Exactly, besides it was the end of the race, if it was the first Lap they might of had a point, the fact he still did over 98% of the race shows that he can race.Oh grief. Pack it in the lot of ya. When you can all go out there, and be inch perfect at 200mph racing for the biggest prize in your sport so perfectly without a single tiny error or lapse in concentration like a robot, then talk about it.
So you're saying that Dillon was expecting Jeff to jump to the outside(where no one was moving) and let him go by. I don't think so. I think Jeff was going to stay behind his teammate, Kasey Kahne. There was never a hole there whether Jeff twitched or not
I wouldn't be if he didn't cause all the wrecks in last season's Daytona 500
I'll stop dogpiling him when he stops crashing the field. Simple as that. Heck, Danica can even run around out there and not wreck anyone.So because of the many incidents he caused last year (in his rookie season no less) and the incidents he caused in Truck race (again in his rookie year), its alright to dogpile the hell out of him for the one accident he unintentionally caused?
Never said Dillon was the only one. They all have more skill than I do, and some have the right grandparents...My point is you're doing this as if he wrecks the field every single race when its only happened at Restrictor plates races, all the while the likes of Stenhouse are still around and wrecking someone no matter what race it is and doing something stupid almost everytime he does.
Never said Dillon was the only one. They all have more skill than I do, and some have the right grandparents...
Never said Dillon was the only one. They all have more skill than I do, and some have the right grandparents...
I hope you understand it wasn't aimed at you.Well I'm done. I just find this sort of attitude increasingly no longer funny anymore and actually beyond annoying now. So right, off we go.
Anyhow, where did Matt Crafton Finish? I only saw him flash by the wreck so I'm not sure where he ended up. He did a good job, not bad for his first cup start (which still surprises me).
I hope you understand it wasn't aimed at you.
I'll give him credit when he does something. Up to now, he's not been the least bit impressive to me. It's not just him either. Stenhouse won a Nationwide title (or 2 maybe) and hasn't done anything in Sprint cup. I thought he sucked in Nationwide too. There are other examples, but equipment is a big deal to a lot of it. I don't think Dillon has what it takes to be successful, but if he does, I'll congratulate him just like I would anyone else. I do think that he only has his ride because Richard Childress is his granddad. He's going to have to prove to everyone that he's capable of not just finishing races, but he needs to show that he is competitive and able to win races and compete for championships.And here we go with this BS
No you didn't say he was the only one but the way you are posting about these incidents (and even say that he shouldn't be driving) sure seem to paint that kind of picture. If he was as untalented as you appear to imply, then he should've been here in 2009 (after his brief stint in the Busch series at that time) instead of 2013.
Don't think so, they tend to get more experience at a younger age though.I just have to wonder what the grid would look like if some people had their way. It seems like young drivers don't get any time to develop anymore.
Ive rechecked it and its iffy. Dillon definently had room to let off the gas, but at the same time I don't think he was paying attention to Gordon coming back down.
Classy. Tony is my favorite, Hamlin did nothing wrong. Tony's car pushed, tony got into someone, Tony went out. Hamlin never even got into a bad position...
As were other drivers to others' left rear all day long, yet Stewart was the only one with an issue.
Maybe he needs a mile of room like Danica, yeah?
Ironically I don't like Denny. But seriously all that happened was Tony got tight. He said so in an interview.Everyone seems to be your favorite or you like them to some good extent as if you'd clearly be the first to stand up for driver A if someone did them ill or spoke bad about them when you don't agree. So by some ideal in this case if you see no wrong done to your favorite flavor clearly nothing occurred. Problem is, the aero loss from the left rear quarter panel and bumper is seen quite frequently since Gen 5, Hamlin was on Stewart's left and caused aero loss from what could be seen, when he should have been on the center or on the right. Does this mean he did it on purpose...not at all but Tony might not have seen it that way.
Ironically I don't like Denny. But seriously all that happened was Tony got tight. He said so in an interview.
I don't think it was either. If you guys listened to the broadcast, they said that there was a decent breeze coming off of 4 affecting the cars. I bet Tony had snap oversteer because the track flattens out quickly off of 4 with the breeze changing the handling of the car. Many factors. He could've been tight. He could have been hit. I didn't see enough replays to know if he was hit or not, but from the angles I saw, it looked like he lost it without helpAnd you've proven my point, thanks. And what interview? Also that didn't look like the car was tight but rather loose if it had nothing to do with another car.
I don't think it was either. If you guys listened to the broadcast, they said that there was a decent breeze coming off of 4 affecting the cars. I bet Tony had snap oversteer because the track flattens out quickly off of 4 with the breeze changing the handling of the car. Many factors. He could've been tight. He could have been hit. I didn't see enough replays to know if he was hit or not, but from the angles I saw, it looked like he lost it without help
https://twitter.com/MartySmithESPN/status/569575999052111872"Just so you know, Tony Stewart hit the radio button and told his team it was 100% his fault."
I read it or heard it somewhere, but the reasoning provided was that some of the cars were involved in very hard collisions, and NASCAR didn't want to make the safety crews wait another minute for the race to end. NASCAR felt that the safety crews needed to be released immediately on to the track to check on the drivers involved in the crash on the back stretch. This was probably an overreaction to the Kyle Busch accident from the day before (and possibly even from the Earnhardt crash 14 years ago), but it is hard to fault NASCAR for erring on the side of a driver's well-being in the seconds following a hard crash.By the way, NASCAR once again shows it's consistent at being inconsistent by throwing the yellow when the wreck was well behind the leaders, while yesterday the drivers were allowed to race back to the line.![]()