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    Matt Kenseth vs Joey Logano Wreck At Martinsville Speedway

    Matt Kenseth vs Joey Logano Wreck At Martinsville Speedway

    November 2, 2015 by Shane Walters

    Matt Kenseth vs Joey Logano Hits Boiling Point At Martinsville Speedway

    Matt Kenseth vs Joey Logano Wreck At Martinsville Speedway NASCAR raceThe Matt Kenseth vs Joey Logano battle came to blows at Martinsville Speedway. Watch the Joey Logano and Matt Kenseth crash video below. Kenseth who was multiple laps down took out leader Joey Logano with under 50 laps to go, of 500 at Martinsville.

    Uncalled for, any fan who says otherwise isn’t a fan of the sport, they are a fan of drama. That is apparently every fan in the stands at Martinsville Speedway. This is not demolition derby. Riding the gas pedal and trying to put a NASCAR competitor through the ‘safer’ wall and into the grandstands has no place in the sport.

    Drama can be found on most tv networks between 7 and 9pm. Those fans should search for drama via their network tv set, not on a racetrack.

    There’s a real argument that Joey Logano had it coming, just not like this. Rewind a few weeks, Matt Kenseth and Joey Logano were battling for the lead and the win in the final laps at Kansas Speedway.

    RELATED: Joey Logano Spins Matt Kenseth to Win

    Joey Logano already had a win. He didn’t need to win Kansas to advance into the next round of the chase, Kenseth needed a win. Desperation was shown and the #20 car threw a block in all directions to hold the lead from Logano.

    Logano pushed him into the corner and Kenseth spun. That is far different from wrecking someone on purpose. Logano did not drive into turn 1 with a plan to wreck Kenseth. He drove into turn 1, gloves off and ready to take the lead away. When Kenseth threw the block he gave Logano the green light to fight that way.

    The #22 went on to win that race at Kansas and the next one at Talladega SuperSpeedway. Now, Martinsville is the start of the Eliminator 8 round. The points are reset.

    Kenseth is out of the battle and Logano again needs a win to advance. He’s in position to do so after dominating most of the race at Martinsville Speedway.

    However, Matt Kenseth is battling with Brad Keselowski, a duo that have had had their own set of issues in the past. The battle was for 2nd. The field was bunched as the two Penske drivers had a plan to let each other in on the restarts, bunching up the field.

    RELATED: Brad Keselowski vs Matt Kenseth and Everyone Else At Charlotte

    Keselowski gets bumped from behind by Kurt Busch, he’s pushed into Kenseth. Now Keselowski has damage and jumps up the track. The second connection spins Kenseth in front of the field. Multiple drivers are collected in the big one at Martinsville Speedway.

    At this point Matt Kenseth has blood boiling, in his mind it’s due to another Penske Racing driver. He returns his mangled machine to the garage and returns to the racetrack. The only mission is to take out somebody.

    Joey Logano who had nothing to do with the previous incident is in his mirror. Kenseth starts turning green. He’s overly excited.

    The dominating car begins to drive right passed the mangled and multiple laps down Kenseth machine. Instead of jumping on the brakes in an attempt to actually manage the corner, Kenseth hits the gas.

    Where’s he going? Matt Kenseth attempted to put the leader Joey Logano into the grandstands. This is uncalled for.

    Wow, did I just see that?

    -Jeff Gordon

    I completely understand tangling between two drivers battling for position. It’s even ok if it’s aggressive driving due to previous instances. However, under no circumstances should a multiple laps down car ever tangle with the leader of the race.

    It’s a chicken-you-know-what move to completely take out the leader when your race is over. We’ll move on. We’re going to work hard and we’re going to get our car back out there hopefully. We’ve just got to go win.

    -Joey Logano

    Furthermore, no drivers should ever wreck other cars on purpose. Tough and aggressive racing is one thing, bumping is perfectly fine. Making it near impossible for someone to pass you is perfectly ok, if it’s justified. However, blatantly wrecking another driver on purpose and trying to put them into the grandstands is totally uncalled for, even if it’s in retaliation.

    I got into him. The right front was dragging down there … and man (I) couldn’t get it to turn and collected him. I know it’s got to be disappointing for him. It’s a tough sport; some days you’re the bat and some days you’re the ball. I was the ball a few weeks ago and I was the ball again today, so that part of it is never fun.

