More later, but right now I want to clarify that starting in 2013 ALL Runoffs classes (28 classes in 2013) will be invited to run the vast majority of Majors events. The only exception is the Invitational event, which will be for the "Top Ten" only. After I sell a region on hosting such an event we'll have hard data on which to determine the viability of that format going forward.
And yes, the Solo National Tour is a very good analogy for the Majors concept.
As I said, more later...
Butch Kummer
SCCA Director of Club Racing, Majors
2006, 2007, 2010 SARRC GTA Champion
Still a short post, but just to hopefully clear some things up:
• All Runoffs-eligible classes (currently 28 for 2013) will be invited to run at the vast majority of the Majors events. The only exception will be the Invitational events that will be for the "Top Ten" classes. Although I've been directed to schedule one of those in each conference, to-date I've been unsuccessful in doing so.
• The target is six double-race Majors weekends per conference, but there may be some singles on the calendar as well. You'll count your best 67% of the races (8 if there are 12 races, 7 if 10, etc.) in the conference toward the Conference Class Championship, so it's not like you MUST run all six weekends to contend.
• The Majors program in 2013 and beyond is vastly different than the 2012 pilot program. There certainly were some successes in 2012, but we also learned a lot about what NOT to do (which is why all classes are invited to the Super Tour and Showcase events). The BoD (who makes policy, while the National Staff implements it) recognizes that Invitational events are a tough sell to the regions, but the drivers who participated generally had very positive comments about the clustered competition (1-3 classes per run group vs. "alphabet soup") aspect of the weekends. The BoD would like us to do at least one Invitational per conference to prove or disprove the concept before giving up on it.
• As many have said (and thank you for your comments), we can keep on doing what's not been working or we can try something different. Is this the absolute best answer to what's ailing SCCA Club Racing? Maybe not, but it's a pretty damn good one and at least "we" (your club and mine) are trying something new.
I had planned to add other comments about the program, but Eric Prill did a nice job of summarizing what I would say here:
http://sccaofficial.blogspot.com/201...s-it-mean.html
See y'all at the track...
Butch Kummer
SCCA Director of Club Racing, Majors
2006, 2007, 2010 SARRC GTA Champion