Until 2001, race tracks struck individual agreements with networks to broadcast races, but NASCAR wanted to capitalize on the growing popularity of the sport and announced in 1999 that television contracts would now be centralized; that is, instead of making agreements with individual tracks, networks would now negotiate directly with NASCAR for the rights to air a package of races.
Contract overview
2001–2006: Fox, NBC, Turner Sports
On December 15, 1999,
Fox Sports,
FX,
NBC and
Turner Sports agreed to pay
$2.4 billion for a new six-year television package, covering the Winston/Nextel Cup Series and Busch Series schedules.
Fox and FX would be responsible for covering the first half of the season. All Busch Series races during that part of the season would also be on Fox/FX. NBC and Turner would partner to cover the second half of the season, which beginning in 2004 would include the
Chase for the Cup. Originally, Turner's broadcast outlet for its NASCAR coverage was to be
TBS as it had been for every other race Turner had broadcast before. However, Turner Broadcasting opted to rebrand its sister network
TNT as a drama-heavy network and decided to move the NASCAR coverage there in March 2001 as they felt it fit the new branding better.[1]
As part of the new contract, the Daytona events were split evenly between the networks. Fox would air the Daytona 500 in every odd numbered year during the contract, with NBC covering the then-Pepsi 400 those years. NBC would then, in turn, air the Daytona 500 in every even-numbered year with Fox receiving the Pepsi 400.
ESPN retained the rights to the Craftsman Truck Series through 2002 under a separate contract. Beginning in 2003, Speed Channel bought out the rest of ESPN's contract and became the exclusive broadcast home of that series.
Initially, practice and qualifying sessions would alter between Fox Sports Net and FX during the Fox/FX portion of the season and between TNT and CNNSI during the NBC/TNT portion of the season. By the end of 2002, Speed had replaced Fox Sports Net and, due to CNN/SI shutting down in the spring of 2002, a deal was arranged with NBC/TNT to move most practice and qualifying sessions to Speed as well using NBC/TNT's production team and Speed graphics.
The centralized TV deal caused consternation among many longtime NASCAR fans. The biggest criticisms include an increase in commercial breaks, emphasis on the more popular drivers and teams to the exclusion of others, and the de-emphasis of actual racing coverage in exchange for more fluff and
hype.
2007–2014: Fox, ESPN, Turner Sports
Late in 2005, NBC announced that they no longer wanted to carry NASCAR races on their schedule. ABC/ESPN took the opportunity to regain the series. On December 12, 2005, NASCAR announced its next TV contract: eight years, $4.8 billion with Fox/Speed Channel, ABC/ESPN, and TNT.[2] This time, the deal bundled the Camping World Truck Series in with the Sprint Cup and Nationwide series:
TNT, which split from former partner NBC, continued with the following six races at
Pocono,
Michigan,
Sonoma,
Kentucky,
Daytona (
Coke Zero 400), and
Loudon. The Coke Zero 400 was presented with limited commercial interruptions until 2013.[3] The Kentucky race replaced the race at
Chicagoland Speedway in 2011.
ESPN networks broadcast the remainder of the Cup schedule, beginning at the
Brickyard 400; From 2007 to 2009,
ABC carried coverage of the last race before the Chase at Richmond and all
Chase for the Sprint Cup events, although in 2010 (following NASCAR's shift to standardized start times for races), only three races were aired on ABC, and the majority of coverage was allotted to ESPN networks.
ESPN networks held exclusive rights to the Nationwide Series across the entire season, with races on ESPN, ESPN2, and ABC.
Speed Channel moved two of its Camping World Truck Series races to Fox from 2007–09; usually, they were scheduled to be the California race and the spring race at Martinsville. From 2010 to 2013, all CWTS races were on Speed; Fox returned to the series in 2014 with its telecast of the Talladega race.
Qualifying sessions for Sprint Cup races aired on Fox for the Daytona 500, Speed/FS1 for the next 18 races, and alternating between Speed/FS1 and ESPN/ESPN2 for the remaining 17 races.
