More of “How I Can Miss My Pit Box, But Not Brian Vicker’s Quarterpanel.”

Unlike so many race fans, I am not really big on Dale Earnhardt Jr.  It isn’t what has he done lately, it is what has he done to justify all the attention he receives, other than bearing the name of a NASCAR legend?  There are many more talented drivers in the garage than Jr. and they deserve some of the attention that this Hendricks driver receives.

 

I actually would have respected the man if he had simply said “I made a mistake and deeply regret it.  I will apologize to all the other drivers and try to work through this.”  Instead he blamed Brian Vickers for racing with him, and was irked with NASCAR for penalizing him.  I wish Dick Berggren would have had the courage to state “Dale, there were 43 other cars in the field, meaning there were over 200 pit stops during the race.  No one else had the problems you did.”  However, asking tough questions of NASCAR’s favorite son is not how TV personalities keep a lucrative gig.

 

I would have respected Darrell Waltrip for stating “Jr. needs to be taken out back of the woodshed,” instead of his giving Jr. the benefit of the doubt.  Again, notice the last sentence of the paragraph above.

 

And I would have fallen out of my chair had NASCAR actually penalized its wunderkind.  As replays of Sunday’s “big one” were shown, the first words out of my mouth were “$5 NASCAR doesn’t have the balls to penalize him.”  The race would have ended right then, because the rest of the day would have been spend cleaning seat cushions, beer cans, and pop bottles off the track. 

 

Fifteen years ago, heck, ten years ago, I would not miss a NASCAR race on TV.  Now it is all I can do to watch a few laps.  Races like Pocono, Dover, and New Hampshire will see me watching something else, or maybe reading a book.  Watching paint dry would be more entertaining than those races.  Having Kevin Costner in a NASCAR commercial does not make those track or the cookie-cutter 1 ½ mile tracks anything close to a “Field of Dreams.”  I keep thinking falling ratings may turn things around, but obviously not.

 

Apparently I am not the only person who thinks that yesterday’s handling of the Earnhardt incident was WWE like.  I received some emails this morning with a few links this morning.  You might want to check them out:

 

http://bleacherreport.com/articles/124641-dale-earnhardt-jr-fan-favorite-or-nascar-favorite

 

http://www.examiner.com/x-1617-Detroit-NASCAR-Examiner~y2009m2d15-NASCAR-and-Dale-Jr-should-both-feel-very-ashamed

 

http://www.orlandosentinel.com/sports/motorracing/orl-bianchi16021609feb16,0,4822159.column

 

 

Will NASCAR become the new WWE?

 

 

 

Thanks for stopping by.

 

 

~ by Ron Meyer on February 18, 2009.

9 Responses to “More of “How I Can Miss My Pit Box, But Not Brian Vicker’s Quarterpanel.””

  1. [...] conclusion, Earnhardt Jr. is NASCAR’s most overrated driver on the Sprint Cup [...]

  2. Was at the 125’s when Jr. screwed up on pit stop. Half the grandstands got up and left, when they knew he couldn’t win.

    His die hard fans get grumpy and are unbearable to sit by. Jr’s brand is what is killing NASCAR.

    WWE? Maybe the vickers, jr incident was kayfabe?

    If NASCAR is hipping the events, they suck at it.

  3. Fanatic-you are preaching to the choir. Seth-as always, good stuff. I really think you need to be a guest poster for this blog.

  4. A sport compact driver from Eagle Raceway who I’m friends with on MySpace posted a bulletin entitled “Dale Jr./Brian Vickers wreck” with a subtitle of “Vickers sucks, he deserved it.”

    Such are the mindsets of those wearing Mountain Dew colored glasses.

    This person also posted a YouTube video of the whole thing. Here’s a link to it: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_UOsGzxVoVI

    Yes, Vickers moved down to block in order to hold his position for the lucky dog.

    Yes, Junior got clipped a little but in no way lost control of his car.

    Junior blatantly came back up and spun Vickers in front of most of the field taking out a great number of others and drove away.

    Personally it seems to me that Junior was extremely upset; possibly about his pitting errors, but flat wasn’t driving with his head screwed on straight.

    NASCAR will not be placing any penalties on “The Son” anytime soon. His team, probably; as well as his owner. But him personally, ain’t gonna happen. The won’t do anything to alienate the great masses that are “Junior Nation”. How many times during the telecast did they mention that he’d been voted Most Popular Driver again?

    Another thing that bugged me is that right after the melee, the announcers were calling it as it happened, but when they came back from commercial their tunes had changed from Hard Rock to a Love Song.:P

    Ron; I assume that you’re not planning on getting sponsorship from NASCAR or ISC anytime soon.;)

  5. Nah, I am not counting on any sponsorship from NASCAR or ISC. The race fan in me sure wishes they would do something to make watcing one of their races on TV as enjoyable as it used to be, but the blogger in me wouldn’t be able to point out just how good dirt track local racing is if they did that.

    I’m always afraid they might get their attorney to threaten me, but what I’ve made on this blog wouldn’t buy a hot dog and a beer at any of their tracks.

  6. Blogging, and being critical of NASCAR, ISC, SMI, or “the Jr.” is dangerous.

    NASCAR has a secret mafia that goes around to silence critics….

    True fact.

    The hit-man’s name is Digger.

    Nothing stops your heart like watching a NASCAR telecast when all a sudden a screaming animated rodent explodes on you 86″ jumbo HDTV with surround sound!

  7. I don’tmind Digger, but my set isn’t an 86″ Jumbo. I thought working at a race track wasn’t supposed to be big money Seth? Anyway, for me hearing Larry McReynolds try to get his add on to DW’s Boogety starts a migraine, and though I like DW I wish he wouldretire Boogety. If your belts aren’t already tight Larry, the green flag waving isn’t a good time to be messing with them.

  8. What would be your opening catch phrase?

    L-Mac: Ok Folks get ready, fluff your pillows and drink warm milk one more time…

    DW: Oh Gee Golly…Nap time! Nap Time! Nap Time! Let’s try to make a race boys… We’ll wake you up with ten to go!

    Mike Joy: It’s time now for our first of twenty-eight ask.com, Joey Logano updates presented by Home Depot…

  9. Seth-why not? Call it the truth in labeling act.

    I got an email yesterday from someone who wondered if NASCAR needs to run a remedial driving school. Another said that Dale Jr. is Paul Menard with better equipment. Now those are lines we’ll never hear on TV.

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