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    NASCAR to do away with undisclosed fines

    CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — NASCAR said Wednesday it will stop issuing undisclosed fines going forward, a practice that made fans distrust the sanctioning body.

    "While there are always sensitivities related to sponsor relationships and other leagues may continue issuing disclosed and undisclosed fines, NASCAR has decided that all fines moving forward will be made public after the competitor or organization that has been penalized has been informed," NASCAR said in a statement.

    It's not clear how many times NASCAR failed to disclose a penalty against a driver or a team, but the practice first came to light midway through the 2010 season when it was learned that Denny Hamlin had been secretly fined for posts he made on Twitter.

    In the fallout from the Hamlin fine, it was revealed that Ryan Newman had been previously penalized for disparaging comments he made about the style of racing at Talladega.

    Then, word of another Newman fine spread last season after the driver was involved in some sort of physical altercation with Juan Pablo Montoya during a meeting with NASCAR officials. Fans grew increasingly angry with the practice of not publicizing all fines, but NASCAR wouldn't comment one way or the other on the issue.

    The tipping point came on the eve of championship weekend in November, when The Associated Press reported Brad Keselowski had been secretly fined $25,000 for comments he made about electronic fuel injection.

    NASCAR chairman Brian France was peppered with questions about secret fines the next day, and coyly said no one would know if there had been other fines the public was still unaware of.

    "When you cross a line that denigrates the direction of the sport or the quality of the racing, we're not going to accept that. Not going to accept it," France said. "Happy to have any other criticism, any other complaint, happy to hear them all. If I own a restaurant and I say you know what, the food in my restaurant is not very good, we're not going to accept it. It's as simple as that."

    "What would be the benefit (of announcing fines)?" he continued. "The drivers know exactly what we're after. They know exactly what we expect out of them and when they don't handle that, the only way we can control that is, obviously, a fining system."

    The questioning continued, and with championship weekend in jeopardy of being overshadowed, France relented and promised to reconsider the practice of not publicizing every fine.

    NASCAR said Wednesday it evaluated the issue during the offseason and based its decision from "feedback from the industry."

    The decision to stop the secret fines comes on the eve of France's annual preseason remarks to the media. The NASCAR presentation is scheduled for Thursday afternoon at the Hall of Fame.

     

    11 comments

    • clark  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      I think France should get the biggest secert fine of all time..........
    • David  •  Liberty, Missouri  •  1 mth 0 days ago
      Nascar is getting more and more full of them selves. All they want is robots that drive in circles, and can not voice any of their own opinions with out fear of retaliation from Big Ole Nascar. I would like to see someone like Donald Trump create a New Stock Car racing association to compete with Nascar, using real emotions, and real driver input on what it take to make the sport great. Any one looking foward to Daytona, with 2X2 car racing ? How boring !
    • Old ManDirt  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      I don't know if NA$CAR will ever get it's creditability back. But there have been some steps in the right direction, this is one of them. The retrun of cars that are closer in appearance to real cars and the acceptance of the demise of carburators is another.
      I hope some time I can put the S back in the way I type these posts.
      I wonder why the seat widening projects have not been shown as news here. That is one way to make the stands look fuller, give the fans room to actually sit down.
    • Heisenberg  •  24 days ago
      Keselowski is right. Fuel injection is a stupid idea. It will require a computer ... running a program. There's NO WAY Cheatin' Chad can hack that, right?

      Go back to the way it was. Limit the displacement and fuel capacity and not much else. If a team wants to use B.F. Goodrich tires, let them. If they suck, they'll pay the price. If they choose to employ a lower gear for better acceleration (at the expense of fuel economy and possibly a blown engine), let them. If they wish to employ a larger carburetor (increasing power at the expense of economy), let them. There's a thousand variables that NASCAR is trying to control making each entry as cookie cutter as possible ... all in the name of "increasing competition". What it amounts to is, if one driver happens to excel with the agreed upon equipment, he wins year after year.

      Boring.
    • joe3  •  Tampa, Florida  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      I just see this as another way Nascar limits what is said about it...Good thing AJ is long retired. Nascar isn't racing, it's a "show" about $$$$ and sponsors, using cars and tracks as their medium. Too much 'control' Mr. France .... INHO
    • billw828  •  28 days ago
      My opinion is Nascar is now too big for a family business. Now how much is Bill France going to fine me for writing that?
    • Jeff B  •  Tampa, Florida  •  27 days ago
      It is clear that Nascar is playing games in order to influence results. Busch is forced to sit out a cup race after wrecking someone in a truck race. However Vickers wrecks the 17 two weeks in a row without so much as a word being said. They did not want Busch or Matt to compete with the two marketable drivers of the 14 and 99.
    • OldPilot  •  29 days ago
      " Nascar does away with itself" --Now, THAT would be a newsworthy headline.
      Of course, where would all the semi-literate, beer swilling rednecks go for fun?
    • Harold  •  27 days ago
      Its common knowledge that people with lots of money assume lots of power and will run roughshod over those they feel are nobodys because they have less money. Well, with Nascar, its the nobodys that make the sport stay alive.
    • MrMike  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      Still a fake sport.
    • Heywood  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      NASCAR exploits the poor white trash of the USA. Don't patronize NASCAR.
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