Home US SportsNASCAR Insider Flags NASCAR Fuel Saving Concerns as Crew Chiefs Lean Into Superspeedway Strategy Shifts

Insider Flags NASCAR Fuel Saving Concerns as Crew Chiefs Lean Into Superspeedway Strategy Shifts

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At Daytona and Talladega, the racing looks like controlled chaos, cars packed three-wide at nearly 200 miles per hour, inches apart, one wrong move away from a 20-car pileup. For fans, it is the most visually spectacular form of NASCAR there is. But behind that spectacle, something calculated is happening. And the people doing the calculating are not the drivers.

How Elite Crew Chiefs Turned Speed Into a Liability

As PRN’s Brad Gillie recently pointed out, the fuel-saving strategy at superspeedways was a problem long before the Gen 7 car’s arrival. “This is not just a Gen 7 problem,” Gillie said. “This is crew chiefs have figured out a lot, and the time you spend on pit road and needing that track position.”

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What crew chiefs figured out was a simple but damaging piece of math. At superspeedways, the pack is drag-limited, meaning pushing harder does not actually help you go faster relative to everyone else. Run at 100% throttle, and you burn significantly more fuel while gaining nothing on track. Drop to 70-80%, stay in the draft, and you save enough fuel to shorten your pit stop by two to three seconds.

Two to three seconds on pit road translates to 10 to 15 positions of track position, something virtually impossible to gain back under green flag racing at a superspeedway. The choice became obvious: save fuel, protect track position, and let pit road do the work.

The Next Gen car made it worse. Its single-lug nut design allowed teams to change four tires in roughly the same time it takes to fill half a tank of gas, making fuel the primary time thief on pit road. Once crew chiefs recognized that, conserving fuel stopped being a tactic and became the dominant strategy.
The result is a race that looks exciting on the surface but is quietly being managed from the pit box.

Drivers are not really racing; they are waiting. The deeper irony, as Gillie noted, is that this “slow” style of racing is actually what produces the three-wide pack that fans love watching. “We saw a three-wide, 180-mile-per-hour bumper-to-bumper traffic jam,” he said. Fix the fuel saving, and you might end up with something far less entertaining: cars running single-file at 200 miles per hour, simply waiting out laps. “Be careful what you wish for,” Gillie warned.

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