Retrospective: How 10 years of elimination-style playoffs set NASCAR on its current course

Retrospective: How 10 years of elimination-style playoffs set NASCAR on its current course

Shocked was how Jimmie Johnson described it. In the wintertime before the 2014 season, hed received a phone call from then-NASCAR chairman Brian France. Johnsons sixth reign as Cup Series champion was barely two months old, but the way that hed pursue title No. 7 was about to change.

France walked him through the details of the new format for the playoffs, then called the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup. The introduction of eliminations every three races, culminating with a winner-take-all season finale for a four-driver field, was a substantial departure from the previous 10 years of determining a postseason champion from a 10-race aggregate of points. It marked a new era, one Johnson wasnt quite ready to process.

It just caught me off guard and shocked me, Johnson told the Associated Press, and I told Brian when he called me, Just give me a minute to adjust, because Im on my heels.

Ten years of postseason grids, championship marches, unpredictable eliminations, and pressure-packed moments later, the Cup Series Playoffs is ready to enter its second decade. During the two-week Olympic break, NASCAR.com will reflect with a special series looking back at those moments that have defined the era, then look ahead as this years final four regular-season races tee up the next edition of the elimination procedure for the Bill France Cup.

RELATED: Vote for top moment in elimination era

Those memories start with some history, a retrospective about how the system was received, and how it has evolved and altered the industrys approach to competition.

Were furthering how we refine and how we approach this as a team all of our cars so its been interesting, and its still changing, said Team Penske competition director Travis Geisler, noting how each evolutionary moment has forced his organization winners of the last two Cup Series championships to adapt. The recipe is much like grandma cooks. Its just kind of a dash of this and a pinch of that.

NASCAR had already made a sizable splash in 2004 when it adopted the first edition of the Chase. That structure placed top-performing competitors in their own exclusive class for title eligibility, a field that started at 10 drivers and then expanded to 12.

A decade with that format reached a turning point at the end of the 2013 season.

We wanted to simplify our system, said Steve ODonnell, then NASCARs senior VP of racing operations and now its chief operating officer. Sports fans across the country understand the idea of playoffs, since every American sport features some kind of elimination format.

Meetings prompted the change to a system that expanded the title-eligible field from 12 drivers to 16, but whittled that group by four drivers at each checkpoint in the 10-race stanza. Consistency was still a factor, but wins also gained importance both as a gateway to playoff eligibility and an automatic advancement once the playoffs began.

NASCAR had dabbled with eliminations before, with a format that shaved cars from the running order in the annual non-points All-Star Race in 2002-03, but never with the stakes of the premier series championship on the line. That prompted ODonnell to make a direct plea to the stock-car faithful at the formats introduction on Jan. 30, 2014.

There are passionate fans out there, and I hear them as well. Those who may not like this are very passionate about it, ODonnell said. What I would say is, instead of dismissing them, we very much value their opinion. Its OK. But Id say, Give this a chance, because its still the sport you love. Were just going to take the sport you love and elevate it that much more.

Some of those predictions for a riveting March Madness or playoff hockey atmosphere in the autumn sunset of the NASCAR season came true in a rollicking nine-race run to Homestead. Aggression, controversy and motivation ran high, resulting in a Championship 4 quartet of Kevin Harvick, Denny Hamlin, Joey Logano and Cinderella sensation Ryan Newman, who converted a desperation move in the next-to-last race to make the final cut.

Drivers making the media rounds that week seemed to warm up to the format, even after running through that first elimination gauntlet.

This move was about growing the sport and making it sustainable for years to come, The Boston Globe quoted Brad Keselowski, a lightning rod for 2014s polarizing moments who claimed his lone Cup title two years earlier in the waning seasons of the first Chase format. He was also the first winner under the new format, Sept. 14 of that year in the playoff opener at Chicagoland Speedway.

If those metrics show that its working, then Im a fan of it. My connection to the new NASCAR Sprint Cup Chase format is purely based on our fans reaction in a positive form. If thats the case, then Im supportive. I dont have any other ties than that. I like tradition, but Im not married to it. Im more married to what our fans and partners think about it than anything else. Maybe the jurys not fully in, but so far its come back very positive.

Dale Earnhardt Jr. saw the benefits in an uptick in TV ratings and water-cooler chatter. He spoke highly of the format, even though it was unkind to him and his Hendrick Motorsports teammates during that inaugural season. He was ousted in the second round, and none of the organizations four playoff-eligible drivers reached the Championship 4 finale.

Did it work? I think it did work, because NASCAR wants more attention and more people talking, and I think thats what happened, Earnhardt said. Weve gotten more publicity out of this years Chase than weve had in many years past.

The next phase toward reaching the current postseason system came just three years after the first rollout. Competition officials broke each race into three stages, with points incentives awarded at each intermission. The bonuses also included playoff points for winning races and stages, and those extra tallies would carry over when the standings were reset after each playoff interval a reward for performance in both the regular season and postseason.

The shift also came with a name change Chase was dropped for the more recognizable Playoffs, a nod to other big-league sports. This was a situation of the entire industry coming together for the betterment of the sport, ODonnell said. We worked closely with everyone from teams and drivers to our broadcast and (manufacturer) partners. It was important that everybody felt invested in where we were going.

Back in the current day, Joey Logano weighs the merits of the playoff system with a discerning eye even for a driver who has won two Cup Series championships since the advent of stages and the elimination era. In the first year of stages, the unpredictability snared him; Logano missed the postseason altogether.

Its just creating more do-or-die moments where you werent going into the final race of the year knowing who was going to win the championships, and drivers go in there, just cruise-control for the race, dont wreck, get through, win the championship, Logano said at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. So that was one of the things they wanted to get away from, but then theres also, how do you make every race more important where you dont just win a race and then youre in and then you cruise-control the rest of the year until the playoffs start with no advantage, or you win 10 races during the season and youre seeded the same as the guy who won one. Thats not fair, either. So thats where I think all these ideas came up in those meetings.

Still, the concept was considered a radical departure from the status quo for decades.

It is, but I have no doubt in my mind its right, Logano said. I think its been one of the best things for the sport. Theres always going to be somebody that doesnt like it and theyre going to have a loud voice, because people listen to people who dont like things more than people who like things. People usually dont give compliments; they just complain. So youre going to hear that more often, but I think in general, its been good for the sport.

Some 10 years after the idea was hatched, teams arent quite as taken aback as Johnson was in that first explanatory phone call. The skepticism has since faded, even if the ferocity of the postseason structure hasnt.

I enjoy the intensity level, the pressure level that kind of ratchets up, and it does break up what otherwise is a very long season, Geisler said. I think it makes sense to have a break point somewhere in there. Initially, it was more just the normal human response: You dont like change and the point champion is the whole season maybe the relics of how we all have grown up racing. But now that were in this, I can see where it really does generate some exciting racing, some exciting scenarios that you never know how its all going to come together, but it always seems like those last couple (races) are just tooth and nail. Thats what were supposed to be doing.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *