Posted on 08/11/2014 6:27:28 AM PDT by shortstop
When you mix anger, hotheads and high-octane fuel, you sometimes get trouble.
In Canandaigua on Saturday night, you also got tragedy.
A 20-year-old phenom, pushed up against the wall by one of the biggest men in NASCAR, wrestled himself out of his bunged up car and stormed down the track to confront the man he felt had done him wrong.
It was high-bank dirt and small-town dreams and a kid with a helmet and some coveralls and cars coming by under a yellow flag. He walked into the traffic lane and one came past and then it was the big man and he raised his hand to flip him off and a foot or two outside the path of the front wheel he made his stand.
But the back end cut loose and swung wide and the big rear tire came over him and hung him up and then threw him far and lifeless back onto the bank.
Thats how Kevin Ward Jr. lost his life and Tony Stewart lost his peace of mind.
And maybe his career and maybe his freedom.
Because the press conferences are being held by the sheriff, not track officials, and every angle of every cellphone video is being scrutinized by people who know physics, racing and the laws of the state of New York.
And the most ominous report in the press is the claim that spectators could hear Tony Stewarts engine rev as he approached Kevin Ward Jr. Did they miss hear? Was he trying to get traction to cut left and avoid the kid? Or was he trying to scare the younger man, maybe spray him with mud as he passed, do something in some way to stand up to this impertinent, wet-behind-the-ears, backwoods rookie daring to walk across the track and flip off a three-time NASCAR champ?
Was it stupid plus stupid equals a horror no one could imagine?
Did the impetuous decision to get out of a crumpled car on an active track combine with the impetuous decision to brush by an angry competitor leave a young man dead and the race world questioning itself?
Or did a kid too young to buy a beer simply misjudge and walk into the arc of a passing racer?
The investigators will have to decide.
The investigators and everybody who squinted into their phones yesterday watching the YouTube of Kevin Juniors death.Whatever they decide, Tony Stewart is at fault.
Tony Stewart and a culture of bare-knuckle racing that believes the response to competitive jostling is to storm into the scrum with fists and fingers flying.
Its a world of high-tech machines and low-tech men.
A world where when you have a dispute with a guy you go kick his ass.
A world where its somehow reasonable to climb out of your car on an active race track and storm around like a 3-year-old throwing a tantrum.
A world that Tony Stewart helped create and perpetuate.
Because it wasnt just Tony Stewarts car that killed Kevin Ward Jr., it was his example.
It didnt take the ESPN producers long to find video of Tony Stewart storming around on an active track himself, throwing his helmet at passing cars and giving the finger to drivers who had crossed him.
The sad irony of Saturday nights tragedy is that Kevin Ward Jr. was killed by Tony Stewart while being Tony Stewart. You had a 20-year-old guy in a helmet and some coveralls whose entire life had been steeped in motorsports, raised in a culture which, for most of his life, had been defined by the antics of Tony Stewart.
Kevin Ward Jr.s choice to exit his car and walk across the track was insane, but it was a choice which the code of honor of his sport almost made obligatory, and a code which was best exemplified by the man whose car would, in a split second, end his young life.
Tony Stewart has blood on his hands, through either the pressure of his foot on the throttle or the impact of his example on his sport. In a way, Tony Stewart not only ran Kevin Junior down, he also put him in the track in front of him.
Not by the jostle up against the wall, but by the expectation of how a man is supposed to react to such a jostle.
And that blood is not just on Tony Stewarts hands, it is smeared across the multi-colored logo of NASCAR. Because when your dog runs loose and bites someone, youre responsible. And the officials at NASCAR have allowed the hotheads of their sport the Tony Stewarts of their sport to rant and rage from Talladega to Daytona. The founding myth of southern racing is that it all began with hillbillies running moonshine across the back roads of Dixie. True or not, the times have changed, the society has changed and the attitudes need to change.
The line is, Gentlemen, start your engines, and there needs to be more emphasis on being gentlemen.
Because thats what was lacking Saturday night in Canandaigua even tempers, sportsmanship and a simple rule that says you dont get out of your car unless its on fire.
It was all so needless.
And everybody watching that YouTube knows that.
And racing needs to face that fact.
Never get into a gunfight with a knife.
Never get into a fist fight with a car.
NASCAR is the KKK of sports, don’cha know.
As usual the people who know the least about a subject have the most to say about it.
Now we are going to have a persecutor (prosecutor) salivating over the fact that he will have the opportunity to try a celeb and have his name all over the news. He is right now sifting through experts, expert?, to find one that will give him what he wants.
We will also have a televulture hounding the family with promises to get them monetary resolution for this tragedy. This article starts this process/.
Nope.
Kevin Ward Jr.s choice to exit his car and walk across the track was insane
Yep.
It was the cause of his death.
It was night and the kid was dressed in black, as well.
How could I ever forget?
Bottom line, motor sports will eventually fall as NFL will due to pressure from the Left.
In the mean time motor sports will be forced to limit their racing vehicles to electric powered with large soft bumpers, driven by Pee Wee Hermen types at speeds not above 10 mph
This writer only mentions NASCAR but this was a Sprint race. NASCAR had nothing
to do with it.”
That is a good point. I've been to the Daytona 500 a few times years ago, and have seen drivers get out of their cars to confront each other after an accident. I don't know what, if anything, was done as a disciplinary measure to discourage this sort of thing. I think multi-race suspensions for this kind of behavior is not out of line.
All they have to do is point to this thread.
Stewart wrecked the kid’s car then hamburgerized him.
Good. He deserved it. He was weak and stupid. Poor poor Tony.
I predict that in the very near future, NASCAR will announce stricter
punishments for running around on the track, fighting, etc.
***********
NASCAR may well do that for their group but NASCAR has no control over the
Sprint Car groups. See Sprint Car Sanctioning Bodies:
http://www.sprintcarnews.com/zsanctioningbodies.html
This wasn’t a NASCAR race. It was sanctioned by the “Empire Super Sprint” organization. This is a regional group (limited to New York; may travel to Pennsylvania occasionally) that conducts “tour” races to tracks in New York.
A few NASCAR drivers, when they’re in town for the big race on Sunday, visit local dirt tracks to mix it up with the locals. Tony Stewart does / did this all the time, as have David Reutimann (his Dad, Buzzie, was a Superstar at our local NY dirt track in the 60’s), Carl Edwards, Jamie McMurray, Dave Blaney, J.J. Yeley, and others.
I don’t know if, after this debacle, that will continue or not.
targeted sports: football, hockey, auto racing
accepted sports: baseball, basketball, golf, tennis
the only reason basketball is tolerated is because of the race of the majority of its players.
Obviously the estupido thought he was playing some video game and had super powers. Guess he never thought about dogs that chase cars having an abbreviated time as a dog.
i am curious to know what kind of vision or view the drivers have out of these vehicles. Unless Stewart was told via radio that Ward was on the track, Stewart might have not seen Ward until the last second.
BINGO!
so have you joined up with isis yet?? u seem like the type
Mike
I absolutely meant NASCAR.
I’m sure the Sprint car people will do something too. But this wouldn’t be a national story, if it didn’t involve Tony Stewart. This may have happened on a dirt track, but its a “NASCAR” story....especially when people fish up old video of Stewart going out on the track (a NASCAR track) and doing practically the exact same thing Ward did.
As an aside, if you think NASCAR has no control over the Sprint car people....ask yourself if NASCAR has control over whether or not their big name racers go to the dirt tracks. If NASCAR wanted all the Sprint cars to have pink bows on top, the Sprint car people would be ordering ribbon.
Just goes to show you shouldn’t jaywalk...especially on a track full of race cars.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.