Talladega Draws Smallest Crowd For NASCAR Sprint Cup Race In Track’s History
10/09/12 Talladega Superspeedway officials estimated that a crowd of 88,000 attended yesterday's NASCAR's Good Sam Roadside Assistance 500, the "smallest crowd for a Sprint Cup race at Talladega since figures have been provided." The crowd "was 20,000 less than the previous low of 108,000 announced" for the Aaron's 499 in early May.
The track "drew a combined 315,000 fans for its two annual Cup races as recently as 2007." Driver Jeff Gordon said, “From an entertainment standpoint, they should be lined up out to the highway out there. That I don’t get at all. That makes no sense to me."
Talladega’s "trend of falling attendance matches" NASCAR’s. A USA Today report shows that attendance for Sprint Cup races is down 2.4% "from a year ago" and 8.5% from '09. NASCAR and Talladega officials have said that the "main culprit" is the economic downturn.
Talladega Superspeedway Chair Grant Lynch "seemed at a loss about how to reverse the trend without an economic resurgence." Lynch said, “All we can do is to continue to try to improve our facility and put on the best show we can for the fans and hope that they think the values we’re offering out there and the products that we’re presenting to them make good sense to them as a way to spend their hard-earned dollars and come and have a weekend of great entertainment." He added that "the fall race, in particular, could be suffering from going head to head with college football at a time when Alabama and Auburn have won the past three national championships." Anniston Star