NASCAR Cup Series practice sessions were broadcast by Speed/FS1 for the first 19 races and alternated between Speed/FS1 and ESPN2 for the remaining 17 races. Speed/FS1 was guaranteed at least one session each weekend during the ESPN portion of the schedule.
Nationwide Series practice and qualifying alternated between Speed/FS1 and ESPN2 throughout the entire season.
On the pay-per-view front,
DirecTV premiered
NASCAR Hot Pass at the 2007 Daytona 500. The package consists of four channels, each dedicated to a particular driver with team communications among the driver, crew chief, and spotter. From 2007–08, Hot Pass also had separate lap-by-lap announcers and color commentators for each channel.[4] In 2009 NASCAR Hot Pass became free, although without announcers, and on January 7, 2013, it was discontinued all together.[5]
NBC and FX no longer carried NASCAR as a result. NBC was paying $2.8 billion for six years of
Sunday night telecasts of the
National Football League starting in 2006. Both the new NFL and old NASCAR deals overlapped in 2006, which forced some postrace coverage at NBC races to air on
CNBC. FX stopped airing sporting events from 2006 to 2010. (It did show the ninth inning of a rain-delayed
Fox game between the
New York Yankees and the
Boston Red Sox when it conflicted with the start of the
2008 Subway Fresh Fit 500, as well as other games which overran into the starts of NASCAR races. Beginning in 2010, Fox's MLB games during NASCAR Saturdays were shifted to early in the afternoon.)
The new contracts increased the amount of coverage from each weekend's races. When the 2007 season began, all practices for NASCAR Cup Series races were televised, whereas only the final practice ("happy hour") was carried before. In addition, all Nationwide Series final practices and qualifying sessions were also shown; before, a few qualifying sessions were not seen and only a handful of practices were seen. Most, if not all, truck series time trials are also broadcast.
From 2007 to 2010, average race viewership fell from 7.85 million at its height to 5.99 million in 2010, according to the Sports Business Journal.[6]
The 2000 season also marked the final one for various networks that carried NASCAR racing. Because of the new television deal struck on December 15, 1999, it would be the last year for a multitude of these long-time broadcasters. NASCAR on CBS broadcast the final races of its twenty-two season partnership, ending with the Pepsi 400 at Daytona. NASCAR on TNN and NASCAR on TBS ended their time in the Winston Cup Series; the former's run of ten seasons came to an end at the Checker Auto Parts/Dura Lube 500 at Phoenix, while the latter's abruptly ceased at eighteen seasons following the UAW-GM Quality 500 at Lowe's Motor Speedway (TBS had initially won rights for the new deal, but were replaced by TNT). NASCAR on ESPN, alongside its affiliated programming with
ESPN on ABC, ended its initial run of covering NASCAR's top series (both networks returned during the 2007 season); ESPN's first run of twenty seasons concluded with the NAPA 500 at Atlanta, while ABC's then-twenty-five nonconsecutive seasons with the sport stopped with the Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis.
CBS also had broadcasting rights to
college and
NFL football,
college basketball and
golf, therefore scheduling conflicts prevented them to air as many races as NASCAR wanted.[47] As a result, NASCAR's relationship with CBS, its oldest television partner, concluded at the end of the
2000 NASCAR Winston Cup Series. While the 2000 Pepsi 400 was the last Winston Cup Series race to be broadcast on CBS, their true final NASCAR race in general was the
Craftsman Truck Series'
Chevy Silverado 200, broadcast on July 15, 2000.
After nearly 10 years of live coverage, as well as tape delayed coverage on American Sports Cavalcade in the 1980s, TNN's partnership with NASCAR came to a close at the conclusion of the
2000 NASCAR Winston Cup Series season, with the network's final broadcast being the
Checker Auto Parts/Dura Lube 500 on November 5. TNN's final NASCAR broadcast as The Nashville Network was the
2000 MBNA.com 400[48] on September 24. It became The National Network the next day, and on the last couple of TNN races, the new logo was in the top right corner, instead of the transparent Nashville Network logo.
