Why the Coke Zero 400 was run on July 5th and not July 4th?

For 29 years, the summer race at Daytona International Speedway was a part of the nation’s birthday. The event was always run on Independence Day, no matter what day of the week. The race was in the morning, and the drivers and their families were celebrating on the beach by late afternoon. The tradition that began in 1959 ended in 1988 when the event was moved into prime time on whatever Saturday was part of the holiday weekend. Now it has been moved once more, to Sunday night, to accommodate the return of NASCAR to NBC.
Mark Lazarus, chairman of NBC Sports Group, said the change was simply about audience. “The Fourth of July is annually the lowest night of television watching of the year – fewer people watch TV that night because they are all out watching fireworks,” Lazarus told The Associated Press on Saturday. “In order for us to start our relationship with as big a splash as we can, we wanted to give ourselves the best chance and opportunity to have a big audience. It was simply math.” The switch still comes with challenges. By moving it to Sunday night, the race now goes head-to-head against the United States playing in the Women’s World Cup final. NBC’s pre-race show begins at the same time as the game, but the race doesn’t actually go green for another 78 minutes. Lazarus anticipates, barring overtime and penalty kicks, only about 35 minutes of direct competition. He is hopeful, though, that World Cup viewers will flip to the NASCAR race when the game ends. “It’s a mixed blessing – it will bring a lot of different people to the television set,” he said. “We’re hopeful, if we continue to market, that we’ll get some people who wouldn’t be home watching TV to transfer over and check us out.”
Although both NASCAR and Daytona officials signed off on the switch to Sunday, it’s not the most ideal situation for track President Joie Chitwood. Running the race a day later hurts attendance because campers usually return home on Sunday, and now the World Cup likely will cut into viewership. Chitwood understood NBC’s desire for the Sunday night race, but is thankful the race will return to Saturday night in 2016. “In our conversation with them, it was just the one time,” he said. “We all talked about what we could do special for NBC, and this was one of their components, and it made a lot of sense when we sat down and really talked about it. When you look at what they’ve done with “˜Football Night in America,’ they are just knocking it out of the part. They’ve really captured that. Hopefully, they can sprinkle a little bit of that magic on this event this Sunday. I don’t think anybody a year ago, though, knew about World Cup soccer, so that’s the way the breaks are.”(see full article at the‚ Associated Press)(7-5-2015)