Updated
Updated · The San Diego Union-Tribune · Jun 15
NASCAR Unveils 3.4-Mile Coronado Street Course With 16 Turns as Teams Face Minimal Practice
Updated
Updated · The San Diego Union-Tribune · Jun 15

NASCAR Unveils 3.4-Mile Coronado Street Course With 16 Turns as Teams Face Minimal Practice

3 articles · Updated · The San Diego Union-Tribune · Jun 15

Summary

  • NASCAR said its new Naval Base Coronado circuit will stretch 3.4 miles with 16 turns, mixing narrow sections, sharp 90-degree corners and several short straights around the waterfront base.
  • One 50-minute practice for Cup and O’Reilly Series teams — and two 40-minute sessions for Trucks — will leave crews building tire, chassis and setup data on the fly.
  • Jimmie Johnson called parts of the track “bumpy and rough,” while Billy Scott said cars could bottom out and Joey Logano warned incidents in tight sections could block the course.
  • Kyle Larson still identified passing zones at Turn 2, Turn 6 and the Turn 12 A-B section, suggesting execution and quick visual learning may decide how raceable the layout becomes.
  • The course places the start-finish line and pit road on the Ellyson section, tying NASCAR’s latest street-racing experiment to Coronado’s naval aviation history.

Insights

Will NASCAR's longest street course, with its bumpy surfaces and varied pavements, lead to racing chaos this weekend?
Can a high-speed NASCAR race and a secure naval base successfully coexist for this historic weekend event?
With minimal practice on a new track, will simulation data or driver instinct decide the winner at Coronado?