NASCAR Drivers Question 350-Lap All-Star Race as Experimental Splitter Test Collapses
Updated
Updated · Motorsport.com · May 16
NASCAR Drivers Question 350-Lap All-Star Race as Experimental Splitter Test Collapses
1 articles · Updated · Motorsport.com · May 16
Dover’s 350-lap All-Star Race drew criticism from drivers who said the weekend feels like a standard points event, with the full field starting Sunday and eliminations only coming later.
A planned experimental splitter meant to give the exhibition a distinct on-track feel was scrapped after manufacturing quality-control problems left NASCAR unable to ensure equal parts for every car.
Denny Hamlin and Carson Hocevar said the format loses some exclusivity when all cars race on Sunday, while Chase Elliott said NASCAR has already used many former All-Star gimmicks in regular competition.
Brad Keselowski still argued the event has value under today’s win-focused playoff system, and Ryan Blaney floated a fan-drawn late invert as another way to restore unpredictability.
The debate underscores NASCAR’s broader challenge: finding new ways to make its showcase exhibition stand out after innovations like double-file restarts and overtime became weekly staples.
Has the Dover experiment proven that NASCAR's All-Star Race has lost its identity for good?
After a failed All-Star Race, is NASCAR's push for a CUV series its next big mistake?
Will NASCAR's future be dictated by corporate vision or by its racing legends?