Former NASCAR champs slam ‘Car of Tomorrow’
Quote selected text Published October 18th, 2006 in NASCAR News
Former champions Jeff Gordon and Matt Kenseth would like to see NASCAR’s Car of Tomorrow be just that — a car for the future, not 2007.
Gordon and Kenseth were among drivers who tested Tuesday at Homestead-Miami Speedway. The three-day test session, which concludes Wednesday, is the final NASCAR-sanctioned test of 2006.
Five of the 20 participating teams brought their COTs to Homestead-Miami. The COT will make its limited debut in 2007, and although it strives to be fast on the racetrack it appears to be slow to win converts among drivers.
“I’ll admit, I’m not a big fan of the Car of Tomorrow,” said Gordon, a four-time champion. “I think there’s some technology in there that’s good. Certainly safety-wise, I think there’s some things that I like.”
Gordon’s Hendrick Motorsports team didn’t bring its COT to Homestead-Miami, but Gordon did participate in the test session at Michigan International Speedway earlier in the year.
Kenseth, the 2003 champion, also tested the COT at Michigan. “I wasn’t very impressed by any of it, really,” Kenseth said Tuesday. “I think they’re going to be a lot different to set up. It looks like a normal car, but setting it up I think there’s going to be a lot more engineering and more expense involved to figure out what these cars need to run fast.”
The way the car looks is also an issue, they said.
“It’s funny,” Kenseth said. “You’re out here (and) the normal car looks like a racecar, and you catch (a COT) and it kind of looks like a school bus or something. It looks really, really strange, so it is going to take some getting used to.”
“The biggest issue I have with the car is it doesn’t look like a racecar,” Gordon said. “To me, (when) I think of a Car of Tomorrow, I think of the ingenuity, technology. … But I think we could have done it by also making it look like the Car of Tomorrow. Have some futuristic things in it that look cool. It doesn’t have that.”
No speeds were reported Tuesday, but Kyle Busch posted the fastest time of the first session. Scott Wimmer, driving a car for Richard Childress Racing, hit the wall between Turns 2 and 3 causing the only incident of the first session. The team was forced to withdraw the car.
- Roush slams ‘Car of Tomorrow’, NASCAR
- Car of Tomorrow to be tested at Talladega
- No ‘Car of Tomorrow’ at Talladega
- Car of Tomorrow slated for road-course debut
- NASCAR will run the ‘Car of Tomorrow’ full time in 2008

they are real fugly lookin
Here we go again….Nascar stacking the rules again with the car of the future……. Who said racing was 100% safe. Thats why everyone doesn’t have a racecar. These cars look like an amusement park ride car to me. They belong across the street from the speedways so the fans can ride in them and not get hurt………Nascar needs to build the tracks and catch fences and let the racers build the cars………..ask Jr. Johnson what he thinks about the nerdmobile…….