    -Matt Kenseth

    Matt Kenseth’s right front was not down. He’s just giving himself a leg to stand on in case NASCAR decides to put the hammer down on him and/or Joe Gibbs Racing. I think Kenseth not owning up to what everyone else saw, including himself, just makes it that much worse. It was blatant, a lapped car flat drove to leader into the wall. There’s not much room for argument.

    This is nothing new but that doesn’t make it ok. See the post I wrote in 2012 on ‘Boys Have At It‘. However, I think it’s time NASCAR stepped in and reset the rules. Boys have at it has run it’s course and this is the clearest vision of that.

    I expect a harsh crack down on Matt Kenseth come Tuesday. I guess the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series ratings drop will come to a temporary halt. I’m sure NASCAR really likes that. I would assume that would be the only reason for a lack of penalties issues Tuesday.

    Author: Shane Walters Twitter

     

    Matt Kenseth vs Joey Logano Martinsville Speedway Crash Video

     

    Brad Keselowski and Matt Kenseth Martinsville Speedway Crash Video

     

    Joey Logano Post Martinsville Speedway Crash Interview

    Video: NASCAR

    Tony Stewart Sprint Car Crash Kills Driver Kevin Ward Jr

    Tony Stewart Sprint Car Crash Reportedly Kills Driver ( Crime Scene Tape )

    August 10, 2014 by Shane Walters

    NASCAR Driver Tony Stewart Sprint Car Crash Kills Kevin Ward Jr

    Tony Stewart Sprint Car Crash Kills Driver Kevin Ward Jr ( Tony Stewart Pit )Tony Stewart sprint car crash has taken a turn for the worst as Kevin Ward Jr has been pronounced dead. It happened at Canandaigua Motorsports Park and details are somewhat limited. Here’s what we know.

    Scroll below to watch the Tony Stewart Sprint Car Crash video.

    The Ontario County Sheriff’s Department would not identify the driver but said he was pronounced dead on arrival Saturday night at a hospital in Canandaigua.

    Tony Stewart and 20 year old sprint car driver Kevin Ward Jr tangled in what looks like a slide job gone wrong. Kevin Ward then ran out of track, slid into the wall, cut a tire and nearly flipped.

    Ward then exited his mangled car, helmet still on to show his displeasure with Tony Stewart. Kevin Ward Jr pointed as Stewart drove by under caution laps. However, it was the first caution lap. That’s important because the cars were still falling into line and slowing down. Yes, they were going slower than race pace but the sprint car field in it’s entirety was not at caution speed just yet.

    Tony Stewart hit the gas as the driver approached. Fish tailing his sprint car into the standing driver. However, after watching the video below multiple times, in ultra slow motion, I really don’t think it’s that simple. The details of what happened next is very much debatable and it will be a discussion for years to come.

    I think Tony Stewart hit the gas to avoid Kevin Ward Jr it was not to scare or provoke him as many have said. When the non-racing fans jump on board the conversation, this will become the frustrating part to explain. Here’s a short note directed directly at those people, your Mustang street car drives nothing like any race car, especially a dirt sprint car. In sprint car racing, if you hit the gas it helps steer the car to the left.

    If you watch the video, very close, Kevin Ward Jr was walking far down the track, in an attempt to grab full attention of NASCAR Sprint Cup champion Tony Stewart. Ward walked so far down the track it looks like the blue car, just in front of stewart (name unknown) also almost hit Ward. It appeared to me like the blue car even made a slight movement around Ward as he went past. Ward then took a few more steps, walking further down the track for the next car in line, Tony Stewart.

    Kevin Ward Jr was also wearing an all black racing suit on a dimly lit dirt track. Kevin Ward Jr took a jump in front of Stewart just before Stewart got there, almost like he was trying to make him stop. Ward tried to jump back very quickly but there wasn’t enough time. I think Stewart saw him at the last second and did his best to avoid him.

    Kevin Ward Jr left it to the reaction time of Tony Stewart to avoid him. Anyone who tells you that Tony Stewart hit Kevin Ward Jr on purpose needs a serious talking to. No racing driver on this planet would ever hit another standing driver purposely.

