Practice of racing back to the caution flag. The Gentlemen's Agreement in NASCAR!

Search

Another Day, Another Dollar
Joined
Mar 1, 2002
Messages
42,730
Tokens
ORLANDO, Fla. - (KRT) - Some who've known NASCAR president Mike Helton throughout his near quarter-century involvement in stock car racing say they'd never seen him as upset as he was last Sunday.

He'd just watched disaster narrowly avoided several times within a few seconds.

The scenario was a sort of perfect-storm argument against the antiquated and dangerous practice of racing back to the caution flag.

On the frontstretch at New Hampshire International Speedway, Dale Jarrett sat helpless - except that he re-buckled and re-cinched his safety harness, after looking into his rearview mirror and seeing the bedlam coming.

Jarrett's Taurus was wrecked and immobile, pointed forward, a sitting duck on the track, should any driver in the onrushing traffic make the slightest error.

Jarrett's wreck had brought out a caution flag, and yellow lights in all four corners of the track, but under NASCAR rules, drivers technically didn't have to slow down and maintain position until after they passed the yellow flag at the start-finish line. Thus the term, "racing back to caution."

By the "gentlemen's agreement" under which drivers police themselves in such a situation, it's the race leader's option whether to come back to the line all-out, or slow down and cool off the field.

The leader this time was Bill Elliott, who has never made a foolish move on a racetrack in his life, and wasn't about to now. Elliott slowed dramatically and quite appropriately.

Bobby Labonte passed him flying, to get a lap back. Kurt Busch did the same.

Then here came Michael Waltrip and Ryan Newman, not trying to unlap, just racing each other for position.

Nobody hit Jarrett. He had in effect dodged several 3,400 pound bullets - rather, they had dodged him.

After that, the NASCAR corporate jets had barely arrived back in Daytona Beach when a series of intensive meetings began. They have continued all week, according to sources inside NASCAR headquarters.

The topic was whether racing back to caution should be banned. The only major distraction was what to do about the threat of Hurricane Isabel to the weekend's racing activities at Dover, Del. Once it was decided Tuesday that Friday's qualifying would be canceled to let the storm pass, and the starting fields for the Saturday Busch race and Sunday's Cup race determined by points, the NASCAR hierarchy returned to the matter of racing back to caution.

New NASCAR chairman Brian France, who took over from his father, Bill France Jr., on Monday, is said to be leaning heavily, along with Helton, toward banning the practice. Unless lieutenants who directly conduct the races can give the two top executives sufficient rationales for status quo, the bedlam's days are numbered.

Whether an announcement comes before the Dover races, or is deferred, may depend on whether the younger France, 41, is worried about being perceived as changing too much, too fast.

For many years the gentlemen's agreement worked - but among the likes of Richard Petty and David Pearson. The angriest I ever saw Petty was in the garage area at Daytona when he raged in the face of brash young Darrell Waltrip for gaining several positions after a caution had come out - legal, but highly unethical in the King's judgment.

But with billion-dollar TV, $15 million sponsorships and enormous pressure, come young guns who race in a mode that borders on desperate. And, just to hang on, some veterans have joined in the banzai.

Every position in every race has come to mean so much that the gentlemen's agreement has deteriorated into a matter of, if it's legal, do it.

For decades, NASCAR has been the only major form of racing in the world to allow racing back to caution. Part of the reason in the early years was that scoring was done with pencils and paper, and freezing the running order at the moment the caution lights came on was virtually impossible. Now, electronic scoring is much more precise.

Bobby Allison returned from racing in the Indianapolis 500 in the 1970s as a staunch opponent of racing back to caution, pointing out that at Indy, "they figure there's a good chance the wreck that caused the caution is between you and the flag stand."

Twenty-five years later, at New Hampshire, Dale Jarrett sat helplessly between the racers back to the caution and the flag stand. The danger couldn't get any clearer.

So finally, hopefully, NASCAR is about to decide that enough is enough.


http://www.bayarea.com/mld/mercurynews/sports/6796369.htm
 

New member
Joined
Sep 20, 2004
Messages
418
Tokens
Its just a plain stupid rule. the action should stop and quit letting guys get their laps back. Let them earn them.
 

Another Day, Another Dollar
Joined
Mar 1, 2002
Messages
42,730
Tokens
Racing back to the finish line under a caution flag will be banned at all NASCAR events beginning this weekend, the racing circuit announced Thursday.
 

Another Day, Another Dollar
Joined
Mar 1, 2002
Messages
42,730
Tokens
It was very dangerous and like Mike said, it is silly anyway. These guys get a lap down, tough chit. Better luck next week
icon_razz.gif
 

New member
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Messages
3,624
Tokens
Thank god for this rule. Especially for those of us who bet on nascar. Now the slow car that gets down a lap won't be able to get his lap back.
 

New member
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Messages
31
Tokens
Now the emphasis will shift to where the pace car picks up the pack. You are going to have conspiracy theories now about driver x was able to get his lap back b/c Nascar held the pace car until he passed. Similar to how theories about Nascar at restrictor races.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
1,108,590
Messages
13,452,665
Members
99,423
Latest member
lbplayer
The RX is the sports betting industry's leading information portal for bonuses, picks, and sportsbook reviews. Find the best deals offered by a sportsbook in your state and browse our free picks section.FacebookTwitterInstagramContact Usforum@therx.com