ESPN began showing NASCAR races in
1981 with the first event being at
North Carolina Motor Speedway, which brought NASCAR to huge popularity. The last of its 265 Cup telecasts (that number includes some on
ABC Sports) was the
2000Atlanta fall race (now the
Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500). ESPN and ESPN2 continued to air
Craftsman Truck Series races in 2001 and 2002. After losing the rights to NASCAR Winston Cup (and Busch Series) broadcasts for the 2001 season, ESPN slowly began losing the remainder of their racing to other networks. For
their 2002 season,
CART signed a TV contract with
Speed Channel and
CBS, ending ESPN's partnership with CART that had begun 20 years before. NASCAR's
Craftsman Truck Series left ESPN, also for Speed Channel, in
2003. For
2004 the
International Race of Champions likewise moved to the Speed Channel. Since ESPN's reporters were no longer allowed (by NASCAR) to report from within the racetrack for RPM 2Night segments (due to their contract with
Fox and
NBC/
TNT), the weeknight show eventually came to an end. However, ESPN was not completely without racing, as
Indy Racing League, its
Indy Pro Series development championship, and the
NHRA were still on ESPN's lineup. The SpeedWorld blanket title was discontinued in 2006; the final event aired under the branding was an
NHRA championship event in
Pomona Raceway. Sister network ABC has maintained a package of IndyCar events produced by ESPN (pay television rights are held by
NBCSN), and NASCAR events would return to ESPN and ABC from 2007 to 2014, holding rights to the NASCAR
Sprint Cup and
Nationwide Series; these events were instead branded as NASCAR on ESPN. After the NHRA left ESPN for Fox after the
2015 season and the
IndyCar Series left after
2018, the only motorsports coverage on the ESPN networks is
Formula One races on ABC, ESPN, and ESPN2 (which is simulcast with
Comcast-owned British broadcaster
Sky Sports); the last Formula One season ESPN previously covered under the SpeedWorld banner was
1997, before moving to
Fox Sports Net and then-Speedvision the following year (although for a while when Speed aired Formula One, ABC were allowed to broadcast selected, mostly North American, Grands Prix).
In the starting grid for the 2001
Budweiser Shootout at Daytona International Speedway (which used 3D representations of the cars), Fox showed only the logos on the hoods of cars that had paid the network to advertise during the race. For instance, the
Budweiser logo on the No. 8 car of
Dale Earnhardt Jr. and
The Home Depot logo on the No. 20 car of
Tony Stewart were shown, but
Miller Lite on the No. 2 car of
Rusty Wallace was not. After outcry from some of the excluded companies, full logo graphics were restored to all cars four days later for the
Gatorade Twin 125s telecast. The computer-generated cars used initially on the starting grid and top-five standings when going to commercial break were phased out from main broadcast use, and were discontinued entirely in 2005 with the exception of the Daytona 500 starting grid (which featured the computer generated cars).
From
2001 to
2006, the Daytona 500 broadcasting network alternated between
Fox and
NBC under the terms of a six-year,
$2.48 billion, centralized NASCAR television contract. Previously televisions rights deals for races were negotiated by the individual track owners. Beginning in 2001, the television contract would now be administered by the sanctioning body. Fox carried the Daytona 500 in odd-numbered years (
2001,
2003,
2005), and NBC carried the Daytona 500 in even-numbered years (2002, 2004, 2006). The
Pepsi 400 in July followed the opposite pattern, going to the network not airing the Daytona 500 in the respective season.
Rights to other support events held during
Speedweeks followed the same general pattern, alternating between
Fox/FX (odd years) and
NBC/
TNT (even years). Ancillary events included the
Budweiser Shootout, Daytona 500
pole qualifying, the
Gatorade 125s, as well as coverage of "Happy Hour" practice and other practice sessions. The
Busch Series race followed the same pattern, however, the
Truck Series race was aired by ESPN for two seasons as part of a different contract.
