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  1. #21
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    Quote Originally Posted by highgroove View Post
    Put starters on the sprint cars and i will come...
    Sprint Cars take less time to realign themselves during cautions, have a lot less drivers going into the
    hot pit during cautions, etc., etc. compared to late models so for the few times that there is a flip during a race and the sprint cars needing to be push started does not really interfere in any time being wasted during a race.

    I will agree that there is a lot of follow the leader sprint races during the heats, but during the feature there is a lot more action than late models, esp. when they hit lap traffic.

    Also when the WoO Sprints do the 4 a breast, they get into formation immediately, do 1 lap and go green the next lap unless smoke needs to be cleared from fireworks compared to late models taking at least 5 laps to get into formation then having the 4 a breast and starting the race, plus in that time they cannot get into a formation as nice as the sprints.

  2. #22
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    but u leaving out the usac sprints that have very different formats yet and draw a good many sprint cars and have a big race fan base probably one of the biggest.

  3. #23
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    The payouts for winged sprints is a whole lot better for weekly shows. Also looks at Knoxville nationals, the 1st car to miss feature wins 8000 dollars plus what ever he won if he ran the c,d or e. I personally enjoy non-wing much more than winged. Most winged sprint car fans have to respect for other classes, they leave after sprint cars, foolish if you ask me. But winged sprint car racing has a rabid and huge fan base, especially on a local level. Sprint car racing has a much larger corporate sponsorship.

  4. #24
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    When you go to a big World of Outlaws sprint race, half of the fanbase will have local drivers shirts on and the locals have a very good shot at winning or placing very high. Late model racing use to have a large local racing fan base, thats gone, if you go to a big race, world, dream, north-south, knoxville nationals you see little if any support for the local drivers if any, 90% of the shirts and support is for Bloomquist, Pierce, Davenport, or Owens. Western Pa has huge support for their locals, Attica and Knoxville has the same.

  5. #25
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    Top 410 sprint motors are 60k+. They're more expensive than super late motors, though not by much. The do require more frequent rebuilds though, because winged sprints twist them way harder way than a super late does.
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  6. #26
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    Speaking of weekly pay, the weekly pay for Knoxville probably rivals most regional tours. Weekly 410 features pay $4,000 to win, $1,500 for 360 wins, and $600 to win a 305 feature. The payouts go up for mid-season and season championship nights.

    I can't find information on the current points fund, but the last I knew it was a million dollars paid out across the three classes. It was sponsored by Lucas Oil at that time.

    https://www.knoxvilleraceway.com/Pages/Championship-Cup

  7. #27
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    Quote Originally Posted by mcarter815 View Post
    I can't find information on the current points fund, but the last I knew it was a million dollars paid out across the three classes. It was sponsored by Lucas Oil at that time.

    https://www.knoxvilleraceway.com/Pages/Championship-Cup
    I don'y know about total pay, but read on Twitter that it pays $20,000 to win the 410 Track Championship

    Quote Originally Posted by play4kps View Post
    When you go to a big World of Outlaws sprint race, half of the fanbase will have local drivers shirts on and the locals have a very good shot at winning or placing very high. Late model racing use to have a large local racing fan base, thats gone, if you go to a big race, world, dream, north-south, knoxville nationals you see little if any support for the local drivers if any, 90% of the shirts and support is for Bloomquist, Pierce, Davenport, or Owens. Western Pa has huge support for their locals, Attica and Knoxville has the same.
    The state of Late Model Racing and Sprint Car Racing has flipped in the past 10-12 years. Used to an Outlaw would run over most locals anywhere but northern Ohio and Pa and some Ca tracks. While a local in a late model could race for the win against the big touring series. Like I said now it's flopped; more and more local regional sprint guys have equipment nearly or as good as the WoO guys and they can run competitively. It seems to be more accessible as the chassis are more basic and haven't had drastic changes in a long period. I think all those factors have laid a base for guys to stay in a sprint car and get better, and now all the equipment is close. That makes it easy for fans to get excited on a weekly or regional level and have a guy to root for and continue to root for the home teams even when All*Stars or Outlaws come to town.
    Now in the Late Models, the locals don't even show up to the Lucas races, and the regional guys usually (but not always) get beat by the same 5-6 tour guys.
    "The Wise One"

  8. #28
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    Quote Originally Posted by Josh Bayko View Post
    Top 410 sprint motors are 60k+. They're more expensive than super late motors, though not by much. The do require more frequent rebuilds though, because winged sprints twist them way harder way than a super late does.
    But have you compared what a new rolling sprint car chassis costs compared to a new late model rolling chassis costs . The sprint car is way cheaper chassis wise.

