Jump to content

Dale Earnhardt Jr. penalized for causing a caution


landergolfer
 Share

Region 4AA Tournament  

43 members have voted

  1. 1. Region 4AA Tournament



Recommended Posts

Dale Earnhardt Jr. was penalized $10,000 and 25 points for intentional causing a caution at Bristol. Jr. was penalized for intentionally causing a caution condition during the race and as a result was in violation of Section 12-4-A (Actions detrimental to stock car racing) and 12-4-N (Any driver who, in the judgment of NASCAR officials, intentionally causes or attempts to cause a caution condition by stopping or spinning out or any other action) of the NASCAR NEXTEL Cup Series Rule Book. Does the punshiment fit the crime?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...
Stoning is a good thought, I was thinking more of lethal injection but yes, stoning would work.

 

Is there another sport where someone could have such an impact on a game?

Are you serious? Sure there are other sports where someone could have a much greater impact. In this case, this was just one race of the season and only a few points at stake, which is not much at this time of the season. It didn't affect anyone else.

Now, a QB could throw a Super Bowl game, or a picher could influence a world series baseball game, a basketball player could goof off in a playoff game, etc, etc. What Jr. did was NOTHING compared to some of those examples.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Stoning is a good thought, I was thinking more of lethal injection but yes, stoning would work.

 

Is there another sport where someone could have such an impact on a game?

Are you serious? Sure there are other sports where someone could have a much greater impact. In this case, this was just one race of the season and only a few points at stake, which is not much at this time of the season. It didn't affect anyone else.

Now, a QB could throw a Super Bowl game, or a picher could influence a world series baseball game, a basketball player could goof off in a playoff game, etc, etc. What Jr. did was NOTHING compared to some of those examples.

I think your examples are significant, however I don't see any one of those any worse than what Jr. did.In the other sports you mentioned the athelete could play it off and we may never know it was intentional, but this was very intentional and he was exposed. All I am saying is that in my opinion the penalty is too light.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share

Announcements

  • Recent Posts

    • Yes this process is moving slower than I would have expected
    • also was told coady auston applied, he served as defensive coordinator for greenfield under don pitt several years ago before going to Obion county  
    • TSSAA restrictions for hiring non-faculty coaches have been removed for over a year at this point. In the past a non-faculty person had to be "grandfathered" by being an assistant coach for five years, being fingerprinted, and having a background check run per TSSAA rules... since those were rescinded, the board of directors for the school district are responsible for any/all restrictions on hiring non-faculty personnel. I guess what I'm saying to you is that if you really wanted what you posted, it's already possible as long as your local BOE will allow for it.
    • stop it, rlh. you’re gonna get me all misty eyed and sentimental.    i see seven fairly regularly. ….but slim shady, that’s like spotting bigfoot on main street. you just hope he doesn’t spot you. 
    • Are you trying to say you didn't find Seven and ShadySlim going at it?
×
  • Create New...