NASCAR tone-deaf if it wants to silence roar of engines – Orlando Sentinel

A moment of silence for NASCAR, please.

The sport presumably wants to hire librarians to monitor the noise at all of its tracks. “Drivers…start your engines…but quietly please!” Don’t be surprised if Dale Earnhardt Jr. gets whacked over the head with a rule for breaking the rules of engagement.

In what very well may be the worst idea in modern sports history, NASCAR officials are considering dropping down the noise level of cars. That’s among a series of 15-20 changes under consideration, and reported by The Sports Business Journal earlier this week.

My counter-point:

SHUT THE HECK UP!

Can you hear the death knell of NASCAR? We’ll administer last rites and let Richard Petty, Darrell Waltrip and other greats be the pallbearers at the funeral.

Somebody in the home offices in Daytona Beach or Charlotte must have dropped the memo: Noise is the heartbeat of NASCAR. The roar, the rumble, and the rush of 40 stock cars joining in perfect harmony to create a soundtrack that can reach over 130 decibels during a race.

The noise can be deafening, but in a get-your-heart-pumping adrenaline rush kind of way. There is nothing quite like the first lap at Daytona or Talladega, after the pace car drops into the infield, and the race cars crank up to full-speed with 725-horsepower engines under the hood.