Ernest Sutton said it for me. I agree with him 100%. There is a precedence for dealing with this kind of on track action by Nascar, but with wishy-washy Brian France in charge I don't think he has the guts to handle it the was his Dad did with Dale Earnhardt and Geoff Bodine. Remember?? Problem solved or Dale Earnhardt, Geoff Bodine, Richard Childress and Rick Hendrick could find another line of work because they weren't coming back to race Nascar. Maybe another group meeting to see if the drivers and their car owners want to pursue other interests.
Ernest Sutton said: I can appreciate what you're saying, Billy, and you are right about wrecks & rivalries filling up more seats in the grandstands - and NASCAR certainly needs that, seeing as how those numbers have been declining the last 2-3 years. The one thing I do not ever want to see again, though, is a driver lose his life on the racetrack - and I've seen that more times than I care to talk about. Keselowski's car stopped sideways on the track & he got t-boned on the passenger side - I don't even want to think about what the result would have been if it had been on the driver's side. I don't have any problem with aggressive driving - after all, that's what racing is supposed to be about anyway - and I believe that when drivers have disagreements on the track, those should be settled off the track.....in whatever manner they choose to settle it. I realize the cars are a lot safer today than they were in the past, but I still can't agree with using them as weapons. And, of course, the other issue is all the equipment of innocent bystanders being torn up - some of those teams are big-money teams, but others are not & can't afford those kinds of losses. I'm all for the most aggressive racing they can put on the track & yes, racers do assume the risk when they strap themselves in, but I believe intentional wrecking is crossing the line of acceptability.