NASCAR fans got a pretty doggone good show Sunday afternoon at Talladega -- especially if you're a fan of edge-of-your-seat-for-500-miles action.But more than the action, what the fans at the track and the ones at home were ultimately left with was a big, big question.
When in the world is NASCAR going to find a consistent, plausible rule book?
I'll state it bluntly: Dale Earnhardt Inc.'s rookie driver Regan Smith got screwed on the final lap of the Amp Energy 500 at Talladega Superspeedway after NASCAR handed Tony Stewart the win -- his first of 2008. Smith, they said, broke the out-of-bounds rule by making a pass of Stewart under the yellow line just before the start/finish line.
Smith crossed the start/finish first and had seemingly handed Stewart a seventh-career 2nd-place finish at the Alabama track.
Smith deserved to be doing burnouts.
He deserved to be celebrating an improbable win in victory lane.
And, most of all, he did not deserve to be getting penalized for something a well-known driver got away with en route to a victory at the same track in 2003.
His name? Dale Earnhardt Jr.
In that event -- the April spring race at the 2.66-mile, high-banked, extremely fast track 30 minutes east of Birmingham -- Dale Earnhardt Jr. made a pass under the supposed out-of-bounds line around Matt Kenseth with five laps to go as the field drove through turn three.
Earnhardt Jr. would go on to win the race, and didn't face any sanction from NASCAR despite the fact that multiple teams lined up at the NASCAR official's hauler after the race demanding an answer for why his move wasn't illegal despite pre-race warnings of penalties for such tactics.
The win stood while the rest of the sport steamed.
And Sunday, the same rule came in to question, despite the fact Smith's move looked much more legitimate than Earnhardt Jr.'s move in 2003 that didn't garner a penalty. Naturally, that left Smith -- the driver competing for the rookie of the year title who has gotten next to zero publicity in 2008 -- with a question of why his move was so wrong.
"I was told the rule is that if you're forced down there you're the winner and on the last lap anything goes," said Smith.
And even if Smith was told that, it's sure hard to know for sure thanks to NASCAR feeling a complete unwillingness to ever publish a rule book for the general public to look over -- though it would be difficult to keep certain pages updated; certain pages that the sport seems to pencil in as things go along.
All of the rules governing the out-of-bounds line are stated in a pre-race drivers meeting, and NASCAR has had problems answering to all of the possibilities the rule creates since it came in effect a few years ago.
Even so, I don't see how Smith's move can be determined to be illegal because of the way he so craftily got to the inside of Stewart.
Smith made a swerve to the high side of the track, causing Stewart to swerve as well, and then darted for the bottom of the track where he pulled alongside Stewart's rear fender. Stewart then swerved again, clipping the nose of Smith's car and forcing him under the yellow line, but not stalling Smith's momentum as the No. 01 slid past Stewart's No. 20 at the line.
Shouldn't Smith be allowed to hold his position? Or should Smith, as he pondered after the race in an interview, hold his spot and cause Stewart to crash?
Well, in this case, it seems like NASCAR would have rather torn up a race car (Stewart's) instead of seeing a gutsy finish.
In the open-wheel IRL IndyCar Series, league rules specifically state that a driver has one move to block a car coming behind him, and that if that trailing car makes another move, the lead car will be penalized for excessive blocking if another move is made because of the danger it presents.
I don't see how such a rule wouldn't make sense for NASCAR to adopt, especially if it stated that at Talladega and Daytona -- where the out-of-bounds rules are in effect -- a driver could hold his position and get driven below the yellow line by the other car but continue to pass a car.
It's not right for a lead driver to simply be able to push a car down the track to prevent a pass.
Otherwise, NASCAR is simply setting itself up for way too much inconsistency and relying too heavily on judgment calls, when drivers should be able to settle a finish of the race on their own.
To me, there's nothing that happened during Sunday's finish that says that Smith's move was dangerous -- rather I thought Stewart's egregious blocking was the more dangerous component of the ending, but yet, he wasn't the one penalized.
