With the end of the NASCAR season, all the chatter in media circles is how two on-track incidents at Homestead could be what the sanctioning body needs to reattract fans for 2010.
It wasn’t talk about close side-by-side racing in the Nationwide and Sprint Cup series that had fans admiring the talent of good racing. It wasn’t about Jimmie Johnson making NASCAR history by winning a fourth championship or Kyle Busch capturing the Nationwide crown.
The buzz has been about the season-long feud between Denny Hamlin and Brad Keselowski, who beat and banged on each other in the Nationwide series, and Tony Stewart and Juan Pablo Montoya playing bumper cars during the Ford 400.
Hamlin and Keselowski have been crashing each other for several races and a “wink” of the eye, as Hamlin claimed the sun was in his eyes Saturday, just doesn’t cut it.
Hamlin gets a meaningless one-lap penalty for rough driving.
On Sunday, Stewart pulled up in front of Montoya, and contact was made. When Montoya drove to the inside, Stewart made a left-hand turn, causing contact between the two cars. Montoya’s car suffered a cut tire and hit the outside wall.
When Montoya returned to the track, he didn’t waste any time in spinning out Stewart.
Montoya was penalized two laps for rough driving. Where was Stewart’s penalty for rough driving?
Don’t hand out penalties that have no bearing on each team. Park the cars for the remainder of the race, disqualify them with zero points and money.
Other drivers are taking a different stance; they want to see good side-by-side racing. Even the normally hot-headed Kevin Harvick indicated he wasn’t ready to trade punches in the future.
A lot of people around NASCAR hope both of these feuds remain heated when the Daytona 500 rolls around to draw fans back to televisions when the 2010 season begins.
A brawl between three drivers, like what happened in 1979 during the Daytona 500, is not what NASCAR needs now. It worked 30 years ago, but the NASCAR public relations staff should be considering the possible consequences of such an action.
There are enough opportunities for crashes while racing without drivers taking another driver out of competition for revenge or spite.
If the powers that be believe intentionally crashing cars is the image stock-car racing needs, maybe we can get Stewart, Montoya, Hamlin and Keselowski to stage a tag-team wrestling match.
Stewart should be remembered this season for the awesome performance of the race team he became a part of. Both he and Ryan Newman made the Chase, which was a huge accomplishment. It shouldn’t be about his frustration with Montoya when both were running in the last race of the season for pride.
Contact Ken de la Bastide: 454-8580, ken.dela bastide@kokomotribune.com
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Ken de la Bastide: NASCAR has no place for feuds
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