RGM didn't have a great year, but will still be locked into the first 5 races of the season which is extremely hard to get into if you miss one of those first 5 races. That was not the reason for my title though, NASCAR has ruined Cup racing and notice is being served. Track attendence is down, TV ratings are down, sponsorship is down and fan interest is dropping too.
The COT was suppose to help in safety, lower costs and level the playing field. So far safety is the winner. Lowering costs and level playing field aren't living up to the billing. The COT is a heavy car that's hard to turn and nearly impossible to find a solid set up. The car can swing from loose to tight or vice versa with the slightest adjustment, making races a long day for both drivers & crew chiefs.
Nascar has made two improvements with double file restarts and next season's unified start times, but the biggest issue Nscar has will be the hardest two items to address: Leveling the playing field and tracks. Hendrick's dominance has gotten out-of-hand. It's expected to be competitive with it's driver line up, but the dominance it has on the COT is a bit much. Nascar needs to find a way where 43 cars have a chance to win on sunday, not just a few. Then, there's the track issue...how many boring races can one season have? Too many this year! Nascar booted great tracks like Rockingham and North Wilksboro to race in larger markets, but the excitement that made those larger markets interested is fading. Even one of Nascar's most exciting races was an embarassing dissappointment when cars played folow the leader in single file at Talladega, again another product of the horrible COT. Nascar needs to build or locate better tracks. Build another Bristol or plate track, but please no more cookie cutters!
The COT needs an over-haul too! Loose the stupid wing and splitter. The car has proven it's safety works (just ask Michael McDowell), but put the spoiler back. Testing ban helped teams save money, but it didn't close the gap in competition. The way to close the gap is money. Nascar served notice and capped teams to 4 teams (Exempt are Hendrick & Stewart-Hass racing), but now they need to cap the teams individually. Set a dollar amout $6 - $10 million per team and $30 per organization. It wouldn't take long before the Top 35 rule would be a huge benefit again.
Doubt any of these common sense suggestions will ever come true, but something needs to change because 2009 was a terrible season.