So, everyone has been fussing about NASCAR's sloppy restarts and their lack of "enforcement" regarding the "rules".
Cup restarts are about the same as any short track, and for that matter, street drag racing. Everyone is trying to "psych" the other guy in some fashion and gain an advantage.
Currently they start two wide and have a "box" of about three car lengths for the leader to fire in and "control" the start, otherwise the starter throws the flag and restarts the race.
Fair enough, except that anyone that has been in the position knows that if you wait for the other guy to fire, you lose 1-3 spots. And the other guy can "lay down" to make it look like you jumped the start.
Which is, IMO, precisely what Greg Biffle did to Brad K at Loudon. Maybe it was intentional, maybe not, it really does not matter. And clearly Brad did jump the start.
By half a car length. Which he then immediately gave up, allowing Biffle to repass.
But it mattered not, NASCAR gave Keselowski the black flag. "[CUP official Richard] Buck said it didn't matter whether Keselowski actually completed a pass, he violated the rule that the leader has control of the race and the second-place driver can't restart by accelerating before the leader hits the gas."
But here is the deal: How was Brad's behavior in any way different than "going below the yellow line" at a plate track and then giving the position back up--with no penalty?
Answer--It isn't. It is the same as it almost always is with officials. What they do is emotion driven--in this case there was a sense that they needed to do "something"--not based in actual right or wrong.
NASCAR fumbles the ball--again--IMO.
Cup restarts are about the same as any short track, and for that matter, street drag racing. Everyone is trying to "psych" the other guy in some fashion and gain an advantage.
Currently they start two wide and have a "box" of about three car lengths for the leader to fire in and "control" the start, otherwise the starter throws the flag and restarts the race.
Fair enough, except that anyone that has been in the position knows that if you wait for the other guy to fire, you lose 1-3 spots. And the other guy can "lay down" to make it look like you jumped the start.
Which is, IMO, precisely what Greg Biffle did to Brad K at Loudon. Maybe it was intentional, maybe not, it really does not matter. And clearly Brad did jump the start.
By half a car length. Which he then immediately gave up, allowing Biffle to repass.
But it mattered not, NASCAR gave Keselowski the black flag. "[CUP official Richard] Buck said it didn't matter whether Keselowski actually completed a pass, he violated the rule that the leader has control of the race and the second-place driver can't restart by accelerating before the leader hits the gas."
But here is the deal: How was Brad's behavior in any way different than "going below the yellow line" at a plate track and then giving the position back up--with no penalty?
Answer--It isn't. It is the same as it almost always is with officials. What they do is emotion driven--in this case there was a sense that they needed to do "something"--not based in actual right or wrong.
NASCAR fumbles the ball--again--IMO.
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