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View Full Version : Keselowski, Stewart fined and put on probation after Charlotte post-race incidents



bigbadbrother
10-15-2014, 12:06 AM
Chris Estrada

Brad Keselowski and Tony Stewart have each been fined and put on probation for the next four Sprint Cup races after playing roles in a series of post-race incidents following Saturday’s Bank of America 500 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

Keselowski has been fined $50,000, while Stewart has been fined a lesser amount of $25,000.

Escaping penalties of any kind were Matt Kenseth and Denny Hamlin, who were both also heavily involved in the Charlotte incidents.

“These penalties are about maintaining a safe environment following the race,” NASCAR vice president Robin Pemberton said in a statement. “We knew that the new Chase format was likely going to raise the intensity level and we want our drivers to continue to be themselves.

“However, the safety of our drivers, crew members, officials, and workers is paramount and we will react when that safety could be compromised.”

Officially, Keselowski and Stewart both violated Sections 12-1 (actions detrimental to stock car racing) and 12-4.9 (Behavioral penalty – involved in a post-race incident) of the 2014 NASCAR rule book.

Their probation periods will end on November 12 – four days before the 2014 season finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

With the decision made by the sanctioning body, Chase contenders Keselowski, Kenseth, and Hamlin have managed to avoid being docked of championship points.

Hamlin remains seventh on the Chase Grid at 17 points ahead of the Eliminator Round cutoff. Kenseth stays ninth at one point behind the cutoff, and Keselowski is still 10th at 19 points behind.

This weekend’s GEICO 500 at Talladega Superspeedway will determine the final group of eight drivers for the Eliminator Round. Joey Logano (Kansas) and Kevin Harvick (Charlotte) have already advanced there via wins in the Contender Round.

At the conclusion of Saturday’s event, Hamlin and Keselowski expressed their displeasure with each other after hard racing during the final two laps.

Hamlin admitted to brake-checking Keselowski on the cool-down lap, which led the latter to unsuccessfully try and spin Hamlin out in Turn 3.

The scene then shifted to the entrance of pit road, where Keselowski hit both Kenseth and Stewart. Stewart promptly backed his car into Keselowski’s own.

Keselowski, now with severe front-end damage on his car, then drove into the garage area with Hamlin closely following him. The 2012 Cup champion did a burnout to get away from Hamlin before parking in front of his Team Penske hauler.

Hamlin climbed out of his car but was immediately intercepted by members of his team that kept him from moving toward Keselowski. After Keselowski walked away to his hauler, Kenseth then ran up and attacked him from behind, beginning a skirmish between their respective crews.

Goldentoe
10-17-2014, 05:53 AM
The speeds the drivers perform at are extreme. There is no room in racing for nudging etc. Its time for lenghty suspensions for their actions.

bigbadbrother
10-17-2014, 06:57 AM
I agree. Bad brad should have been sat down for one race, with only a fine it makes NASCAR look like the WWE. Doing this kind of stuff will get someone hurt or killed or even worse get a fan hurt.NASCAR needs to put the team's and drivers in line on this now before it's to late.

dishuser
10-17-2014, 11:58 PM
The speeds the drivers perform at are extreme. There is no room in racing for nudging etc. Its time for lenghty suspensions for their actions.
rubbing is racing
always has been
no need to stop settling it on the track now

bigbadbrother
10-18-2014, 02:19 AM
yea rubbing is one thing but going after another driver like that is another thing. trading paint is part of racing

dishuser
10-19-2014, 01:05 AM
yea rubbing is one thing but going after another driver like that is another thing. trading paint is part of racingif this was 30 years ago brad would be to scared to drive the next race
nascar has ruined what rednecks started