In
2001, after
CBS lost the rights to the Daytona 500,
Ken Squier left the network and joined
Fox for a one-race arrangement as special contributor and studio host.
The
2001 Daytona 500, which was the first NASCAR points race ever telecast by Fox, also brought an unrelated controversy. At the end of that race, Fox concluded coverage shortly after
Dale Earnhardt, who was fatally injured in a crash on the last lap of the race, was admitted to
Halifax Health Medical Center in
Daytona Beach, Florida. The network provided no updates on his condition at the time of the 5:15 p.m.
Eastern Time sign-off (although no information was available at that time), and continued airing regular programming (with the
animated seriesFuturama) at the moment
Earnhardt's death was confirmed at a press conference held at 7:00 pm. Eastern Time. NASCAR's other broadcast network partner,
NBC, delayed a commercial break during an
NBA telecast and
ESPN (which aired the Craftsman Truck Series at the time) had coverage of Earnhardt's death and the aftermath that was both earlier and much more extensive.
Fox News Channel and
Fox Sports Net, however, did break into programming to announce the seven-time champion's passing, with Chris Myers providing reports on FSN programs. It is possible that Fox showed an on-screen crawl on the
master control feed during Futurama. In addition, local affiliates may have chosen to pre-empt the episode, with anchors delivering the news live. However, none of this has ever been verified. Shortly after the race, Hill explained to the
Associated Press that the network had gone over its allotted time – as the result of
an 18-car pileup on the back straightaway on lap 173 that led to the race being red-flagged for lengthy cleanup – and that continuing to cover the story would be too morbid. Producer Neil Goldberg also said Fox Sports staffers were not allowed near the crash scene. When ESPN presented a tribute feature in remembrance of the ten-year anniversary of Earnhardt's death in 2011, it showed footage of the crash and aftermath, that looked like part of the live telecast. However, it was stamped with "
WFTV", the calls of the
Cox-owned
ABC affiliate in
Orlando, Florida (Orlando and Daytona Beach share the same media market, and ABC's corporate parent The Walt Disney Company owns 80% of ESPN). How footage from Fox's NASCAR coverage got credited to the local affiliate of another network has not been made public, though it was likely that since none of the footage is similar to that of Fox's, the last lap was filmed by WFTV for their own
local newscasts, intended originally as
B-roll to add "color" to their post-race coverage of the Daytona 500.
Some fans reacted negatively to NBC's coverage, claiming that it was largely inferior to
Fox in terms of both technological capabilities and bland commentators.
Wally Dallenbach Jr. and
Bill Weber were viewed as monotonous and boring in their delivery, compared to
Larry McReynolds and
Darrell Waltrip. Statistically after its first season, Fox race telecasts had more viewers than those on NBC during 2001. NBC was also criticized by fans for incorporating long commercial breaks during the race, much longer than the breaks that Fox would run during its race telecasts. Two glaring problems with the NBC coverage were that restarts were often missed due to these extended commercial breaks, that breaks during green flag runs were too frequent. Fans and media columnists used "Nothing But Commercials," as a jocular acronym for NBC's coverage. This cliché was mocked in the film Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby, during a scene in which NBC is shown to take a quick commercial break during a race (with a commercial for
Applebee's) when Ricky Bobby (
Will Ferrell) and Jean Girard (
Sacha Baron Cohen) wreck their cars in a very long-lasting crash (NBC's announcing team at the time of Weber, Dallenbach and Parsons had cameos during the scene covering the fictional race). By
2004, however, NBC had made substantial improvements in regards to both technology and commentating. Although NASCAR and NBC ended their partnership after the
2006 season, many fans hoped that they could reunite in the next television contract in spite of problems with partners
ESPN and
TNT.