  9. #29
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    Quote Originally Posted by TBSprintFan View Post
    But have you compared what a new rolling sprint car chassis costs compared to a new late model rolling chassis costs . The sprint car is way cheaper chassis wise.
    Sure, but unless you are wrecking all the time, you don't need that many chassis in a season. Those motors are a regular maintenance cost. I think I read that they only last a dozen races before needing a rebuild.

  10. #30
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    Brsteg you hit on something! Attica pay 3000 to win for winged sprints and 1200 for late models. the fans there still love both, but when the outlaws or Lucas late models come in, the locals are nowhere to be found, I realize they arent heavily bankrolled by series sponsors, but for local fans that sucks. When the All stars or World of Outlaws come in, the locals run and are competitive. Until something can be done to keep locals competitive, dirt late model car counts will continue to fall. In dirt late model racing there is way too many races paying 30,000 dollars plus, so they can claim their race is a crown jewel, A crown jewel should be a race that pays extremely well thru the field. If you cant pay 10,000 to win and pay the additional 20,000 thru the field. Example: this year the dream payed 125,000 to win, you could pay 50,000 and the same cars will be there. you could pay 2nd 40,000, 3rd 30,000, 4th 25,000 and 5th 20,000, 6th 15,000, and the field 1000 less from there and pay 3000 to start.

  11. #31
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    Quote Originally Posted by TBSprintFan View Post
    But have you compared what a new rolling sprint car chassis costs compared to a new late model rolling chassis costs . The sprint car is way cheaper chassis wise.
    Oh, I know a sprint roller is cheaper, but a top team will go through a dozen rollers a season.
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  12. #32
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    Back in may I went to the woo sprints at fairgrounds in Nashville it paid 15 grand Friday night an 25 grand Saturday night it was sold out Saturday night seats 20 thousand at 40 a seat.

  13. #33
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    People complain theres no passing in winged sprint car racing, well late models have become pretty much just like it. Personally I like both, but other than the Knoxville Nationals and World 100 if I could chose between another World of Outlaws sprint car race vs a Lucas Oil late model race I will pick the Outlaws every time these days.

  14. #34
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    Quote Originally Posted by Josh Bayko View Post
    Oh, I know a sprint roller is cheaper, but a top team will go through a dozen rollers a season.
    No WoO team goes through a dozen rollers a season, I would say most would get 2-3 new cars a season and refurbish their old cars as spares. I would say if you took everything into consideration the cost to just run the car alone, not including driver, crew, hauler , etc., it would be pretty much equal from a top late model to a top sprint team. You are starting to see a lot of areas starting to run wingless sprints as it is a more affordable option of race car now a days. You can buy a good low night roller for around $5000.

  15. #35
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    Snowman, sadly, I feel the same as you. And it really sucks because I used to love dirt late model racing more than any other form, but over the past 3 years, the lack of passing and quality racing has really dwindled. And sadly most on this forum are cheerleading the death of this great form of racing, they will say, just dont go, or be happy we got something, really.

  16. #36
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    The “real” underdog here may be non-wing sprints which in my opinion, along with midgets, may offer the most competitive racing of any but seem to lag overall in fan attendance and purses money. The thing I’ll never understand about wing sprint fans is how excited they get when someone wins by half a lap. But they sure invest big time in tee shorts and caps.
    I hate time trials.

  17. #37
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    Wingless sprint cars and midgets are really exciting to watch, but they are also more dangerous than the wing cars. Those wings were originally developed to make the cars safer.

  18. #38
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    Default Mcarter815

    So very, very true.
    I hate time trials.

  19. #39
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    I'm not happy 'til you're not happy too.

  20. #40
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    Non wing sprints are much more exciting, but like you said much more dangerous! I live in Troy Ohio, We lack weekly dirt track racing in our area, Waynesfield used to run a weekly non wing sprint show, now special events. 2 plus hours from late model racing kind of sucks.

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