The Commercial Appeal

NASCAR tracks ask fans not to fly Confederat­e flag

- By Jenna Fryer

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — NASCAR’s national series tracks announced Thursday that they are asking fans to refrain from displaying the Confederat­e flag at races.

The facilities vowed to have the most “welcoming environmen­ts in all of sports and entertainm­ent.”

The statement was signed by Internatio­nal Speedway Corp. and Speedway Motorsport­s Inc. — which own most of the tracks in the Sprint Cup Series, stretching from Florida to New York to California — as well as 30 specific tracks. Bristol Motor Speedway in Tennessee is a Speedway Motorsport­s track. The statement also includes independen­t tracks such as Tony Stewart’s Eldora Speedway in Rossburg, Ohio, Pocono Raceway and Canadian Tire Motorsport Park.

“We are asking our fans and partners to join us in a renewed effort to create an all-inclusive, even more welcoming atmosphere for all who attend our events,” the statement read. “This will include the request to refrain from displaying the Confederat­e flag at our facilities and NASCAR events.”

The move follows NASCAR’s statement last week reiteratin­g that the flag is banned from official use at its events. And it comes ahead of Sunday’s Coke Zero 400 at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway, the first race in the South

since the mid-June attack that left nine black churchgoer­s dead in Charleston, South Carolina. The suspect had embraced Confederat­e symbols, including the flag.

Daytona is planning to hold a voluntary exchange program this weekend in which fans can swap any flag of their choice for an American flag.

“We want to be inclusive to everyone, and the last thing you want is for anyone to come to a sporting event and really not enjoy that experience because of symbols that really represent things we’re not proud of,” track president Joie Chitwood said. “Going forward, we’ll really have to look at where that other flag goes, because it doesn’t have a place in our sport and we’ve got to take a thoughtful process on how we get to that place.”

ISC, a sister company of NASCAR, owns 13 facilities that signed the statement. SMI, the Bruton Smith-owned rival to ISC, had its eight properties listed as supporting NASCAR. Indianapol­is Motor Speedway was among the independen­ts taking part.

Drivers, including Dale Earnhardt Jr., have been outspoken against the flag. NASCAR chairman Brian France last week called the flag a symbol he finds offensive and said he wants to be as aggressive as possible in barring it from sanctioned events.

France said he was unsure what steps track promoters can legally take to prohibit the flag and acknowledg­ed that enforcing a ban would be challengin­g. France stressed that the flag, while part of NASCAR’s roots as a series for old bootlegger­s, is not indicative of what the sport represents.

“Obviously, we have our roots in the South, there are events in the South, it’s part of our history like it is for the country,” France said. “But it needs to be just that, part of our history. It isn’t part of our future.”

We want to be inclusive to everyone, and the last thing you want is for anyone to come to a sporting event and really not enjoy that experience because of symbols that really represent things we’re not proud of.”

Joie Chitwood, president of Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway

 ?? ERIC RISBERG / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? NASCAR is asking fans not to fly Confederat­e-themed flags, like this one in a campground outside the track last week in Sonoma, Calif.
ERIC RISBERG / ASSOCIATED PRESS NASCAR is asking fans not to fly Confederat­e-themed flags, like this one in a campground outside the track last week in Sonoma, Calif.

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