TNT aired its first
NASCAR Winston Cup Series race under the new contract at
New Hampshire International Speedway in July 2001. Both networks shared the broadcast team of
Allen Bestwick,
Benny Parsons, and
Wally Dallenbach Jr. in the booth and
Bill Weber, Marty Snider,
Dave Burns, and
Matt Yocum on pit road, as well both as being produced with Turner Sports' graphical look. The only differences were the placement of the network's logo on the graphics package and different colored pit reporter fire suits. TNT was treated as the secondary broadcaster, as far as broadcast rights are concerned, during its relationship with NBC because it is a cable rather than broadcast network (Turner produced all of NBC's telecasts as well). NBC's portion of broadcast included almost all of the prestigious races during their half of the year (with the exception of the
Mountain Dew Southern 500 at Darlington, the fourth leg of NASCAR's
Grand Slam, in 2001 and 2002, and the
Chevy Rock & Roll 400 at Richmond from 2004 to 2006, when the race was the last race of the regular season under the season format). The idea was that ratings would most certainly be higher for NBC's coverage of a given race next to TNT's due to a broadcaster's penetration. TNT was given most of the
Busch Series schedule except for major races, then covered by NBC. Night races were almost always covered by TNT except for the
Pepsi 400 at Daytona, which aired on NBC in years that they had the rights to it, and (later) the
UAW-GM Quality 500 at Charlotte when that race was moved from Sunday afternoons to Saturday nights. Otherwise, following the fall Richmond race, TNT's Cup Series coverage was limited to one, two or three races (including the
Pop Secret Microwave Popcorn 400 at Rockingham, which they covered from 2001–2003). It was generally understood that anytime a major news story needed to be covered by NBC its NASCAR coverage would be switched over to TNT. This occurred only once: the October 7, 2001, race at
Lowe's Motor Speedway was interrupted during the prerace show when President
George W. Bush announced the beginning of
Operation Enduring Freedom in response to the
September 11, 2001 attacks. NBC covered the news until 25 laps to go (simulcast with TNT), and the entire race was shown on TNT. TNT also would broadcast any NBC-scheduled races that were postponed by rain until the following day, much like FX would do for Fox during this contract (this is no longer applicable as Fox airs rain-delayed races the following day, since Fox has no daytime programming, unlike
ABC,
CBS and
NBC). The TNT–NBC partnership broke off when
NBC chose not to bid for the NASCAR contract when it expired in 2006.
Notes
1- Rained delayed the remainder of the race to Monday and was bumped to
FX.
In October 2005, NBC announced that it might not renew its contract end of the NASCAR contract after the
2006 season, largely because of its acquisition of the Sunday Night Football telecast from
ESPN. The restructured broadcast deal awarded Fox the rights to the Daytona 500 from
2007 until 2014. The contract also allowed
ESPN and
ABC to regain NASCAR rights, taking the second half of the season's races; meanwhile, TNT retained its broadcast rights and signed a contract to air six mid-season races. The ESPN family of networks became the exclusive home of the
NASCAR Busch/Nationwide Series as part of the contract, replacing TNT, NBC, Fox and FX as broadcasters. As the NFL and NASCAR contracts overlapped during the
2006 Chase for the Nextel Cup, some of NBC's post-race shows were moved to
CNBC in order to allow the broadcast network's
NFL pre-game show Football Night in America to start on time.
The 2007 season[73] was the start of a new television package. The contracts are for eight seasons, running until 2014.
NBC and
FX both egressed after the
2006 season, and
ESPN and
ABC have returned after a six-year absence, with ESPN last broadcasting the series'
NAPA 500 from Atlanta in November 2000, and ABC telecasting the
Brickyard 400 in August of that same year.
Fox carried the first part of the season beginning with
Speedweeks at
Daytona, and continued coverage up through the
June race held at the
Dover International Speedway, with Fox-owned Speed Channel carrying the
Gatorade Duel at Daytona qualifying races and the Nextel All-Star Challenge/Nextel Open doubleheader.
Mike Joy,
Larry McReynolds, and
Darrell Waltrip returned to the broadcast booth for Fox. Fox also planned to carry two
Craftsman Truck Series races March 31 and May 26, with Speed carrying the remainder of the series. The March 31 race at Martinsville was shown successfully on Fox, but the telecast for the May 26 race at Mansfield, OH was moved to Speed Channel after lap 50 due to rain delays.
