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Busch, Edwards Feud Earns Probation

NASCAR had to rain on its own parade, but thankfully they didn't induce a downpour.

The sanctioning body placed Sprint Cup point leader Kyle Busch and last Saturday night's winner Carl Edwards on probation Wednesday morning for their post-race antics following the Sharpie 500 at Bristol Motor Speedway:
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (Aug. 27, 2008) – NASCAR announced today that it has placed Kyle Busch and Carl Edwards on probation for the next six races in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, as a result of their on-track incident last Saturday at the conclusion of the race at Bristol Motor Speedway.

Busch, driver of the No. 18 car and Edwards, driver of the No. 99 car, both violated Section 12-4-A (actions detrimental to stock car racing; hitting another competitor's car after the race had concluded) of the 2008 NASCAR rule book.

The probation takes effect beginning with this weekend's event at Auto Club Speedway.
Prior to 2008, the typical penalty for such post-race encounters included a monetary fine and seemed much steeper, but this penalty falls more in line with NASCAR's pledge from the beginning of the season to let the rough side drag a little more in the sport.

And can you blame them? The biggest news from Bristol was Busch & Edwards, not anything else.

Stewart Reportedly Shoves USAC Official

Tony Stewart may have been announcing his new car with Stewart-Haas Racing Friday morning at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, but his actions Thursday night at O'Reilly Raceway Park might become a bigger story later this weekend.

Stewart, according to many online reports and at least a handful of NASCAR beat writers Friday morning at IMS, first knocked a radio headset off the head of a USAC (United States Auto Club) official and then shoved him during a pit road confrontation at ORP.

From the Anderson (Ind.) Herald Bulletin:
Stewart, the two-time Sprint Cup champion, owns the midget cars of Tracy Hines and Levi Jones. Hines entered Thursday's race as the points leader and was running in the top four when he brushed the outside wall on a restart on the eighth circuit

Hines' crew attempted to change a right rear flat tire and get Hines back into the race before another restart. As the crew pushed the car to the front of the straightaway, a USAC official indicated they were too late.

Video: Montoya Unleashes on Kyle Busch

Juan Pablo Montoya's brutal honesty is so, so refreshing.

Following Sunday's Lenox 301 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway, JPM fully admitted that he intentionally spun Sprint Cup point leader Kyle Busch late in the event under caution after the two had bumped on track. Before we go any further, watch below at 0:46:



As you can see, the discontent among the two began when Busch drove JPM up the hill in turn one. The two continued to make contact down the backstretch and when the caution came out for the crash between Clint Bowyer and Sam Hornish Jr., Busch banged into Montoya's drivers side.

That was enough to break Montoya's last straw.

Add Ron Hornaday to Kyle Busch's Enemies

Sprint Cup driver Kevin Harvick owns the Craftsman Truck Series truck raced by Ron Hornaday.

Saturday afternoon at Michigan International Speedway, they were both on the same page in doing one thing: hating on Kyle Busch.

Busch drove into the left-rear of Hornaday in turn one on the final lap of the 200-lap CTS event won by Erik Darnell, knocking the CTS point leader into a spin and out of a top-10 finish. That set both driver and owner off, as they chased Busch through the garage area and had a heated discussion. Harvick and Busch later talked to the media:

"He just drove into me because he got mad because I took us four wide and passed him cleanly," Hornaday said. "Halfway through the race, he showed me he was upset because he lifted the back of the truck up. If he is going to race that way, that is pretty chicken. He doesn't deserve to be a racer.

Kyle Just Being Kyle After N'Wide Crash

If you were able to make it through Saturday's rain-delayed coverage of the Nationwide Series Heluva Good! 200 at Dover International Raceway, I commend you.

More importantly, if you made it you were treated to another episode of "Reasons Why Fans Hate Kyle Busch".

Busch, as is usual these days in any of NASCAR's divisions, found himself out front for 68 laps of the event, and with 31 laps to go, was battling back through the pack to get back to the lead. With 30 laps to go, he was no longer battling.

Heading in to turns 1 & 2 on a restart, Busch got spun and slammed into the wall by fellow Braun Racing driver Jason Leffler, who got loose underneath Busch. Busch's day was done, but his quote-giving abilities were not.
"I just have a teammate that can't stand to be No. 2," Busch said. "I don't know what Leffler was thinking there."
ESPN's Dave Burns then asked if Leffler "shouldn't have been racing as close" to Busch.
"Duhhh," said Busch. "You get air pulled off the side of you and you wreck. It's just not responsible driving."
There seems to be an oxymoron in there somewhere for Kyle Busch to be talking about "responsible driving." For the full effect of Busch's "Duh", check the video over on Youtube.

Leffler did apologize for the accident later, but I find it tough to really place blame on a guy who was on the inside of a someone passing him on the outside. Leffler got loose and lost it, plain and simple.

Denny Hamlin won the event that had a grand total of 5 lead changes, marking the 9th-straight victory in the Nationwide Series by somebody employed by Joe Gibbs Racing. One lap wasn't led by Hamlin or Busch in the race.

Yawn.

Live From Lowes: Denny Hamlin, JR Motorsports Snarl As Kyle Busch Wins Again

Geoffrey Miller is in Concord, N.C. for Sunday's Sprint Cup Coca-Cola 600 at Lowe's Motor Speedway. He'll aim to eat as many elephant ears as possible while blogging away "Live from Lowe's" throughout Memorial Day weekend.

What a night it was here Saturday in Concord, N.C.

