Tony Stewart: NASCAR'S Loose Canon
Tony Stewart is up to his old tricks again, hitting people and
crying foul, only this time, the people he is attacking aren't
camera men or fans seeking autographs. Stewart attacked Matt
Kenseth, driver of the Rouch stable number 17, at 190 miles per
hour during the Daytona 500. What makes this extra-ordinary,
even for Stewart, is that he waited til they, and 40 other cars
were racing into a turn, an act that could easily send a man to
the hospital, or just as easily sent him to the cemetery. I
wonder how it would have washed with NASCAR fans had it been
Tony Stewart that sent the late Dale Earnhardt into the wall and
his subsequent death at Daytona back in 01'? This could have
just as easily have happened to Kenseth or any other driver on
the track on Sunday. Luckily, they all walked away. But what
about next time?
Tony Stewart is going to wind up killing someone very, very
soon. His on track attacks of other drivers are constantly
overlooked by NASCAR, the same NASCAR that has sent crew chef
Chad Knaus of the number 48 Lowes Chevrolet home for 4 races and
fined him $25,000 for a technical violation. The violation?
Three-quarters of an inch too much behind the rear deck of the
car. A seemingly run of the mill infraction, but NASCAR has
thrown the book at Knaus, while they look the other way as
Stewart plows through other drivers, bad mouths his fellow
competitors, and throws hissy fits on and off camera. Not an
hour after pointing the finger of blame at other drivers for
rough driving, this maniac could be found at Daytona trying to
run other competitors off of the track at 190 mph. All of this
after just 3 months ago winning the NASCAR championship.
And if Stewart isn't attacking drivers on the track, he can
usually be found punching out camera men as well as the
occasional autograph seeking fan. To say that Stewart is a
champion is to put a bad apple on a pedestal in front of
children worldwide and say, "Kids, this is what you should
strive to be when you grow up". NASCAR should be ashamed of it's
handling of this loose canon, especially considering the harsh
fines and suspensions of not only Knaus, but other drivers and
crew chiefs as well.
I think it should be a criminal offense to maliciously go after
another driver with the intention of wrecking him. Drivers are
obviously aware of the danger level involved with this act,
which could easily result in death(s). In such a scenario,
NASCAR could also be held liable if they repeatedly looked the
other way while one of the drivers were attempting to murder
people on the track. Maybe then they would step up and take care
of out of control hot heads like Tony Stewart before they
actually take the life of a fellow driver.