TNT covered six mid-season races in June and July dubbed the "NASCAR Summer Series" including the
Pepsi 400. The commentators included announcers
Bill Weber and
Wally Dallenbach Jr.Kyle Petty replaced the late and great
Benny Parsons, and also drove and did commentary from his car during the June 24 race at Sonoma, which turned out at the outset of the race to be rather embarrassing as he uttered "
fuck" in a replay of how he was involved in an accident. Petty is driving a part-time schedule in 2007, as
Chad McCumbee took over Petty's No. 45 car in the June Pocono race, and
John Andretti, who drove the No. 43 car for Petty Enterprises, and won a race with them
at Martinsville in 1999, is driving in the remaining races except for Sonoma. TNT used
Hinder's cover of the
Steppenwolf classic rock anthem "
Born to Be Wild" as part of their race broadcast.
TNT, however, elected to make a bid for rights in the new television contract and was successful in retaining its coverage, joining
Fox and
the ESPN family of networks in a contract that ran until 2014. Under the terms of said contract TNT gained broadcast rights to six June and July races, which it calls the NASCAR on TNT Summer Series. TNT's six races in
2014 were the
Pocono 400 at
Pocono Raceway, the
Quicken Loans 400 at
Michigan International Speedway, the
Toyota/Save Mart 350 at
Sonoma Raceway, the
Quaker State 400 at
Kentucky Speedway, the annual
July 4 weekend
Coke Zero 400 at
Daytona International Speedway, and the
Camping World RV Sales 301 at
New Hampshire Motor Speedway. Unlike in the previous contract TNT was not able to procure rights to any
Nationwide Series races, as ESPN successfully bid to be the exclusive carrier of the series. However, TNT became the exclusive home for the Coke Zero 400, much like Fox had become exclusive home for the Daytona 500 — in the previous contract, Fox and NBC alternated coverage of the two races at Daytona, with Fox airing the Daytona 500 and NBC the Pepsi 400 in odd-numbered years, and vice versa in even-numbered years.
Bill Weber stayed on as TNT's NASCAR voice and
Wally Dallenbach Jr. was retained to be his color commentator. Originally,
Benny Parsons was to join the two in the booth, but he died from lung cancer prior to the beginning of the 2007 season.
Kyle Petty elected to take time off from his driving duties to take the position in the broadcast booth. Marty Snider and
Matt Yocum returned as pit reporters. To replace
Allen Bestwick and
Dave Burns, both of whom went to ESPN following the 2006 season, TNT promoted
Ralph Sheheen and
Lindsay Czarniak to full-time pit reporter positions; previously both of them served as substitutes or for stand-alone Busch Series races that conflicted with the Cup Series schedule. To round out the coverage,
Larry McReynolds was loaned by Fox to provide analysis and explanations.
ESPN and
ABC carried all races beginning with the
Allstate 400 at the Brickyard in late July on ESPN running up through the Labor Day weekend race at California and ABC picking up their part of the package with the final pre-chase race at Richmond and the entire
Chase for the Nextel Cup.
Jerry Punch served as the play-by-play and
Rusty Wallace and
Andy Petree served as color commentators. Punch last worked for the network as a pit reporter on
IRL events such as the
Indianapolis 500, and has also filled in on the play-by-play of NASCAR races prior to 2001, mostly during coverage of
NASCAR Busch Series races, which
ESPN2 and ABC carried full-time starting in 2007. Wallace is the
1989 NASCAR Cup Serieschampion. They were joined by newcomer
Andy Petree, a former team owner and
Dale Earnhardt's crew chief in 1993 and 1994.
Brent Musburger and
Suzy Kolber served as the hosts on both ESPN and ABC. Rock group
Aerosmith kicked off each broadcast with a live version of their big 1970s FM hit "
Back in the Saddle" that was filmed in concert in Las Vegas.
In 2008, ESPN moved Wallace and Bestwick from their positions. Bestwick became studio host while Wallace joined the studio team.
