Daytona 500, Part Two
I was so caught up in Jimmie Johnson’s win in yesterday’s post that I totally ignored Tony Stewart. Maybe we should all ignore Tony for a while!
Stewart started Speedweeks by whining about bump drafting, then proceeded to threaten fellow drivers on the track multiple times (how many times did he steer toward another driver in the pack?) and totally took out Matt Kenseth (and later admitted it was retribution from an earlier incident…though that was probably magnified only in Tony’s mind). He also could have avoided the wall incident with Jeff Gordon, but he chose not to.
All that and he still finishes fifth. I admit the man can drive. He’s great. But he should have been parked. I guess being the reigning champion comes with a few free passes. Hopefully NASCAR tells him there are no more Get Out of Jail Free cards left.
As for Johnson and the penalties, I was pretty close in my prediction. Knaus is suspended for three more races, placed on probation for the rest of the year and fined $25,000. He got off pretty easy in my book. I would have at least doubled the fine and there would have been points taken away. Again, NASCAR wimped out when it could have sent a strong signal to the teams.
But there’s another take on the Knaus cheating story: Why did he do it when he did it? I mean, he cheated for Daytona qualifying. The team finished fifth last season and was guaranteed a starting position in the race. Winning the pole would be cool, but is it worth the risk? Pit selection and not having to race hard in the qualifying races aren’t good enough reasons either. He remains defiant and will surely continue to cross the line. This team needs some remedial training on risk management and risk acceptance. And NASCAR needs to sharpen it’s guillotine.