Trevor Bayne talks with car owner Jack Roush at Michigan |
To justify staying this way just look at what Team Penske did back in the late 2000s. They ran three race cars and struggled with them. They switched back to two cars in 2011 and a year later were about to win a championship with Brad Keselowski in 2012. Penske has remained a two-car team since and helped back the Wood Brothers to keep their third driver on the track in the 21. I believe that Roush has taken this same road to bringing themselves back up the ladder.
Sponsorship is also a major effect on the organization. Where the two years prior, AdvoCare completely backed Trevor Bayne they are not this season. Once again this weekend Roush Performance Parts is on Bayne's Ford Fusion at Kentucky Speedway. So here is that little issue that fans of Bubba Wallace keep wanting to gripe about when he got dropped after Pocono. Wallace has not won a race since he first arrived at Roush and the sponsorship didn't come with him. So with issues going on to keep the two primary cars in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series going forward they had no choice but to drop the 6 Xfinity program out.
Years ago unsponsored cars were white and black on the track but around Roush's 25th anniversary in the sport, they started to change that. Bayne ran several events in a 25th Anniversary Roush Fenway car in 2013, a Roush CleanTech car and other Roush related products but here is the problem with that; when those companies are on the car it was what we used to call a 401K sponsorship on the car.
That meaning that the money is coming straight from the organization and not from a corporate organization like AdvoCare or Liberty National Life. The same goes for when Ford Performance is on the cars as well, instead of running a blank car it is a way for the team to advertise for the manufacturer or the car owners main company. Sponsorship is the driving point of this sport, and the company needs more of it to fill some of the holes for 2018. Fans want to have this little debate about the organization asking too much for sponsorship, however, since Newmark came in, I have heard all that changed when Geoff Smith parted ways as the Team President.
Smith in my opinion was responsible for the big split between Mark Martin and Valvoline back in the early 1990s because he wanted too much from the sponsor. I believe now Newmark is smarter about getting sponsorship for the cars and takes what they can get for the cars.
The one thing that RFR did not downsize was its engineering department last fall. While going from 3 cars to 2, the team kept it's engineering core the same and added to it. Roush still has work to do in getting their chassis's better but they're finding speed as the season goes on. The goal is to get back to a three car organization but not until they have speed back in the main two cars for the organization.
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