Dale Jarrett, who had retired during the 2008 season and had worked part-time for the network afterward, joined Punch and Petree as booth analyst.
Shannon Spake replaced Bestwick on pit road.
In 2009, the Monday edition of NASCAR Now became a roundtable show, similar to the old Inside NEXTEL Cup show that was on
Speed Channel. Bestwick hosts the roundtable; he is also the former host of the Speed Channel program. The panelists rotate and have included
Mike Massaro,
Johnny Benson,
Boris Said,
Ray Evernham, and
Ricky Craven. Massaro has also filled in as host, including after the
2010 Daytona 500. Beginning with the
2010 season, ESPN carried fourteen of the seventeen races, including the entire
Chase for the Sprint Cup except for the
Bank of America 500 which continued to be televised on ABC. ABC acquired the
Irwin Tools Night Race and kept the
Air Guard 400 as part of its race coverage. Previously, ABC aired the entire
Chase for the Sprint Cup and the Richmond race (now known as the Federated Auto Parts 400), but NASCAR's decision to standardize early start times conflicted with ABC's expanding Sunday morning political talk show lineup. This led to consternation among ABC's Southern affiliates, who counted on the races as a bulwark against NFL games on competing
CBS and
Fox stations. This decision was in-line with ESPN taking over the rights to the
Rose Bowl and the
British Open as part of an ongoing strategy to shift sports programming from ABC to ESPN, to the outrage of many sports fans.
The 2008 season[74] marked the second year of television contracts with
Fox,
TNT and
ESPN/
ABC.[75] The biggest changes involved ESPN and ABC, as
Dale Jarrett became the network's lead race color commentator and
Rusty Wallace became the pre-race analyst. Dale, who completed his driving career with the
Sprint All-Star Race XXIV, followed in the footsteps of his father,
Ned, who worked with ESPN through most of the 1980s through the 2000 NASCAR season.
Allen Bestwick took over the hosting role for all races as well as some editions of
ESPN2's NASCAR Now, replacing
Brent Musburger and
Suzy Kolber on the pre-race show, with
Shannon Spake taking Bestwick's place as pit reporter. Also, veteran NASCAR reporter
Nicole Manske (along with Ryan Burr) took over as a part-time host of NASCAR Now show for
Erik Kuselias.[76] No major changes were made by Fox and TNT for the 2008 season.
One innovation was Fox's "Gopher Cam", placed below the track near the inside of the turns for a unique perspective. In the need for a name for their new mascot, Fox turned to internet users and even drivers for suggestions, and the gopher cam mascot was named "Digger".[77] "Digger" is now emblazoned on T-shirts, hats and even as a plush toy.
After limited usage in 2007, the network introduced the "Gopher Cam" full-time in 2008, a camera angle from the bottom banking of a track's turn. Fox implied that it invented the technology.[78] However, it was quickly brought to light that Terry Lingner of ESPN, along with engineer James Fishman, had developed the technology 15 years earlier under the name "Tread Cam". However, it should be known that the devices are completely different.
