The current NASCAR season is 36 races.
It hasn't always been that long. Or as short.
Twenty years ago, when Crusty Wallace won his one and only championship, the 1989 Cup season was 29 races long.
Thirty years ago, the '79 season was 31 races long, and it didn't start in Daytona. (It started on a road coarse in California.)
Forty years ago, the 1969 season actually started in 1968. When it ended in College Station, Pa., on Dec. 7, the season had seen 54 races. Season champ David Pearson missed three races and still won, partly because Richard Petty skipped four and mostly because Pearson whupped everyone that year.
My point: There's absolutely nothing sacred about the 36-race season.
So I propose 25.