NASCAR '21 slate adds road tracks, axes Chicagoland, Kentucky
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[October 02, 2020]
New tracks, road courses and a
dirt race: NASCAR fulfilled its mission of expanding its sphere of
influence with the 2021 NASCAR Cup Series schedule, announced
Wednesday afternoon.
With the addition of road course races at the Indianapolis Motor
Speedway Road Course; Circuit of The Americas (COTA) in Austin,
Texas; and Road America in Elkhart Lake, Wis.; NASCAR has doubled
the number of road-course events on the schedule, retaining the
races at Sonoma Raceway, Watkins Glen International and the
Charlotte Roval.
For the first time since Sept. 30, 1970, when NASCAR's top series
raced at the North Carolina State Fairgrounds in Raleigh, the Cup
Series will race on dirt (March 28) after a short-term
transformation of the concrete surface at Bristol Motor Speedway.
The addition of Nashville Superspeedway to the schedule (June 20) is
another of many substantive changes to next year's rotation of race
tracks. Darlington Raceway gets two events next year, on May 9 and
Sept. 5 (retaining its position as the Playoff opener).
Notably, though, neither Chicagoland Speedway nor Kentucky Speedway
-- both 1.5-mile intermediate speedways -- appears on the 2021
schedule, as NASCAR strives to strike a balance between the types of
venues and locations the top series visits.
The rebuilding of the 2020 Cup schedule after a hiatus forced by the
coronavirus pandemic informed some of the sanctioning body's
decisions for 2021.
"Historic day for us -- a lot of bold changes," NASCAR vice
president Ben Kennedy said during a Zoom video conference with
reporters on Wednesday. "I think you saw this really as we went and
started building out the 2020 schedule initially. Got to carry a lot
of those over into 2021. From the playoff schedule, Martinsville
night race, Pocono doubleheader, we were able to retain a lot of
those, but also a lot of significant changes as you think about
2021.
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"Really nine significant ones that we have announced today. Three
new tracks we're going to, world-class facilities, Circuit of The
Americas, iconic facility at Road America, Nashville Superspeedway,
certainly an incredibly important market to us, if you were there
for the banquet last year. Certainly neat to see such a big turnout
from the fans.
"Bristol dirt, another big one, big shake-up to FOX's portion of the
season. We'll see that in March. Indy road course, I think we saw a
great Xfinity race there earlier this year. We'll get to see the Cup
Series head there in August of next year."
For the first time since 2010, Atlanta Motor Speedway will host two
races, on March 21 and July 11. Homestead-Miami Speedway will be the
site of the second points race of the season, following the Daytona
500, in a schedule that makes emphasizes geographic flow.
After the first two races in Florida, the series starts its typical
early-season West Coast Swing at 2.0-mile Auto Club Speedway in
Fontana, Calif., one of the last races there before its conversion
to a half-mile short track. The schedule continues in Las Vegas and
Phoenix before starting a five-race stint in the Southeast that
includes Atlanta, the Bristol dirt race, short-track events at
Martinsville and Richmond and the spring superspeedway race at
Talladega.
"You look at some of the things we are criticized for in the past,
probably somewhat fairly in terms of going away from our roots,
moving races away from a Darlington, moving races away from an
Atlanta," said Steve O'Donnell, NASCAR executive vice president and
chief racing development officer. "It was important for us to
introduce new markets but also embrace what got us to where we are.
"I think you see a really great balance of that with our schedule
where we're able to go to some iconic racetracks, certainly with
Road America, COTA, the change at Indy, Nashville, two races at
Darlington. Our whole industry loves Darlington. Atlanta, we used to
have a championship in Atlanta. Now going back there twice.
"For us, it was a real balance of trying to kind of embrace the old
and also look at some new things. A lot of change certainly, for
sure, but we believe it's a good balance for both."
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Dover and Michigan will host one race each, instead of the
traditional two, to help make room for the new tracks on the
schedule. The Indianapolis Road Course race will replace the
Brickyard 400, a staple of the Cup Series since its debut in 1994.
And Texas Motor Speedway will host the NASCAR All-Star Race (June
13) as well as its customary playoff race in the Round of 8, as the
second Texas points race moves to COTA.
There are significant aspects of the schedule that remain status
quo. The Pocono Raceway weekend doubleheader will take place for the
second straight season, on June 26-27. The playoff race tracks
remain unchanged from 2020, with Darlington opening the postseason
and Phoenix Raceway hosting the Championship 4 season finale.
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The only difference in the playoff is the swap of positions between
Texas and Kansas in the Round of 8.
2021 NASCAR CUP SERIES SCHEDULE
Date -- Race/Track
Sunday, February 9 -- Clash (Daytona Road Course)
Tuesday, February 11 -- Duel at Daytona
Friday, February 14 -- DAYTONA 500
Friday, February 21 -- Homestead-Miami
Friday, February 28 -- Auto Club
Saturday, March 7 -- Las Vegas
Saturday, March 14 -- Phoenix
Saturday, March 21 -- Atlanta
Saturday, March 28 -- Bristol Dirt
Friday, April 10 -- Martinsville
Saturday, April 18 -- Richmond
Saturday, April 25 -- Talladega
Saturday, May 2 -- Kansas
Saturday, May 9 -- Darlington
Saturday, May 16 -- Dover
Saturday, May 23 -- COTA
Saturday, May 30 -- Charlotte
Saturday, June 6 -- Sonoma
Saturday, June 13 -- All-Star (Texas)
Saturday, June 20 -- Nashville Superspeedway
Saturday & Sunday, June 26-27 -- Pocono Doubleheader
Saturday, July 4 -- Road America
Saturday, July 11 -- Atlanta
Saturday, July 18 -- New Hampshire
Saturday, August 8 -- Watkins Glen
Saturday, August 15 -- Indianapolis Road Course
Saturday, August 22 -- Michigan
Friday, August 28 -- Daytona
Saturday, September 5 -- Darlington
Friday, September 11 -- Richmond
Friday, September 18 -- Bristol
Saturday, September 26 -- Las Vegas
Saturday, October 3 -- Talladega
Saturday, October 10 -- Charlotte Roval
Saturday, October 17 -- Texas
Saturday, October 24 -- Kansas
Saturday, October 31 -- Martinsville
Saturday, November 7 -- Phoenix
--By Reid Spencer, NASCAR Wire Service. Special to Field Level
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