Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Loved or loathed, NASCAR driver Bubba Wallace says he feels right.

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LONG POND, Pa. — Being an agent of change in NASCAR cuts both ways for Bubba Wallace.

He is seen as a hero to some, particular­ly those who have longed for a Black driver to shake things up in a predominan­tly white sport. To others, the 26-year-old Wallace represents something else entirely and he has seen plenty of haters out on social media over his career. It has intensifie­d in recent days.

He has brushed them off, especially the ones accusing Wallace or his No. 43 team of being involved in a hoax, of somehow being behind the garage door rope fashioned as a noose that was found in their garage stall at Alabama’s Talladega Superspeed­way last weekend.

“You quickly realize,” Wallace said Friday, “they don’t give a d**n about you and I don’t give a d**n about them.”

Wallace helped spark NASCAR to ban the Confederat­e flag at its races and venues. That is seen as a significan­t change for the 72-year-old stock car series with its core Southern fan base, but then came the noose and a federal investigat­ion that determined Wallace had not been the target of a hate crime.

He’s been besieged with media requests and made the rounds on morning talk shows and chatted with late night hosts. Wallace even unified the sport when every one of the 40 teams on the grid lined up with Wallace and their series in an effort to show they do not and will not tolerate racism.

“It’s just what I feel in my heart, what feels right,” Wallace said . “I’m finally voicing my opinion on the tough subjects that a lot of people are afraid to touch on. I’m not afraid to speak my mind. I’ve done it and gotten in trouble and learned from it. People that know me, I’m 100% raw and real.”

He would also like some of his fame to lead to more sponsorshi­p to fund the No. 43 Chevrolet for Richard Petty Motorsport­s. He’s not going to change his approach for them.

“Ever since I’ve been speaking out, I haven’t been thinking about my sponsors,” Wallace said. “I’ve been thinking about me being a human being and standing up for what’s right. I would hope that sponsors would see that and back me up on that.”

But he’s tired. His free time has been chewed up, and there are two more races this weekend for a team that has been running well.

“It’s not like I wanted to be in this position or asked to be in this position,” Wallace said. “It just kind of happened.”

He is grateful NASCAR released the photo of the rope; NASCAR President Steve Phelps stated “the noose was real,” though it remains unknown who tied it.

“We can’t say it was directed toward me, which is good,” Wallace said. “But somebody still knows how to tie a noose. Whether they did it as a bad joke or not, who knows? It was good for the public to see. It still won’t change some people’s minds of me being a hoax. But it is what it is.”

NASCAR is at Pocono Raceway this weekend for Cup Series races today and Sunday.

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