Ingram: Is NASCAR encumbered by its penalty system?
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[September 08, 2017]
By Jonathan Ingram, The Sports Xchange
On the eve of the playoffs, Denny
Hamlin's stirring victory at the Darlington Raceway has been
declared encumbered by NASCAR due to some finagling in the rear
suspension that likely gave him a faster car than his competition.
If a front-line team like Joe Gibbs Racing has one of its crews
willing to risk fudging on the rules, is the sanctioning body's
penalty system a sufficient deterrent to teams trying to win a
championship?
Since he had already qualified for the playoffs with a previous
victory, Hamlin will be one of the 16 drivers advancing after the
season's final regular-season race Saturday night in Richmond. In
this case, encumbered means that in addition to fines and loss of
points, Hamlin will not get the five playoff bonus points usually
awarded a winner.
Perhaps as significantly, a magnificent drive by Hamlin will be
remembered for the wrong reasons. Give anyone in the Monster Energy
NASCAR Cup Series a slight advantage and the driver tends to
suddenly look unbeatable. Michael Waltrip, for example, won only
four Cup races and all of those wins took place on restrictor plate
tracks during the time the DEI team had an acknowledged advantage --
(one considered legal) -- in horsepower.
Perhaps the discovery of irregularities in the Joe Gibbs Racing
Toyota entry of Hamlin will deter such fudging once the playoffs
begin at the Chicagoland Speedway. If a contending team is caught
during the 10-race title run, it could very well spell the end of
any chances of advancing to the all-important final round of the
championship.
Historically, teams have always tried to find a way through
inspection without necessarily adhering to the rules.
For the sanction body's first four decades, it was considered part
of the sport. It is, after all, a test of mechanical ingenuity among
other things. And there was, to some extent, honor among thieves
when it came to stealing victory. If you could get your car past
NASCAR before the race with a few illegalities, then have at it. It
was the same option for everybody and part of the game.

But that approach can quickly escalate into something beyond getting
a little advantage here and there.
Gary Nelson, the former rules enforcer for NASCAR, has told an
interesting story about his days as a crew chief. Convinced that
Junior Johnson was bribing the official in charge of weighing cars
at the Riverside, Calif. track on the old wooden scales, Nelson
resulted to some trickery of his own.
During a private test session, he hooked up a wire to the scales and
buried it in the nearby sandy soil. When his cars were weighed prior
to the race several weeks later, a crew member surreptitiously
pulled the wire hard enough to make up for about 100 pounds of
weight. Nelson's car thus entered the race 100 pounds light -- a
significant advantage on the road circuit.
The present picture is different due to so many millions of dollars
on the line that derive from corporate sponsorship. NASCAR's premier
series now has major league status and outright cheating taints its
championship.
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Teams have expected NASCAR to maintain a level
playing field and often found it frustrating when the sanctioning
body was too dull or politically encumbered to make sure everybody
was playing by the same rules. Nelson wasn't the first to take
matters into his own hands due to frustration.
The best example of anger at NASCAR for falling down
on the job occurred in 1983, when Maurice Petty used paraffin in his
engine to skate past the electronic inspection device used to scan
displacement before races. He knew other teams were also using the
same tactic and decided to do something about it. If he thought
NASCAR would handle the problem privately, his judgement was very
mistaken.

Petty believed rival Junior Johnson was skirting the rules to gather
points for Darrell Waltrip in the championship. By finishing second,
the team collected near maximum points without worrying about a
post-race inspection. When Richard Petty won the fall race in
Charlotte with an oversize engine, the post-race inspection produced
a major public scandal and a huge penalty for "The King." The
fallout resulted in much stiffer penalties and manual inspection of
several cars' engines after races.
The new rules, procedures and penalties cleared up the use of
oversize engines very quickly and permanently.
That has not been the case with this year's use of the "encumbered
finish" rule. The threat of losing points has not been enough to
deter teams. Hamlin's loss of 35 driver and owner points and his
crew chief for two races was the fifth violation bad enough to
garner a Level 1 penalty. Each of the Team Penske cars of Brad
Keselowski (Phoenix) and Joey Logano (Richmond, Darlington) have
been caught. Kevin Harvick's entry from Stewart-Haas Racing has also
been penalized after his finish at Phoenix was declared encumbered.
With the current extensive post-race inspection process at the R&D
Center -- which includes the first-place and second-place cars plus
one other optional pick -- there seems to be little doubt about
NASCAR's ability to catch those fudging on the rules. But are the
penalties enough to deter teams?
Apparently not. This sets up the rather gut-wrenching scenario of a
victory on Sunday being declared null and void three days later.
Never mind!
NASCAR is caught between a sport driven by money and cars. If an
entire team is suspended for one race instead of just the crew
chief, suddenly the team's sponsor has been denied the opportunity
to leverage its investment. Over time, this might encourage both
team owners and sponsors to start looking outside NASCAR racing for
opportunities to compete.
But if NASCAR really wants to eliminate the out-of-kilter idea of
letting teams keep a sullied victory in the record book plus
penalties, something more draconian is needed.
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