Front Page
Olympic Tickets
MLB Tickets
World Series Tickets
NBA Tickets
NFL Tickets
Super Bowl XLV Tickets
Super Bowl Packages
NHL Tickets
Stanley Cup Tickets
NASCAR Tickets
Soccer Tickets
NCAA Football Tickets
NCAA Basketball Tickets
Ticket Buying Guide
Contact Us
Link Request
Sports Links
gls55 holdings
Website Agreement
Site Map
e-mail me



NASCAR News - Sports News | Archive March 9, 2010

 

Bookmark and Share


NASCAR puts Carl Edwards on probation for 3 races

By JENNA FRYER
March 9, 2010


Charlotte, NC — Sticking with its "boys, have at it" attitude, NASCAR placed Carl Edwards on probation for three races Tuesday for deliberately wrecking Brad Keselowski's car last weekend in Atlanta.

Edwards will be monitored by NASCAR through the April 10 race at Phoenix but may drive in the Sprint Cup and Nationwide Series.

NASCAR president Mike Helton said Edwards acted unacceptably Sunday but did not cross the line in what the sanctioning body will allow this season. NASCAR promised in January to give the drivers more leeway in policing themselves and settling scores in an effort to energize the sport.

"We made it very clear to (Edwards) that these actions were not acceptable and did go beyond what we said back in January about putting the driving back in the hands of the drivers," Helton said. "We believe (Edwards) understands our position at this point."

There had been a strong call from fans and analysts for NASCAR to suspend Edwards, who returned to the track down 153 laps from an earlier accident with Keselowski and intent on wrecking his car. He tried for at least one lap before succeeding with three laps to go, nudging Keselowski's car and sending it airborne. The car banged hood-first off a retaining wall before flipping back onto its wheels. No one was hurt.

Keselowski supported NASCAR's decision.

"They are not in an enviable position when it comes to these matters, but they do an outstanding job," he said in a statement, adding it was unfortunate the accident overshadowed Penske Racing teammate Kurt Busch's victory.

Edwards acknowledged his action was intentional but said he was surprised by Keselowski's car taking flight. Because NASCAR approved greater driver leeway before the season, a severe punishment for Edwards most likely would have quashed the "have at it" attitude after the first test.

The decision to lighten up after years of penalizing drivers for minor infractions — Dale Earnhardt Jr. was once punished for cursing on TV; Jeff Gordon was placed on probation for shoving Matt Kenseth — was in large part due to increased fan excitement created by some 2009 feuds.

Denny Hamlin had a monthslong dispute with Keselowski, an aggressive young driver who has made no apologies for banging fenders with established veterans. Tony Stewart and Juan Pablo Montoya played retaliatory bumper-cars in the season finale at Homestead.

Helton said the day after the finale that NASCAR had perhaps gone too far in sterilizing the competition and acknowledged that more emotion and personality could benefit the sport. The "have at it" era was announced less than two months later, and Helton was not backing down Tuesday.

"The clear message, I think, we sent in January was that we were willing to put more responsibility in the hands of the driver," he said. "But there is a line you can cross and we'll step in to maintain law and order when we think that line's crossed."

Just what is that line?

"I think we see it when we see it," he replied.

Clint Bowyer, participating in a Goodyear tire test at Darlington, disagreed with NASCAR's assessment.

"I think there's a too far in everything and that was too far. Bottom line. Simple as that," Bowyer said. "That was a pretty scary incident that could've been a lot worse."

The fairly lenient punishment — many view probation as a slap on the wrist — drew swift and mixed reaction from drivers who jumped to their Twitter accounts during Helton's 20-minute announcement.

"Huh!" wrote Kevin Harvick, who was suspended one race in 2002 for insubordination — he parked his truck at the door of the NASCAR hauler when he was summoned to discuss rough driving at Martinsville.

"I'm thinking about asking for a refund for all of my penalties!!!!"

But Scott Speed and Michael Waltrip applauded NASCAR's decision.

"You can't ask the driver to take their gloves off one week and then tell em to put 'em back on the next," Waltrip wrote.

Helton said NASCAR saw two distinct parts to the accident: Edwards' action; Keselowski's car going airborne. The more serious of the two, in NASCAR's opinion, is figuring out why Keselowski's car acted as it did.