    Either way, Kevin Ward Jr went flying and twirling through the air in a very upsetting sight. You can see the Tony Stewart sprint car crash video below. Warning the video is very graphic.

    Kevin Ward Jr lay motionless on the track. Emergency was dispatched immediately and the driver was taken to the hospital. He was then pronounced dead on arrival at the hospital at 11:15 PM.

    It’s a terrible tragic incident that could have easily been avoided. The entire motorsports community send thoughts and prayers with the Ward family.

    Fans at Canandaigua Motorsports Park were cleared from the speedway grandstands. The police investigation of the Tony Stewart sprint car crash with Kevin Ward Jr went underway immediately.

    Sheriff Philip Povero says the 42-year-old Stewart was “fully cooperative” as he was questioned and released. Povero said multiple times the investigation is not criminal. In the press conference he also mentioned that this had happened at that very speedway before.

    Roughly three hours after the accident in New York, Donny Schatz, a sprint car driver for Tony Stewart Racing, won the prestigious Knoxville Nationals in Iowa for an eighth time. Stewart had spent much of the earlier part of the week trackside in Iowa watching his drivers compete.

    “I was just told there was an incident involving Tony. I don’t know to what extent or what’s happening,” Schatz said.

    Today, Tony Stewart is scheduled to race in Watkins Glen, NY. Tony Stewart Racing announced that Tony Stewart will race today. However, he is scheduled to start 13th, the same number on Kevin Wade Jr’s sprint car.

    Tony Stewart has announced he will address the media at some point before today’s NASCAR event at Watkins Glen International.

    UPDATE: 3 hours later Tony Stewart said he would sit out this week at Watkins Glen.

    Click here for additional updates on the Tony Stewart sprint car crash with Kevin Ward Jr. The link contains statements from both NASCAR as well as Tony Stewart.

    Author: Shane Walters

     

    Tony Stewart Sprint Car Crash Kills Driver Kevin Ward Jr Video

     

    Tony Stewart Sprint Car Crash Kills Driver ( Photos )

    Tony Stewart Sprint Car Crash Kills Driver Kevin Ward Jr ( Crash Photos )
    Tony Stewart Sprint Car Crash Kills Driver Kevin Ward Jr ( Crash Photo )
    Tony Stewart Sprint Car Crash Kills Driver Kevin Ward Jr ( Sprint Car Crash Photos )

    Kevin Ward Jr Sprint Car
    Kevin Ward Jr Sprintcar Driver
    Tony Stewart NASCAR Driver

    Tony Stewart Sprint Car Crash Reportedly Kills Driver ( Crime Scene Tape )
    Tony Stewart Sprint Car Crash Reportedly Kills Driver ( Police )
    Tony Stewart Sprint Car Crash Kills Driver Kevin Ward Jr ( Tony Stewart Pit )


    Video: YouTube

    BLOG: Bristol Motor Speedway The Last Great Colosseum

    Bristol Motor Speedway The Last Great Colosseum

    August 26, 2013 by Shane Walters

    Hold on tight I’m taking you to Bristol Motor Speedway the World’s fastest half mile

    Bristol Motor Speedway The Last Great ColosseumBristol Motor Speedway the last great colosseum. NASCAR fans fill the seats, 160,000 of them, twice a year to watch an underground boxing match of a race on a high-banked short track hidden within the smoky hills of Bristol, TN.

    Drivers dive nose first into turn 1, drag the brake until the car magically rotates at the center of the 30 degree turn. Back into the gas and onto the straightaway. Briefly catching their breath on the short 650 feet straight away only to hold it in and do it all over again in turns 3 and 4. Sinking into the seat, pushing the car right to the edge of the wall at the center of the corner with a car directly ahead and another up your ass. Breath you’re on the straight away again. Now do it 499 more times.

    Every lap is a struggle to hold the 800 hp cars in the right direction, it’s right on the edge of control at any given moment. It has to be, teams run high 14 second laps to grab the pole while last place runs in slim .5 seconds behind. The drivers are forced to push to car to the limits or choose to run last. They are not chasing tenths, they are in search of hundredths of a second that will give them an advantage over the 250 mile night race.

