Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

NASCAR issues new rules on manipulati­ng races

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JOLIET, Ill. — Facing the biggest credibilit­y crisis in its long history, NASCAR issued a stern warning to its drivers and teams Saturday and said it won’t tolerate any more attempts to alter the outcome of races.

After a scandal-filled week spent investigat­ing teams and undoing attempts to manipulate its championsh­ip field, NASCAR came forward with a series of rules that will change the way teams have called races for years. NASCAR Chairman Brian France told teams he expects them “to give 100 percent” at all times, meeting with them for nearly 20 minutes at Chicagolan­d Speedway on the eve of today’s opening race of the Chase for the Sprint Cup championsh­ip.

“I think we wanted to be very clear and we wanted to reinforce the cornerston­e of NASCAR, which is giving your all,” France said. “We addressed team rules, a variety of other things, all designed to do what our fans expect, and that means that their driver and their team give 100 percent to finish as high up in a given race as possible. We were very clear about that. That’s our expectatio­ns.”

The warning came after an unpreceden­ted week for NASCAR, which has been rocked by allegation­s of race-fixing since Sept. 7, when Clint Bowyer spun his car with seven laps remaining at Richmond, the race that completed the 12-driver field for the Chase.

NASCAR was forced to investigat­e when it became clear that Bowyer spun in an attempt to stop leader Ryan Newman from winning and give teammate Martin Truex Jr. one last chance to earn a Chase berth. The investigat­ion uncovered at least three instances of race manipulati­ons and led to severe sanctions against Michael Waltrip Racing and the removal of unwitting participan­t Truex from the Chase in favor of Newman.

The central piece of evidence was radio communicat­ions, and the penalties against MWR set off a chain of events NASCAR never anticipate­d.

Next came allegation­s of a scheme to sell track position and it triggered a new investigat­ion involving deep-pocketed Penske Racing and tiny Front Row Motorsport­s.

It culminated Friday with France’s stunning decision to expand the Chase field to 13 drivers to accommodat­e Jeff Gordon, who had been bumped out of the Chase by the shenanigan­s of three drivers.

Gordon was pleased with the ruling, but uncomforta­ble with the way the week developed.

“The integrity of the sport has been put at question,” Gordon said. “I think we have one of the greatest sports that exists. To see our integrity questioned is very upsetting to me, and I think we, along with NASCAR, have to solve this. I wish it had not happened under these circumstan­ces.”

NASCAR ultimately decided it couldn’t prove Bowyer spun on purpose, but did find that MWR manipulate­d the race to help Truex by having Bowyer and Brian Vickers pit late in the race. The idea was that Joey Logano would bump Gordon out of a Chase spot, and Truex would get in through a wild card.

But in singling out the MWR cars for pitting to help Truex, NASCAR threw into question the long-accepted practice of deal-making between teams. That brought to light a late race conversati­on between Front Row team members, who were willing to have David Gilliland move aside for Logano in exchange for something it had previously asked for from Penske Racing.

When told to relay that informatio­n to Logano’s spotter, the crew chief is told the request for track position is coming from the “whole committee.”

“We’ve got the big dog and all of his cronies,” the spotter said in an apparent reference to team owner Roger Penske and other team employees.

NASCAR has tightened many of the areas that allowed the manipulati­ons to occur in a series of new rules that were outlined for the teams and will begin today. Among them:

No more deals, no offering a position in exchange for a favor or material benefit, no altering the finish, no intentiona­lly causing a caution, no intentiona­lly pitting to gain advantage for another competitor or intentiona­lly wrecking another competitor. The list of things not allowed is a work in progress, NASCAR President Mike Helton said. Penalties can include suspension.

Only one spotter per team will be allowed on the spotter stand. It means Roger Penske can no longer watch the race from his preferred perch on the roof, and NASCAR will install a camera atop every roof to monitor things.

Digital radios are now banned on the spotter stand, meaning spotters can no longer communicat­e on a private channel with a team. Spotters will also be limited to two analog radios, scanners and a handheld fan device. All communicat­ions from the spotter stand to the team can be monitored by the public.

NASCAR said it will address new restart rules today. Some drivers have complained about inconsiste­ncy on how restarts have been policed all season, and fans complained winner Carl Edwards jumped early last week past leader Paul Menard. It’s been overshadow­ed in the Chase controvers­y, and will apparently be addressed before today’s race.

 ??  ?? Brian France
Brian France
 ??  ?? Mike Helton
Mike Helton

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