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Kevin and Tony. Criminal trespass.
Charting Course ^ | 8/12/14 | Steve Berman

Posted on 08/12/2014 5:37:04 PM PDT by lifeofgrace

kevinandtony

The video stops just before Tony Stewart’s race car fatally impacts twenty-year-old Kevin Ward, Jr.  I know there’s a full version of it all over the Internet, a man—barely older than a boy—losing his life on camera.  I’m glad I haven’t watched it, and I don’t intend to.  Watching someone die on video is something that can’t be un-seen once seen, and I, for one, will abstain.  I have seen too many things that I’d like to un-see.

In a quarter-second, two lives were joined forever.  Kevin and Tony.  What was the fatal attraction that drew them into such a deadly conflict?  It wasn’t about money, or women, or love…well it was about love, sort of—a kind of self-love, love of a feeling, the feeling of winning.  Winning at all costs.

Race car drivers are an aggressive bunch.  There’s no room on a racetrack for a milquetoast.  Milquetoasts win a tin-plated trophy inscribed “loser”.  Race car drivers despise the tentative, the weak, the fearful, because those people are dangerous.  If you’ve ever been behind someone on an interstate entry ramp who stops because they’re scared of the traffic, you know how it feels to drive on a track with a wimp.  Wimps don’t make it in racing.

Kevin Ward was not a wimp.  Since he was four years old, racing was his life.  And he was good at it.  At eighteen, he was named rookie of the year in the Empire Super Sprint series—that was in 2012.  He had even beaten the erstwhile Tony Stewart on the dirt in the little sprint cars.  They were rivals, but they were also kindred spirits.

Tony Stewart is not a wimp either.  His record speaks for itself.  Three Sprint Cup championships, his own racing team (Stewart-Haas), the Number 14 emblazoned on his Bass Pro Shops Sprint Cup car, Tony is one of the cream of the crop in NASCAR racing.  Everyone knows that Tony isn’t afraid to mix it up on the track.  Off the track, he’s one of the most vociferous trash-talkers in the sport.

These two personalities met in a fatal embrace last Saturday night.  The fearless kid and the grizzled veteran clashed on their field of honor, a dirt-surfaced short oval track.  Tony Stewart doesn’t need to race in small town dirt track events—he’s a multimillionaire.  Tony just loves to race.  He loves it so much that he races just for fun.

When he was Kevin Ward’s age, he was doing exactly what Kevin was doing:  trying to be the best race car driver, every time, in every race, and finish first.  A top driver is defined by his aggressiveness and fearlessness, and the line between fearlessness and foolishness is perilously thin.  The line between aggressiveness and assault is a razor’s edge, especially behind the wheel of a 1,375 pound, 850 horsepower chunk of metal and rubber.  Both Kevin Ward and Tony Stewart crossed these lines in a small time sprint car race in upstate New York.  Tony killed Kevin with his car.

This was no drug-fueled, jealous rage over a girl, or a punk kid picking a fight with the wrong guy at a bar.  But the results were the same.  A man dead, another ruined.  The Ontario County authorities are not charging Stewart with a crime—at least not yet.  Calls for Stewart’s head on a platter have only just begun, and more than one district attorney has bowed to public pressure in cases like this.  For my part, after hearing many sides to this story, I don’t think any laws were violated.  But a crime was committed just the same.

How could Stewart be ruined if he’s not charged with a crime, stripped of his titles, banned from NASCAR?  I doubt any of those things will happen to him, but nonetheless he’s ruined.  Tony Stewart has to relive the moment when Kevin Ward died under his wheels, every day, for the rest of his life.  He has to feel the bump as his rear right tire crushed the young man’s body and threw it half a football field, he has to feel the endless doubt every time his hands touch the steering wheel in a race car:  what could he have done to spare young Kevin’s life?  Tony has to face the ultimate truth:  there’s no do-overs, only if-onlys.

If there’s no charges, you ask what was the crime?  Not all crimes are against the law.  This crime is one of passion:  criminal trespass outside the bounds of humanity.  Two men allowed their humanity to submerge and drown under a sea of pride, anger, and invincibility.  Like most twenty-year-olds, Kevin was invincible and immortal, in his own mind at least.  Outside of soldiers in a shooting war, or fleeting moments of adrenaline-soaked fear, young men don’t think of death or mortality.  They see a long life ahead of them and commit themselves to live it well.