"Digger," a CGI-animated
gopher character that was voiced by
Eric Bauza, began as a symbol of the corner camera and was later adopted as an unofficial mascot for Fox's NASCAR coverage. Beginning with the
2009 Daytona 500, Digger was extended into a series of short
cartoons that aired during the pre-race show;
country music superstar
Keith Urban recorded the
theme song for these shorts. Storylines revolved around Digger and his life beneath the infield of a fictional racetrack. Other characters include his girlfriend Annie and the track's security chief, Lumpy Wheels (respectively named after the daughter of Fox Sports president
David Hill, and former track promoter
Humpy Wheeler). Digger's souvenir trailer at the tracks attracted sizeable crowds of families with young children. However, the cartoon segment drew wide opposition from regular viewers of the broadcasts. After a NASCAR town hall-style meeting at the end of May 2009, Fox Sports chair David Hill reported receiving an email from a high-ranking NASCAR official whose identity he chose to conceal, stating that Digger could have been the cause of ratings declines for Fox's NASCAR coverage.[79] Hill said "It was because of Digger that people were turning off in droves because they couldn't stand it, I said, I'm so sorry. If I'd known, I never would have created him. I didn't realize how insidious he was. It's the biggest crock of shit I've ever heard." Among the reasons of criticism is the purpose of the character's usage. Though it was at one time commonplace for networks to create mascots for sports coverage to incorporate an educational and entertaining element into their coverage, which was the case with
Peter Puck, Digger was created purely to add entertainment to the broadcast and reach out to a younger audience. Some NASCAR fans accused Fox of
dumbing down and
fluffing its coverage in order to gain revenue from Digger merchandise sales. Despite continuous outrage from the NASCAR fan community, as well as talk from the NASCAR community that the Fan Council was not pleased with the situation, Fox did not announce any plans to drop the usage of the characters, and even had posted pictures of holiday-themed versions of the Digger die-cast in 2009 and 2010. In response to the comments, in 2010, the Digger cartoon was not shown during pre-race shows and Digger appeared less often at the bottom of the screen. Throughout the 2011 season as well as the
2012 Budweiser Shootout and
Daytona 500, Digger appeared very sparingly, usually only during commercial bumpers. As of the
2012 Subway Fresh Fit 500, all appearances and references to Digger were dropped entirely from Fox's NASCAR broadcasts. However, nods to it occasionally came up (for example, at the Talladega race in 2014, when
Carl Edwards showed debris on his firesuit, Mike Joy commented that he hoped that nothing had happened to Digger, to which Darrell Waltrip responded, "Digger's retired"). Digger made a cameo appearance in the 2009
20th Century Fox film Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Squeakquel. He also made an appearance in the Fox NFL Sunday introduction during the December 20, 2009 broadcast, in which the Chipmunks also made an appearance (20th Century Fox was then a corporate sister to the Fox network through
21st Century Fox, known at the time as
News Corporation).
Another innovation was TNT's "RaceBuddy", an internet application that showed multiple views of the race and radio feeds from drivers (using NASCAR.com's RaceDay Scanner).
New to Fox telecasts was 3-D CGI animated adventures of "Digger", the network's gopher cam mascot and his friends, Annie, Marbles, Grandpa and rival Lumpy Wheels (named after former
Lowe's Motor Speedway chief
Humpy Wheeler). According to Digger's backstory, created by Fox Sports chairman David Hill, Digger lives underground at
Talladega Superspeedway. The characters were also used in segues into and out of commercial breaks. However, Digger later became a harbor of criticism, as well as what most have cited as a cause of a deeper ratings decline than in years past, adding to already lower-than-normal ratings. More is mentioned
here.
Hours before the July New Hampshire race on TNT,
Bill Weber was removed from the broadcast booth and replaced by
Ralph Sheheen for undisclosed personal reasons. TNT and NASCAR announced on July 1 that Sheheen would replace Weber for the final two races on TNT at Daytona and Chicagoland.
The annual changes at ABC/ESPN continue.
Mike Massaro became a third host of NASCAR Now on
ESPN2; Vince Welch replaced Massaro on pit road and
Marty Reid is doing selected
Nationwide Series events as well. But ESPN continues to face heavy criticism from NASCAR fans who complain of bored announcers, bad camera work, excessive commercials and lack of post-race coverage.
On radio,
Sirius XM Radio will carry all races in the series. Terrestrial radio rights are being handled as follows:
Speed (replacing
ESPN Classic) and MRN were the broadcasters at the annual Sprint Cup Banquet at the
Wynn Las Vegas Hotel Casino in Las Vegas on December 4. Las Vegas replaced New York City as the host after 27 years there, 26 of the banquets being staged in
The Waldorf-Astoria Hotel.
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^"10 years after crash, NASCAR still coping with Earnhardt's death". Sports Business Journal. CNN. February 10, 2011. Retrieved February 14, 2011. In the four years since NASCAR signed a multibillion-dollar media deal, average race viewership has fallen from 7.85 million at its height to 5.99 million last year, according to the Sports Business Journal.