"That's something that is very important to us, and we want to study very closely to figure out things that we can do to help prevent this very quickly in the future," Helton said. "This is a very important element of all of this, that I would ask all of us to be reminded of the fact of the car getting airborne was a very serious issue."

•  NASCAR News Archive Index
•  NASCAR Tickets


---------------------



Sadler says tire was fine for Atlanta

Associated Press
March 9, 2010


Darlington, SC — Elliott Sadler had no complaints for Goodyear, only for those drivers griping about the manufacturer.

When asked what it meant that at least a dozen competitors faced tire trouble at Atlanta Motor Speedway on Sunday, Sadler was quick with a response: "Yeah, but there were 37 others that didn't," he said Tuesday at Darlington Raceway.

Sadler and fellow Sprint Cup racers Marcos Ambrose and Clint Bowyer came to the track "Too Tough To Tame" to shake out the dormant raceway and give Goodyear some insight about what tire to bring to the Southern 500 in May.

Sadler said those racers bothered by tire compounds should instead look to their raceshops for better setups designed to minimize tire wear and maximize the rubber.

"I think it's the best Goodyear tire we've had in Atlanta in years," Sadler said. "You can race really hard with it. You can race side-by-side."

Sadler acknowledged the complaints of some teams. "I know Denny Hamlin had one, he had a fast race car," Sadler said. "But he ran over something. To me, that's not a tire issue."

Ambrose and Bowyer were also complimentary about Goodyear's product.

"I had a flat in Atlanta and I think that was my first flat tire in three years," Bowyer said.

And Bowyer had more praise for Goodyear. He thought the tire brought to the California race last month showed vast improvement over what they've raced on there in the past. At Atlanta, "we were just as much to blame as them. Everybody was searching around for" the best air pressure levels.

"A lot of times, you can't always blame Goodyear," Bowyer said.

Bowyer's RCR Racing team tried different levels to see what worked best, pushing him from two laps down into the top 10.

"It wasn't like we put a different tire company on it, we just tried different things within the boundaries," Bowyer said.

Ambrose continued to have problems at Darlington -- not with tires, though, but with the track.

He finished 33rd here in the Southern 500 a year ago, his first time driving a Sprint Cup race at Darlington. It took him only a few laps Tuesday to spin out.

"I reaffirmed that the tire here was difficult to drive on," he said with a smile. "I couldn't get around this place."

Darlington has changed the past two years since a multimillion dollar repaving gave the track a modern, slick surface. On top of that, Bowyer said the racers found a layer of grit and sand they needed to blow off with a few laps before they could get meaningful data that might help in May.

The machines used also featured the new spoilers NASCAR plans to debut in Martinsville on March 28.

Sadler said former Sprint driver Brett Bodine helped with the adjustment to the spoiler, which Sadler thinks might be the answer to keeping cars from going airborne.

Brad Keselowski lifted off the track surface last Sunday in a frightening wreck after getting intentionally hit by Carl Edwards. Edwards was placed on three weeks probation by NASCAR earlier Tuesday.

Sadler wasn't too concerned about Edwards' retaliation, a practice he says has gone on between drivers for generations. What worried him most was how quickly Keselowski's car took to the air and how it could've landed in the stands with horrifying results.

"The spoiler seems to better at keeping these cars on the ground, which is what we need," Sadler said.

Bowyer expects an exciting, tightly contested race at Darlington in two months, helped by a Goodyear tire that will bring out the drivers' best.

Sure, there are legitimate issues at times with Goodyear. The manufacturer, though, has learned from its breakdowns and improved, Bowyer said.

"I feel like they've done a good job of stepping up to the plate this year and creating some good racing for us so far," Bowyer said.

•  NASCAR News Archive Index
•  NASCAR Tickets


 













For Email Marketing you can trust

Convert Currency here

Subscribe in NewsGator Online

PRNN Press Releases

HONESTe Online Member Seal
Click to verify - Before you buy!




AdlandPro World's Classifieds




Image and video hosting by TinyPic



Sports Ticket Web Masters,
Submit your sports event, venue, news, and memorabilia link(s) as ‘articles / advertisements’. Your article(s) will occupy their own EXCLUSIVE and UNIQUE page directly linked to a Sports Ticket Depot sports section of your choice.

Submit details here.