Of course the idea is to have fun. You could have a system of "fairground races" where people join in, in any place and thrash around. They then would not care whether they won or not and what equipment they are up against, but they would have an enjoyable time , or fun.
Warden Law has rightly developed a great reputation for Racing. This has been so successful that National Champions have raced here over the years and thus set the bar very high for skilfull driving. Therefore a race win at Warden Law is an achievement that a driver can rightfully be proud of.
To protect the Championship and grow the grid. Classes were introduced to seperate the excellent from the very good and gave much more of the field a chance to take a trophy/memory home.
Driving standards are well policed ( nobody gets it 100% correct) and driving silliness is discouraged. The admin of the race day is good and friendly.
This has caused the grids to soar ( 40 +) and many drivers going home singing the praises of Warden Law.
Recently, some spectators are convinced that some drivers are cheating, unfortunately to protect the integrity of the Series this needs addressing. Scrutineering unpredicatably but effectively needs to be the answer. I,m sure that Kelvin Nicholls if asked would give hints on what needs to be checked. Or, read the Rules and decide (secretly) what the checks would be that month.
Or watch the grids vanish in a welter of unuinformed gossip
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