Kevin Ward wasn’t thinking of his own death when he climbed out of his car onto an active racetrack—obviously had he thought he would die, he’d have stayed put.  Safety rules dictate that you don’t get out of your car while race cars are speeding along.  But Kevin had been racing for 16 years, the caution flag was out, and the cars were moving no faster than 50 mph.  About the same as you or me walking into the street on a busy county road.

He didn’t intend to stand in front of the cars, he only wanted to shake his fist at Tony Stewart, who had run him off the track—he wanted Tony to see his anger.  Maybe Kevin had done this before; it’s not clear if he had, but it is clear he wasn’t afraid of race cars or walking on the track.  Kevin’s anger and pride combined with his fearlessness and feeling of invincibility to push him one step too far onto the track.  Kevin doesn’t get a do-over or even an if-only.  He gets a gravestone and a grieving family, friends, and fans.

Maybe there’s mercy in that.  I know this sounds uncaring, even callous, but what if Kevin wasn’t killed, but was paralyzed from the neck down?  What if he wasn’t killed, but was in a long-term coma?  What if he wasn’t killed but faced years of recovery and could never race again?  While any outcome of Kevin being alive versus dead is better than what happened, Kevin’s death brought a finality which can eventually lead to peace for his family and friends.  For Kevin, his fate is in God’s hands, and I pray that he knew the immeasurable grace and mercy of Christ, and is resting in the everlasting arms.    If Kevin was here on earth, damaged beyond repair, he might have to live with the if-only, endless reliving of the event, sharing the moment of criminal trespass with his attacker.

I resolve to pray for the other trespasser, Tony Stewart.  I don’t know him, but I know that he alone carries the weight of his crime.  He committed it publicly, on video, in front of the whole world.  The scarlet “M” for “murderer” is branded on his forehead and the staggering weight of the act is on his shoulders alone.  Anyone who has killed another behind the wheel must be aware of this feeling.

Matthew Broderick killed two people in 1987 from behind the wheel.  He doesn’t remember doing it, but he carries the knowledge of their deaths.  He was convicted of a minor road offense and paid a $175 fine.  There’s never been a complete explanation of how Broderick drove a BMW into oncoming traffic.  Ted Kennedy had the shadow of Chappaquiddick follow him his whole career.  Mary Jo Kopechne’s death never left Kennedy, and was never really explained to anyone’s satisfaction.

Similarly, Kevin Ward’s death will haunt Tony Stewart for the rest of his life, with one difference:  the world witnessed this killing.  The world will forever question Tony’s story and motivation.  Did he see Kevin?  Did he swerve to miss him?  Did he hit the throttle to scare Kevin?  Did he think the powerful little sprint car wouldn’t swerve in the turn (he knows better).  What was really going through Tony’s mind in that quarter-second—the fraction of a section he wishes never happened?

What wasn’t in Tony’s mind, or Kevin’s mind was this thought:  life is fragile and temporary.  We all have one life to live, and it is easily ended.  Much too easily.  If Kevin had thought that, he would never have left his car.  If Tony had thought that, he might not have been so aggressive in a race he didn’t need to win at all costs.  Tony will always have another axe to grind, another driver’s action to avenge, another car to pass.  You could say it’s in his nature to win every race, to drive as if this race is the championship, to never let up.

Humanity demands more of us than the urge to win at all costs.  It demands that we place others above ourselves.  It demands that our basest impulses of anger, competition, revenge, and pride be subverted to mercy, care and humility.  In this crime, both Kevin and Tony are guilty of trespassing.  One dead, one ruined.  The two men will always be linked together by this one moment.

We will all mourn for a few days, and then move on with life.  NASCAR raced last Sunday, thankfully without Tony Stewart, and will race again next Sunday, probably with Tony back in the number 14.  Perhaps Tony will take this time to examine his own humanity and make a decision to never trespass again.

Maybe Tony will use this moment in his life to examine his priorities.  Maybe he’ll look at life a little more mercifully, a little more gratefully.  Maybe he’ll have a better understanding of life’s fragility.  Maybe he’ll spend more time outside of the adrenaline-rush of racing and become a more thoughtful person.

