The Commercial Appeal

Is racing or racism more important to NASCAR fans?

- Dan Wolken

In 1997, then-ole Miss football coach Tommy Tuberville told fans of his program something many of them didn’t want to hear: The presence of the Confederat­e flag inside the stadium, at tailgates and woven all through the iconograph­y of the program was killing its ability to recruit.

So Ole Miss fans did what any reasonable group of people would do: After some initial resistance, they dumped the flag, moved on with their lives and enjoyed game days as much as ever.

You’d like to think NASCAR fans will take the same route to the 21st century after the organizati­on announced Wednesday that displays of the flag “will be prohibited from all NASCAR events and properties.”

So pretty soon we’ll learn what matters more to NASCAR fans: The racing or the racism?

In the complex world we live in, things are rarely that simple. But this one is.

You can argue that NASCAR’S move to ban the “stars and bars” will only cause more rebellion among those who build their weekends around showing up at the racetrack, that the ban will be impossible to enforce given the expansive grandstand­s and the tens of thousands who park their RVS on the infield. Many will say NASCAR’S good intentions are doomed to fail.

But that lets fans who cling to their treasonous flag off way too easy. Asking them to choose what’s more important to them — the race or the flag — is not a very high price of admission.

The only problem with this debate is that it implicates far too many NASCAR fans — almost certainly the majority of them — who don’t give a hoot about the Confederat­e flag and go to the races because of the competitio­n and the drivers and the sensory overload no other sport can match.

The Confederat­e flag has as much to do with what happens on the racetrack as the 150-year-old decomposed body of

Robert E. Lee. If that’s why you’re there, if the comfort of flying that flag is what drew you to the racetrack in the first place, go find another safe space. There are plenty of more fulfilling and less expensive weekend hobbies.

The bottom line for NASCAR — and let’s not give them too much credit for waiting until 2020 to figure this out — is that the country is in the midst of one of the most significant shifts on race that we’ve seen in most of our lifetimes.

Playing footsie with the Confederat­e nostalgist­s isn’t just morally repugnant, it’s a bad business strategy. NASCAR doesn’t have the exact problem Ole Miss had in terms of appealing to black recruits, but the general theory is the same. Your can either hitch your brand to racism via that flag or you can reject it. For the vast majority of us, there’s really no in-between.

All over the country, Confederat­e monuments are being ripped down by people who understand full well the difference between honoring a failed rebellion against the United States to preserve slavery and putting that history in a museum where it belongs.

But NASCAR isn’t a museum, it’s a sport. And on race day, it’s a sport that invests more time and pageantry honoring America than anyone.

The people who insist the Confederat­e flag is an important part of that pageantry are not amplifying the values inherent to American sports, they’re mocking the long road to progress that has once again arrived at a defining, historic moment.

Maybe it’s impossible to force people’s hearts and minds to change by press release. Maybe someone whose life has revolved around the deranged notion that the Confederac­y is alive and well rather than a failed coup that ended in disgrace is too far gone at this point to be swayed by sports.

But if there’s a single person whose main reason for showing up at the track was to fly that flag, they never really cared about NASCAR in the first place. They were only using the sport as a proxy for a culture war that was lost a long time ago.

NASCAR didn’t know how or when it would happen, but the removal of that image was inevitable all the same. Just as it has been in every other facet of American life, any tacit approval or associatio­n of a flag that symbolizes slavery is not tolerable unless you care more about the feelings of the racists than the rest of us.

NASCAR is one of the last to make that choice. Now it’s up to the fans to decide what really matters to them. If it’s not the racing, there’s only one other option.

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 ?? JASEN VINLOVE/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? An American flag flies above Confederat­e and President Trump flags in front of the main grandstand­s during the 2017 Firecracke­r 250 at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway.
JASEN VINLOVE/USA TODAY SPORTS An American flag flies above Confederat­e and President Trump flags in front of the main grandstand­s during the 2017 Firecracke­r 250 at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway.
 ?? Columnist USA TODAY ??
Columnist USA TODAY

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