begins this Saturday, Jan. 11, from Angel Stadium of Anaheim in California

Cadillac preps for run at another Rolex 24 victory

Three Grand Touring Prototype (GTP) entries will aim to improve on the season-opening result January 25-26 in the 63rd Rolex 24 At Daytona

Best New Zealand Online Casinos