C.S. Lewis said “True humility is not thinking less of yourself; it is thinking of yourself less.”  Tony Stewart would be well served by that sentiment.  No acts of penitence, nor a lifetime of remorse will bring Kevin Ward back to this earth.  Tony has an opportunity to make this day, the day he changes his life, the day he turns the intensity and win-at-all-cost aggressiveness from racing for his own glory to helping others for the glory of God (if not God then humanity).

Tony Stewart could walk through his own ruin to emerge a new and better man, a man who dares not trespass from his humanity.  I hope and pray that he does.  It would be a fitting tribute to Kevin Ward, who trespassed one too many times.


TOPICS: Society; Sports
KEYWORDS: kevinward; nascar; tonystewart
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Winning at all costs, costs a lot
1 posted on 08/12/2014 5:37:04 PM PDT by lifeofgrace
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To: lifeofgrace

Tony is ruthless, just like Dale Earnhardt Sr and look what happened to him. I have no doubt Tony COULD HAVE avoided hitting Kevin if he wanted to.


2 posted on 08/12/2014 5:45:30 PM PDT by CivilWarBrewing
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To: lifeofgrace

Didn’t see any video, but for my part, I don’t/won’t walk in to traffic moving on a slippery track with cars going “x” mph. Was the young man angry at Stewart? Did he feel like he needed to confront/call out a “major” racer? Sadly, poor judgement can get you killed. Prayers to Mr. Wards family and to Mr. Stewart for bearing the weight of what happened.


3 posted on 08/12/2014 5:47:28 PM PDT by rktman (Ethnicity: Nascarian. Race: Daytonafivehundrian)
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To: rktman

Much testosterone and adrenaline on the track.
Easy to understand how this stuff can happen.


4 posted on 08/12/2014 5:49:14 PM PDT by nascarnation (Toxic Baraq Syndrome: hopefully infecting a Dem candidate near you)
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To: lifeofgrace

“winning at all costs” didn’t cause this. Getting out of the car and jumping in front of traffic did.


5 posted on 08/12/2014 5:54:05 PM PDT by driftdiver (I could eat it raw, but why do that when I have a fire.)
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To: lifeofgrace

Lots of adrenaline in a race and after a crash. I can see wanting to get out of the car, and I can see having the adrenaline to carry it out. But there is no common sense in walking on a race track with a bunch of speeding cars - it’s like walking on the freeway.


6 posted on 08/12/2014 6:02:11 PM PDT by bboop (does not suffer fools gladly)
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To: CivilWarBrewing

I finally watched the video. If Ward had been standing there and been hit, I might agree. But he was moving aggressively into traffic.


7 posted on 08/12/2014 6:03:54 PM PDT by PAR35
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To: lifeofgrace

Seems like a lib argument that could just as well apply to football.

Make life too safe, and more and more people do riskier and riskier things. Leftists want to channel all that machismo into a violent revolution.


8 posted on 08/12/2014 6:08:00 PM PDT by jjotto ("Ya could look it up!")
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To: lifeofgrace

Good Read,
thanks,,,


9 posted on 08/12/2014 6:10:37 PM PDT by Big Red Badger ( - William Diamonds Drum - can You Hear it G man?)
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To: lifeofgrace
I’m glad I haven’t watched it, and I don’t intend to.

For someone who hasn't watched the film, at least up to moment of impact, you have expressed way too much opinion. If you take the time to watch it, you'll see Kevin get out of a car where he's safe and start charging toward the inside of the track where the traffic is looking for Tony so he could take him and his car on. He nearly gets hit by the car ahead of Tony's and then he charged right at the side of Tony's car like he was going stick his fist in the side opening and prove something. Hard to believe you found so much to write about without even watching what happened...What if the car ahead of Tony had hit him instead? Should that guy be brought up on charges? Watch it! It's like watching a dog chase cars on the interstate. The only way Tony could have avoided him would have been to get off the track instead of going another lap. That wasn't winning at all costs, it was paying the ultimate price for proving you don't belong there.

10 posted on 08/12/2014 6:16:34 PM PDT by Dixie Yooper (Ephesians 6:11)
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All contributions are for the current quarter expenses.



FReepathon day 42.

Two percent a day keeps the 404 away.

