We've been on the fence with NASCAR for some time now. On one hand, it's some of the closest racing  anywhere in motorsports, with actual passing and  door-handle-to-door-handle action as a matter of course. But on the  other, it's become template racing – a personality-driven sport more  about the drivers than any sort of loyalty to a particular automaker.  The Car Of Tomorrow format really rammed that message home, with a  racecar's identity coming down to little more than headlamp stickers  slapped on the nose. That's not necessarily a bad thing in and of  itself, but we've wondered for some time what's in it for the  automakers, who pay big money to stay in a series that has had little  increasingly little do with street car sales, let alone innovation.
Apparently General Motors was beginning to wonder the same thing. In a  new ESPN report, Rick Hendrick, team owner of Hendrick Motorsports,  suggests that GM would have seriously considered leaving NASCAR if it  wasn't for the move away from the COT to the new Gen 6 racer. According  to Hendrick, GM North America boss Mark Reuss spearheaded the charge  away from the 2007 COT and toward a racecar with clearer automaker ties –  cars like the new Chevrolet SS racer shown above. Learn more about the  fight for a closer-to-production look in the ESPN story at the link.