Regan Smith got the extremely raw end of the Sunday's Talladega finish and you certainly can't help but feel bad for the guy that tried to go for the win and succeeded, only to have it taken away due to patsy call that has -- for far too long -- been the subject of way of too much inconsistency.
Let's hope NASCAR takes some notes from this.















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 4)
10-05-2008 @ 9:45PM
Rob said...
Nascar continues to drive fans away with this sort of thing. The thing the Rookie learned today is to turn the guy in front of you around. Who cares if he gets hurt. You win! Maybe, Nascar then would take the win away for aggressive driving. I am sure because it was Tony Stewart or one of the darlings factored into the call.
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10-05-2008 @ 9:49PM
James said...
I'm done with NASCAR. This last subjective inconsistency has made me realize that I've had enough of the France family and their whims of the moment. A completely BS call totally inconsistent with every other call ever made on the rule.
Guess they figured that Tony needed one....
.....Or else they needed some building supplies for yet another palatial vacation home.
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10-05-2008 @ 9:55PM
STEWRAT LOVER 4 LIFE said...
Ha Ha,GET OVER ITTTTTTTTTTTTT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
10-05-2008 @ 10:05PM
angel said...
Tony is DA MAN,YEAH BABYYYYY
10-05-2008 @ 10:06PM
Lakergregg said...
I consider myself a Tony Stewart fan, but I'm done with NASCAR.
From race to race we learn a new explanation of a rule that is totally different from the way that rule was last explained to us,Huh?
Seriously if baseball umpires and football and basketball refs piss you off, NASCAR officials will give you a major stroke.
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10-06-2008 @ 1:57AM
ken woods said...
Well nascar screwed the rookie !
thats why my whole family quit paying those high prices to go to daytona every year.The yellow line rule , the no speeding on pit road, the lucky dog! no racing to the line rule! and now the Regan Smith rule?
I hope nascar goes bankrupt! enjoy those empty seats that have appeared in the last couple of years?
PEOPLE WONT PAY MONEY TO WATCH A CANDY ASSED SPORT LIKE THEY HAVE MADE IT!
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10-05-2008 @ 11:41PM
TravT52 said...
i personally think that the damn nascar officials came up with that at the last minute cause they wanted to see tony win 1 this year........ fact is smith won fair and square....... if it was me i would've put myself in the wall just to take tony out...... that boy aint nothin but a whiny spoiled brat. As for me im done with nascar im stickin with my dirt late models
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10-05-2008 @ 11:41PM
George said...
yes Im done with Nascar too. I wasn't a fan of either driver but this so called sport is obviously so "engineered" for fan apeal and corporate advertising adjenda that it has become a waste of my valuable time.
This race result was one of many that have been scripted on the fly to give NASCAR and their biggest sponsers the biggest bang for their investment. I can no longer consider this entertainment. I should have spent the afternoon reading a book or cutting the grass.
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10-05-2008 @ 11:46PM
Sam said...
I was already angered when they took the win away from regan smith. But I am just at a loss on why they place him as the last car on the lead lap. He deserved a Win! they took that away..so give him second!!! no, they're not going to give him that either. Nascar, the only sport you trump now, is the NHL. congratulations!
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10-06-2008 @ 12:09AM
PMurphy said...
OK, if you want IRL rules, race IRL. You want to play LeMans, go get in a GT. This is stock car racing, or at least it used to be. Dale Earnhardt, Sr. would have put Tony in the wall, but NASCAR has moved toward "parity," a kinder, gentler NASCAR. I wonder why fans are walking away in droves? Let's go back to real racing, NASCAR let them race! Then the win will be worth something and the fans will line up to see it.
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10-06-2008 @ 2:52AM
Samantha said...
This was the first Nascar race I have ever been to and WHAT A RACE!!!! Tony you go!! It was great to come to my first race and see the man I go for win. And as far as people thinking he did not earn the win this is raceing and there are rules. I sat in the pit row seat's and saw Regan cross the yellow line so he doesn't deserve the win. It was poor on he's part to do that and losted it for he's self so now maybe the rookie will play the Nascar way and not cheat he's self out of a win
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10-07-2008 @ 8:59AM
Eddie said...