    Aggression is a requirement to win at Bristol Motor Speedway. If you take a quick look at the all time winners around the half mile. Darrell Waltrip, Kyle Busch, Dale Earnhardt, Cale Yarborough, Rusty Wallace, Kevin Harvick, David Pearson and Jeff Gordon are all really aggressive drivers. Racers who are fast but lack aggression like Kasey Kahne will consistently run second. If you want a win at Bristol you have to take it.

    160,000 seats make Bristol Motor Speedway the 8th largest stadium in the world. Why so many people? People will travel long distances to the middle of nowhere Tennessee for the show. Willing to pay high ticket prices for the tingling feeling received as 500 laps wind down quickly to 495 completed, first and second are nose to tail with just a handful of laps to go. Anything could happen during and after the race.

    I visited Bristol Motor Speedway twice a year for 15 years straight, an 8 hour drive each way. It was worth every mile. Until the track rebuild, I stopped logging those miles in 2008. Still I watch every practice and race lap every year but the new track configuration is no longer worth the drive. I’ve seen the best of Bristol and those days have come and gone. It’s still the best track in the world and I stand strongly behind that statement but it’s just not what it once was.

    Fans will always stand and cheer with excitement as a driver wrecks another driver under caution laps. It’s exciting. It’s much like a fight during a hockey game. The game is on pause but fans are still royally entertained. It’s the same concept but these drivers are strapped to race cars and they will use them as a weapon.

    Fans like to watch a brawl, not just the physical altercation between fists. While tempers often fly after the race as we saw this weekend with Kevin Harvick, it’s much more then that. Drivers are brawling with their own cars and the drivers in front of them throughout the length of the entire race. A simple rub just to agonize the driver ahead and hopefully drive him to make a mistake, all so you can grab the all desired position that he has over you.

    The layout of the track gives you multiple options. Dive to the bottom and hope for the best. However, the competitor at the top of the track will impede your progress when you reach the exit of corner side-by-side, preventing you from using up the full lane on the exit of 1 and 4. Frustration kicks in and it’s simply time to go. Use the bumper and put them in the wall as you drive on past. Hopefully, they wont come to a stop and drag you into the wreck with them.

    The track has been reconfigured multiple times over the years. Most recently, 2007 when track owner Bruton Smith attempted to destroy the single groove race track idea with multiple degrees of banking in the turns. The banking is now increased as you venture further up the tricky race track. Bristol Motor Speedway is now somewhat usable on both the top and bottom but realistically it’s still a single groove racetrack. The track rebuild only moved the preferred lane from the bottom of the track right against the yellow line to the top of the track right against the wall.

    I, like most fans, prefer the old Bristol Motor Speedway. It’s still exciting to see drivers run right against the wall but this makes the track bigger and the bump and run nearly impossible. Bump and runs can no longer be applied, if you do it you will put the driver in the wall. When drivers ran the bottom of the track you could bump them and they would generally save it before hitting the wall, only losing a few spots. Now, the bump and run is applied a lot less often because the consequences are much larger.

    In the past, drivers would race off the corner and dive under on corner entry to take the position. Sometimes, the driver ahead would attempt to slam the door shut but they were already there and there’s no backing out of it. You will either go around or slide up the track. Regardless of what you think of the old track, passing was easier on the old layout. When you couldn’t do it without contact you could always do it with contact and usually both drivers would continue to race another lap.

    Every lap turned would be another lap searching for that driver that gave the bump and run. It’s another level of excitement added to the race within the race. You wouldn’t see drivers run side-by-side for 30 laps on the old layout and that’s ok. They were bumper to bumper and eventually you would expect contact. Now, they run side-by-side lap after lap and nobody goes anywhere. The bottom is just too slow.

    Other tracks are fast but they lack excitement. Racing is much more than just speed and with the tracks added to the NASCAR tour in the past few years you would think NASCAR disagreed. However, this year a dirt track was added and finally it looks like the series is heading in the correct direction.

    I wish Bristol would tear up the whole track and go back to basics. 36 degrees of banking top to bottom. This would force everyone into the same line, bumper to bumber, A slow car would stack up the field, and quickly 10 cars would all be lined up ready to pounce at any moment. It would bring the excitement of the bump and run. That would be racin’ the way it outta be.

