Oroville Mercury-Register

Hot topic shifts to retaliatio­n as playoffs roar on

- By Jenna Fryer

The focus in NASCAR has yet to shift to the actual playoff racing as only three events remain to crown a new Cup champion.

But as the series heads to Homestead-Miami Speedway, the conversati­on over safety concerns has shifted to retaliatio­n and what is over the line. Bubba Wallace has been suspended for Sunday’s race for intentiona­lly wrecking reigning Cup champion Kyle Larson last week in a dangerous act of retaliatio­n that NASCAR and most of Wallace’s competitor­s found over the line.

Retaliatio­n has been an ongoing issue across all three of NASCAR’s national series this season with drivers either seeking payback on the track or after in physical confrontat­ions. Wallace shoved Larson several times after their crash.

The Wallace incident collected fellow Toyota driver Christophe­r Bell, who is eligible for the championsh­ip and dropped to last in the eight-driver playoff field after he was crashed at Las Vegas last Sunday. Wallace had to apologize to Bell and the entire Toyota group of teams and drivers, and the incident now follows NASCAR into the middle race of the third round of the playoffs.

“I definitely think that the penalties need to be severe,” said Chase Briscoe of Stewart-Haas Racing. “I feel like over the last couple years, it kind of got out of hand a little bit just because I think guys have felt comfortabl­e to do certain things and know there are probably not going to be major repercussi­ons.

“I think (NASCAR is) trying to get the ball back in their court to where they have a little more control probably. Which I think is probably needed. Look at how we race at the end of these road course races, there’s just no respect a lot of times, things like that.”

Briscoe raced his way into the round of eight two races ago on the final lap on the hybrid road course/ oval at Charlotte with a frantic last-gasp drive that eliminated Larson from the playoffs by two points. But NASCAR has alleged that Briscoe’s SHR teammate Cole Custer deliberate­ly held up traffic to help Briscoe gain positions, and SHR’s appeal of its $200,000 in fines and indefinite suspension of Custer’s crew chief will be heard next week.

Briscoe is not alone in believing NASCAR had to act on the Wallace incident. Veteran Kevin Harvick posted on social media the sanctionin­g body needs to “protect us from ourselves.” Harvick admitted he’s been in his share of retaliator­y incidents.

Harvick indicated NASCAR needs tough leadership to get the drivers back in line.

“I’ve been guilty of several of these instances you see happening but I also had an iron fist of (NASCAR vice chairman) Mike Helton waiting for me after I’d acted like a fool,” Harvick wrote. “I believe an iron fist is needed going forward and that will trickle down.”

BELL DISAPPOINT­MENT >> Bell was the most consistent driver in the first round of the playoffs, but faltered in the second round to be pushed into a must-win situation at Charlotte to advance into the round of eight.

Now he’s last in the standings because he was crashed in the brawl between Wallace and Larson, and the Joe Gibbs Racing driver is feeling rather down about his chances to make it to the championsh­ip finale. Only four drivers will race for the Cup title at Phoenix in next month’s season finale, and Joey Logano last week grabbed the first spot.

“It’s definitely been the highest of highs and the lowest of lows pretty backto-back-to-back,” Bell admitted. “But with that being said, I feel like I’ve always done a really good job throughout my career of managing my emotions whenever it comes time to perform at the level that I have to perform at.”

Bell had said he was deflated before winning at Charlotte and thought the victory gave him fresh momentum to make a run at the title. Now he knows he’s a longshot to make the championsh­ip four, as he’s below the cutline with William Byron, Chase Briscoe and Ryan Blaney.

“Just sad and disappoint­ed because we had it in the grasp of our hands, or at least we had a good finish at Vegas well within reach,” he said.

Joe Gibbs Racing, meanwhile, recently signed the 27-year-old to a multi-year contract extension.

 ?? JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Bubba Wallace, right, and Kyle Larson push each other away after the two crashed during a NASCAR Cup Series auto race Sunday on in Las Vegas.
JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Bubba Wallace, right, and Kyle Larson push each other away after the two crashed during a NASCAR Cup Series auto race Sunday on in Las Vegas.

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