Well since ots your first race u went to i understand but next time watch the race Smith was pushed down the yellow line.But being tony Stewart probably nascar didnt want to hear the cry baby.At least most nascar fans all know who won REGAN SMITH
10-06-2008 @ 3:14AM
Debbie said...
SOMETHING TO THINK ABOUT! What would the out come have been if it was Dale Jr. instead of Smith?
I am not knocking Jr. or Stewart but lets be real here, when it comes to Jr. Nascar is all over it!!! I like Stewart but how unfair was that? Stewart had an attitude before they even announced the winner, the in car camera showed him throwing his gloves on the dash!
Smith was cheated! From now on lets see if the "Regan Smith Rule" will apply to ALL the drivers, not just the cry babies.
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10-06-2008 @ 5:28AM
Michael said...
Nascar isn't entertaining anymore, it is waiting for some engineered result. Tony is a cry baby when it happens to him, but proud of the fact he does it. Nascar chose to unfairly apply the below-the-yellow-line rule so a star won, not some rookie. I do wish Smith had put Tony into the wall instead of moving down out of the way. But then he would have been penalized for dangerous driving.
Thank goodness I can still see darts competition on ESPN, it is at least fair and much more exciting.
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10-06-2008 @ 7:47AM
Sharon said...
THE WHINEY CRY BABY WINS THE ROOKIE LOST DUE TO THE FACT IT WAS TONY STEWART I NEVER HAVE LIKED HIM NEVER WILL
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10-09-2008 @ 9:36PM
angel said...
would you like some cheese with that wine sweetie?
10-06-2008 @ 7:32AM
Kim said...
Well like Geoffrey Miller says, I too am confused as to what rule applies when. That being said however, if passing under the yellow line to advance a position even on the final lap is an illegal move, then it's an illegal move. Don't get me wrong, I give MAD PROPS to Regan Smith for an outstanding performance yesterday! He looked like a veteran out there rubbing and passing Stewart.
The problem here is that there are two schools of thought. Tony was in the lead. Tony did block not once, but twice. Although he did that though, does he not have the right to do so? He should be able to block his position in my opinion. He could have easily wrecked Smith just as easily as Smith could have wrecked Stewart. Neither did however, so Stewart was declared the winner. The other thought is that Smith was forced down below the yellow line by Stewart on the second block. Was the block illegal or excessive force so to speak? NASCAR is so inconsistent, who knows? Like Mr. Miller says, where is that rule book again?
I agree that Smith should not have been relegated to an 18th place finish. That is definitely not a fair call on NASCAR's part. I do agree if you follow the rule of not permitting a driver to pass under the yellow line, then Stewart did earn the win. Congratulations to both drivers for an exciting, balls to the wall finish!
The problem here isn't the drivers themselves folks, it's NASCAR and their unwillingness to be fair and imparcial when it comes to drivers and the rules. Don't be mad at Stewart. He did what he had to do to win the race. Place blame where blame belongs, with NASCAR for once again being too vague and inconsistent!
Kim
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10-06-2008 @ 3:46PM
Maveness said...
What Kim said. That's everything that's good and right and problematic about the whole situation. On one hand, Smith and Stewart both did everything they could do to win. On the other hand, NASCAR is just so inconsistent that who knows *what* the yellow line rules are? (More importantly, what constitutes being forced below the yellow line. As a Junior fan, if that incident from a few years ago is the precedent for being forced below the yellow line at Dega, then by the same measurement, Regan Smith was forced low and therefore should have had the win. But hey, nobody ever said NASCAR was consistent.)
10-06-2008 @ 8:34AM
Doug Graham said...
Does anyone remember what NASCAR means? Why don't they just put F-1 bodies on them and charge even more money. Rules are rules, and good for Tony, but enough already.
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10-06-2008 @ 9:26AM
SB said...
Like Stewart said, he has lost a win before for making that exact same move. So why would it be legal now? Plus, the rules are different regarding that move on the last lap. If you are forced down in any lap prior to the final, they had said it would have been legal. It was a tough race with all the crashes, etc. but hey, that's Talladega!
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