    Author: Shane Walters
    Featured On: Racing News Network

     

    Bristol Motor Speedway The Last Great Colosseum Photos

    Bristol Motor Speedway The Last Great Colosseum
    Bristol Motor Speedway The Last Great Colosseum
    Bristol Motor Speedway The Last Great Colosseum


    BLOG: Worlds Collide As Formula One Returns To America

    2012 Formula One Returns To America (Circuit Of The Americas) The Track

    November 15, 2012 by Shane Walters

    2012 Formula One Returns To America (Circuit Of The Americas) The TrackIt’s been five long years since the premier form of motorsports has crossed the pond into the United States. Primarily dominated by oval racing fans, America’s corn fields and high rise buildings alike are filled coast to coast with rabid fans who follow the NASCAR circuit. However, this form of oval racing fails to reach the radar of anyone on the other side of the ocean. Wherever the destination, Formula One brings the world with it.

    During the 2008 season, F1 had 600 million sets of eyes glued on the television tube (per race), nearly double the U.S. population. In comparison, this makes the NASCAR viewing audience appear a small sewing circle at just 5 million. Furthermore, the cumulative F1 television audience was calculated to be 54 billion during the 2001 season.

    F1 is the undisputed polar opposite of what the general American expects to see when they enter a racing circuit. Bumpers are replaced by wings, roofs replaced by helmets. Full blown rocket ships on wheels will enter the Circuit Of The Americas in Austin, Texas this weekend making the oversized NASCAR stock cars look like small ill-handling trucks. While in 2012 their isn’t much of anything stock on a stock car, F1 is the future of everything automotive. For years, these formula teams have laid new technology groundwork while simultaneously paving it for auto manufactures worldwide.

    The purest form of racing in the United States isn’t done on pavement. Here our tracks are carved in dirt then covered in late models or sprint cars who slide sideways and turn right to go left. While we have an equally strong base of asphalt tracks and fans, the same types of cars will be found on both with a few minor changes.

    Europe on the other hand grows their motorsports fan base through the use of karts, similar in size but much different than your Target shopping carts. These are really really fast karts, topping 125 miles per hour on a regular basis with built in, yet unnatural, seat warmers as these buttox holders scrape along the racing circuit. Karting is the only form of racing machines capable of reaching g forces equal to F1 cars as they turn on dimes simultaneously hopping over the curbs, chasing the hundredth of a second advantage.

    These two very different worlds of motorsport will again collide this weekend for the first time in five years. Tomorrow, practice 1, cars will be unleashed on the shiny new circuit for the first time. The first purpose built Formula One track ever constructed in the United States. Built around a state-of-the-art 3.4-mile circuit track with capacity for 120,000 fans and an elevation change of 133 feet, the facility is designed for any and all classes of racing – from motor power, to human power.

    Previously, the United States Grand Prix took place at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, that was 2007. Two years prior arguably the most controversial sighting in Formula One history, as over half the sporting teams refused to compete. These teams were obligated to use a set of tires that were faulty for the IMS banking and sure to cause disaster. Only a handful of cars using a different brand of tires crossed through turn 1. Following the event, tensions ran extraordinarily high between track owner Tony George and F1 boss Bernie Ecclestone who was later quoted saying it did not matter to him whether or not there was a Grand Prix in America.

    Most importantly, as an American I’m thrilled that for this weekend only it’s not required I stay up until 4AM just to watch a practice session.

    Written By: Shane Walters

     

    PHOTOS

    2012 Formula One Returns To America (Circuit Of The Americas) The Track
    2012 Formula One Returns To America (Circuit Of The Americas) The Track
    2012 Formula One Returns To America (Circuit Of The Americas) The Track

    2012 Formula One Returns To America (Circuit Of The Americas) The Track
    2012 Formula One Returns To America (Circuit Of The Americas) The Track
    2012 Formula One Returns To America (Circuit Of The Americas) The Track
    2012 Formula One Returns To America (Circuit Of The Americas) The Track

    2012 Formula One Returns To America (Circuit Of The Americas) The Track
    2012 Formula One Returns To America (Circuit Of The Americas)
    2012 Formula One Returns To America (Circuit Of The Americas)
    2012 Formula One Returns To America (Circuit Of The Americas)

    2012 Formula One Returns To America (Circuit Of The Americas)

     

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