Imperial Valley Press

Wallace says racing doesn’t mean NASCAR is ‘standing down’

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Bubba Wallace said there was not much of a dialogue among NASCAR drivers regarding sitting out the Cup Series regular-season finale at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway. While other sports postponed games and practices this week in the wake of the shooting of Jacob Blake, a Black man, by a white police officer in Kenosha, Wisconsin, NASCAR pressed on at its historic track.

“We still have a lot of work to do as a nation to make things better for us, our next generation coming up through,” Wallace told NBC Sports before Saturday night’s race. “What I simply said about not competing (was) us not following suit does not mean that we’re standing down. We still know what’s on our table or what’s on our plate to go out and accomplish and attempt to accomplish to make this a better place

“With tonight’s race being held, we still know that we have a lot on our minds thinking about everybody, the African-American community specifical­ly, to help out.”

Wallace, the only Black driver at NASCAR’s top level, commended other sports for taking action. But he said there needs to be a unified approach to fighting racial injustice. “I respect my brothers and sisters that want to use their platform in that certain way,” he said. “I’m all for it. I think we all have to come together as one and figure out some solution because nothing’s helping — not playing games, playing games, racing, not racing, being silent. We’re still seeing the tragic events happen.

“Jacob Blake, fortunatel­y he survived through that madness there. But it’s something we still shouldn’t have to go through and witness, and he never should have been a part of. “

NASCAR President Steve Phelps made it clear that the sanctionin­g body took a strong stance in June, when it banned the Confederat­e flag at events. Drivers also made a video addressing racial inequality and backed Wallace at every turn, most notably after a pull rope fashioned into a noose was found in his garage stall at Talladega Superspeed­way in Alabama.

The noose was eventually determined not to be a hate crime, but it prompted solidarity and support few have seen in nearly seven decades of NASCAR.

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