Kyle Busch scored the victory in one of the most entertaining Nationwide Series races at Lowe's Motor Speedway I've seen. Busch's ninth total NASCAR win in 2008, though, wasn't exactly the top memory.

Instead, it was Denny Hamlin taking on two-thirds of the JR Motorsports contingent present for the event.

You can read more into at the Associated Press piece, but the gist of the happenings was that Brad Keselowski gave Hamlin a little tap under the yellow from behind to let Hamlin know he was there, Hamlin slowed and swerved into Keselowski's left front fender bending it in, and then Dale Earnhardt Jr. then stood up for the car he owns (Keselowski) and bumped Hamlin in the door.

Busch ran first with those three behind him and appeared to be in danger of getting beat in the final two-lap green flag finish until a caution came out on the final lap before the teams could enter turn three. Instead, he held on.

When the cars came to a stop after the race on pit road, there was plenty of pushing and shoving and NASCAR officials trying to maintain order. It was as close to an all-out brawl as you can get, but tempers evantually settled, allowing for some tremendous quotes.

Said Hamlin, referring to Keselowski's actions:

Grandma Brings Kurt, Kyle Busch Closer

(Note: The picture on the right is from 2004. Yes, it freaks me out too. Thank you, Getty Images.)

If you remember back to one year ago, Kurt and Kyle Busch weren't exactly the happiest set of brothers in the NASCAR garage.

That's generally what happens -- brothers or not -- when you wreck each other while racing for $1 million. I will give credit where credit is due, of course, and say that Kurt Busch easily had one of the best lines of all of 2007 when he said "I definitely won't be eating any Kellogg's any time soon."

Since then, though, the relationship in the family between the two hasn't been the greatest. For much of 2007, a quote from one or the other came out about how they weren't talking or hadn't discussed things.

In other words, they just didn't want to kiss and make up.

Then Grandma stepped in:
Kyle said the two made amends after their grandmother asked them to work out their differences for the Christmas holiday.

"It was a little edgy to begin with because that was about the first time we'd ever sat down together," Kyle said of Christmas dinner.

"The more it kind of went, the more it kind of got back to normal and friendly and whatever. By the end of the night we were playing games and everything anyway."
Well isn't that just ... precious.

Is Jack Roush Defining Irrelevance?

Does anyone really care what Jack Roush has to say anymore? Or has the "irrelevant" tag finally landed squarely on his shoulders?

Honestly, at this point, if Jack Roush -- owner of Roush Fenway Racing -- were to be illustrated in a comic book, he'd be the guy with the bubble over his head saying "Toyota did this" or "I hate Toyota" or "My teams can't beat Toyota, so I bring up other issues". In other words, the guy that the good guy would destroy at the end.

But Geoffrey, why the hate towards ol' Jack?

Friday afternoon at Martinsville Speedway, Roush decided to head down that "Toyota is ending the world as we know it" path -- again -- to respond to a story that quoted him earlier this week talking about a part that Toyota either stole or mistakenly took, depending on who you talk to.

The part in question, according to Roush, was a sway bar that had proprietary designs to it made exclusively for RFR. Somehow, it disappeared during last fall's Sprint Cup event in Dover.

The culprit? A Toyota team that Roush wouldn't identify. Michael Waltrip, though, would later take responsibility, saying that it was a "mistake" and that his team called Roush and promptly returned it.

That being said, Roush tells a little bit different story -- like a person trying to drum up support against someone else would -- and has tried to persuade NASCAR to get involved in reprimanding the team (MWR) in question.

Crash Video of the Week: Pre-Martinsville

Due to the fact that Sprint Cup Series was off last weekend for Easter, the Fanhouse is digging deep for some past highlights from Martinsville Speedway, site of this Sunday's Goody's Cool Orange 500.

In this one from 1999, Tony Stewart and the late Kenny Irwin have their share of run-ins on the half-mile paper clip. Apologies in advance for the European broadcast commentary, I couldn't find the ESPN version.



The conflict got started early in the day when Stewart spun out Irwin in turn 4.

Tony would later call that a mistake, and with good reason.

Did Tony Stewart Punch Kurt Busch?

Check out all of the NASCAR Fanhouse Daytona Speedweeks Coverage.

Friday night's Budweiser Shootout practice at Daytona International Speedway was action-packed, but what happened off the track may be a bigger story.

Tony Stewart, according to multiple sources, punched fellow driver Kurt Busch in front of NASCAR officials in the NASCAR hauler.

The two had been involved in an on-track incident that saw Stewart send Busch's No. 2 in to the wall coming in to turn 3, and then Busch retaliated with several door slams before coming to pit road.

From The Charlotte Observer's Jim Utter:
A meeting in the NASCAR hauler Friday night after an on-track incident between driver Tony Stewart and Kurt Busch ended abruptly when Stewart allegedly struck Busch in the presence of NASCAR officials and left the hauler, four sources with knowledge of the incident told The Charlotte Observer and ThatsRacin.com.

The physical altercation was the reason NASCAR vice president Jim Hunter told a gathering of media outside the hauler Saturday evening that another conversation with the two drivers would be held Saturday morning, the sources said.
Four sources generally means that something happened, and when they call confirm the same thing, well, I think you get my point.

NASCAR has talked about letting the drivers be themselves this season, but I do think they've already made a mistake in not making Kurt Busch and the rest of the field fully realize that using a car as a weapon is not a good idea. Fines and probation don't do that.

As for Stewart, if he really did punch Busch, that is simply unacceptable and is way over the line of "showing emotion".

I have a feeling this story isn't quite finished yet.