Thursday, July 5, 2007

Steve Byrnes Makes Pepsi 400 Practice A Blast


Early Thursday evening, the NEXTEL Cup gang took to the track at Daytona for their final practice. As with every lap on the track for this series, live TV followed along. This practice was shown on SPEED Channel. During the season, TV viewers will see many different faces on these telecasts. Mostly, it is a combination of SPEED announcers with several of the announcers from the network telecasting the actual race.

This day, SPEED showcased one of the best combinations of booth and pit announcers that can be seen on NASCAR TV anywhere. Hosting the telecast was Steve Byrnes, who has emerged as one of the best on-air hosts for both live events and talk shows. He brings to the table an enthusiasm and professionalism sorely lacking in many other NASCAR announcers. This guy certainly is the real deal.

Alongside of Byrnes were his good friends Jeff Hammond and Larry McReynolds. This trio in the booth is magic, and the casual attitude of practice really allows them all to show their knowledge. This group is clearly on their game, and nothing escapes them as the practice grind goes forward. Viewers can learn so much from just sitting back and listening to these "voices of experience."

On pit road for this telecast was Matt Yocum and newcomer Lindsay Czarniak. Yocum is coming off his very successful hosting of Tony Stewart's "Prelude to the Dream" pay-per-view race special, and is the ultimate insider. Yocum also produces Stewart's Sirius Satellite Radio program, which is tremendously popular with fans. Matt just seems to always kind of "be there" at the right time.

Czarniak has been a welcome addition to NASCAR, and has proven to be a hard-working rookie who can take her lumps and hang-in there with the big boys. She has a great ability to put people at ease with her casual style, and the NASCAR gang clearly responds. Face it, we like her.

SPEED's great pictures during practice allow the Director to use lots of in-car camera shots and hang with them for multiple laps. When the action gets thick, its almost as exciting as the race. Everyone knows the guys are trying to find the elusive speed at Daytona, and no one is better at telling viewers about the tiny details of fine-tuning than McReynolds. His unbridled honesty is just so refreshing, and he really brings fans the feel of being at the track with your own crew chief.

One of the best parts of Steve Byrnes in the host position is the fact that he freely asks the questions that viewers and fans want to know. He consistently put both McReynolds and Hammond on-the-spot about NASCAR topics, and they responded. The banter between the announcers and reporters on pit road was often times much better than the commentary heard by fans during the actual race.

All of us who have watched NASCAR for years know that live televised practice sessions can be like watching paint dry. This one on SPEED, however, was just flat out entertaining and very exciting. It was a good TV moment when everything just "came together." The pictures and sound were great, the pit reporters had all the drivers talking, and the booth announcers really gave super information about what was going on, and why.

After watching TNT for several weeks, this SPEED telecast also contained another crucial element missing from the Turner package. These announcers respected each other, and had fun while they were working. The jokes were made at no one's expense, and were in good humor. Even the drivers were smiling while being interviewed at practice, and that was because they could feel the good vibe of the show.

Over the past several months, The Daly Planet has considered various columns about the NEXTEL Cup practice sessions, but they just did not live up to anything exciting. The best part of the last several weeks may have been the horrible green-ish "puffy shirts" that TNT makes Weber and Dallenbach wear when they are doing a broadcast on SPEED. Those should go immediately to the Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame when the TNT part of the NASCAR package is over. A Seinfeld moment if we ever saw one.

So, hats off to SPEED for hosting a killer practice session at high-speed on the high banks. They had a rock solid line-up of talent who made something normally boring into something very interesting and fun. Kudos to Steve Byrnes for keeping this gang working at a high level by challenging them and then rewarding them for their information. This was a key test session for both the Pepsi 400 and qualifying. Now, if only the race can live up to the practice. We shall see on Saturday night.

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5 comments:

Anonymous said...

This is exactly what I was thinking!!

I've been reading your blog for just a couple weeks but have started to really pay attention to the telecast and how it brings out the race. I watched about the last half of tonight's practice on SPEED and it was a great telecast. I laughed. I learned. I waxed (when Larry Mac was remembering Elliot's track record. It was a great telecast!! Good work SPEED!! Steve Byrnes is awesome!

Anonymous said...

I didn't watch it but I agree with your point about practice telecasts. If the broadcast team isn't ON, it's useless. The cast of characters on this particular show are some of the best Nascar TV has to offer.

Especially McReynolds. You can't beat that guy.

I didn't like Byrnes when he first took over for Mike Joy on Trackside. I enjoyed Trackside very much prior to that switch. I still really don't watch the show but I've found that it's not because of Steve Byrnes anymore as much as the silliness. Byrnes truly has really grown into a solid host.

I'm personally against this whole 'having to have a host' way of presenting the races but since we're stuck with them, I sure am cheering hard for Byrnes to take over for the woefully out of place Chris Myers on Fox.

seriously said...

AMEN!

The telecast was easy to watch and listen to a serious departure from the grit-your-teeth and get through it TNT race telecasts.

Anonymous said...

Pepsi 400 practice was great, but I couldn't watch the Busch Series coverage. It seems like Dr. Jerry Punch has no nascar knowledge anymore for some reason. He'll never be a Mike Joy. Also ESPN barely showed any practice at ALL of cars on the track. They kept doing specials on Kevin Harvick andJuan Pablo Montoya for really no reason at all. Show us practice, we know about the drivers.

-Sean

Anonymous said...

Keep your eye on Lindsay Czarniak. She used to be a local sports reporter here in Miami and was always knowledgable re: her subject as well as full of personality. I've never heard her ask a stupid question, unlike some of the glamor-girl reporters the networks tend to throw into the fray.