11 posted on 08/12/2014 6:25:51 PM PDT by RedMDer (May we always be happy and may our enemies always know it. - Sarah Palin, 10-18-2010)
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To: CivilWarBrewing
I have no doubt Tony COULD HAVE avoided hitting Kevin if he wanted to.

And I think you're wrong.

12 posted on 08/12/2014 6:28:04 PM PDT by TangoLimaSierra (To win the country back, we need to be as mean as the libs say we are.)
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To: bboop

” But there is no common sense in walking on a race track “

Especially when the guy that just intentionally put you into the wall is coming around the track again


13 posted on 08/12/2014 6:29:50 PM PDT by Figment
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To: Dixie Yooper
There is a time and place for everything.

One does not let emotion get the best of you. Mr. Ward could have settled this behind the stadium in private with Tony. Like the old ways. Instead we have this. Some bizarre form of road rage on a crowed race track in the dark.

14 posted on 08/12/2014 6:46:40 PM PDT by Theoria (I should never have surrendered. I should have fought until I was the last man alive)
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To: lifeofgrace

Darwin won again...

Heck, we tell children not to play on a busy freeway. ..


15 posted on 08/12/2014 6:55:59 PM PDT by Vendome (Don't take life so seriously-you won't live through it anyway-Enjoy Yourself ala Louis Prima)
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To: driftdiver
Most of the article was about living with it, regardless of whether the kid was 100% at fault or not.

How will Stewart live with knowing that it was his car, under his control, that hit Ward?

-PJ

16 posted on 08/12/2014 7:16:00 PM PDT by Political Junkie Too (If you are the Posterity of We the People, then you are a Natural Born Citizen.)
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To: lifeofgrace

17 posted on 08/12/2014 7:27:07 PM PDT by yefragetuwrabrumuy ("Don't compare me to the almighty, compare me to the alternative." -Obama, 09-24-11)
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To: CivilWarBrewing
I have no doubt Tony COULD HAVE avoided hitting Kevin if he wanted to.

Have you ever driven a sprint car on dirt? Have you ever driven any vehicle fast on dirt? Do you have any idea what a car with slicks handles like at 50 mph on wet dirt?

Sprint cars are designed to turn left and have the rear end slide out to the right.

Approaching one from the upper side of the track is a really bad idea, because just about any action the driver of the car takes pushes the back end of the car out to the right.

18 posted on 08/12/2014 7:29:06 PM PDT by freeandfreezing
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To: CivilWarBrewing; TangoLimaSierra
"no doubt Tony COULD HAVE avoided hitting Kevin if he wanted to."

I don't think so. The more I look at what went on and think about the history of these two drivers, I am coming to the conclusion that the young buck was out to make a name from himself. His first mistake seems to have caused him going into the wall and the second cost him his life.

This animated video claims that Stewart pushed Ward into the wall. But, in the animation and other real footage it looks like it was Ward who came down into Stewart's line, maybe to block him, and mistimed or misjudged his position. The video points out vision is impeded by wind spoilers on sprint cars. What it doesn't mention is where a driver's eyes are trained when they are negotiating turns.

Later in the same video a claim is made that Stewart is heard accelerating "before" the impact with Ward.

However, this video seems to show that although Stewart's view was obstructed (and Ward was wearing black on a shadowed track) he may have seen him at the last second and tried to swerve. That move which could him to break traction and jump in rpm coincides with the appearance of Ward at his right front, not as he approaches him.

The more I think about a young driver with an aggressive reputation having the opportunity to take down one of the greats in the sport, also with an aggressive reputation, I have a hard time trying to accept Stewart as being at fault in any way.

19 posted on 08/12/2014 7:48:49 PM PDT by Baynative (How much longer will the media be able to prop up this administration?)
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To: lifeofgrace

this is bs. you are an idiot if you run across a track with these cars coming at you, especially around a curved area. warning lap or not. it didn’t help hjis uniform was black and it was a night race either, harder to see him out there when you’re trying to watch the cars around you.

ward is dead b/c he exited his car and was charging around the track. i can undestand being pissed. i’d have saved charging the other guy, if necessary, after the race was done.


20 posted on 08/12/2014 8:12:53 PM PDT by Secret Agent Man ( Gone Galt; Not averse to Going Bronson.)
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