DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — NASCAR may have a problem it can’t draft its way out of.
The NASCAR Cup Series is reportedly seeing shrinking casual engagement as fans grow increasingly frustrated with the Next Gen car, while the NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series continues to surge in viewership and relevance.
The reason, according to fans and broadcast chatter alike, is simple: diehards are still watching everything. Everyone else tuned out a while ago.
What’s left in Cup is a hardened core audience — loyal, loud and not shy about criticizing the product. That has made weekly viewership feel less like a mass-market sport and more like a niche broadcast with elite-level production costs.
Meanwhile, the O’Reilly series has benefited from closer racing, younger drivers and a style that some fans argue feels more “NASCAR” than NASCAR itself. The result has been surprisingly tight TV numbers on select weekends, with some events reportedly creeping closer to Cup territory than anyone in the sport would care to admit publicly.
NASCAR has not acknowledged any existential fanbase shift, and officials continue to emphasize overall growth metrics and digital engagement.
But in living rooms and comment sections, the message is less complicated.
Fans aren’t gone.
They’re just watching the race before the race.








