Jeff Gordon Fined For Shove

kat2220

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Gordon fined $10K for shove
Gordon penalized for conduct for first time in career
Posted: Tuesday March 28, 2006 6:27PM; Updated: Tuesday March 28, 2006 6:27PM

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) -- Jeff Gordon has always been a model of good behavior off the track, the rare driver able to keep his emotions in check.

That changed when he angrily shoved Matt Kenseth following the race at Bristol Motorspeedway, an action that drew a $10,000 fine from NASCAR on Tuesday. It's the first time in Gordon's 14-year career that he's been penalized for his conduct.

Don't expect Gordon, who was placed on probation until Aug. 30, to turn into another Tony Stewart or Kurt Busch. But the image-conscious driver is committed to letting loose the emotion he's kept bottled up over the years.

"For many, many years I've been so reserved from controversy," he said. "I was just so concerned with `What was this person going to think?' and `What was that person going to think?' and I was more caught up in that than I was in being true to myself.

"What you see today is a more truer Jeff Gordon and who I really am. I'm not a robot. I have a personality and I have emotions and I have a humorous side to me and an angry side to me."

Kenseth learned that firsthand when contact with Gordon on the final lap of Sunday's race sent Gordon spiraling backward from a third-place finish to 21st. Kenseth claimed the contact was accidental and approached Gordon on pit road in what looked to be an apologetic gesture.

But Gordon, who was still wearing his helmet and safety devices, angrily shoved Kenseth back several feet. The two were quickly separated by NASCAR officials.

It's the first time anyone can remember Gordon losing his cool at NASCAR's highest level. He's had run-ins with drivers before, but nothing has ever escalated beyond a shouting match.

And Gordon has certainly been angry before, but he typically retreated to his hauler to collect himself before facing the public.

That behavior led to a squeaky-clean image and kept him afoul of NASCAR's police -- the last time Gordon was even penalized as a driver was in 2000 when he was docked 100 points for having an unapproved part on his Chevrolet.

But Gordon is ready to shed his image as he attempts to return to championship form. He failed to make the Chase for the Nextel Cup championship last season and wound up 11th in the points -- his lowest finish since his rookie season.

"I think that I kind of heard a lot last year that maybe I wasn't being aggressive enough on the race track and different things," he said. "My team has done an awful lot this year to make our race cars better, to put me in better positions ... and I'm giving them everything I possibly can out there on the race track because they deserve it.

"If that means I've got to be more aggressive, then I'm going to be more aggressive. When you're more aggressive, sometimes it carries over off the race track, as well."

There are some who argue that Gordon has never lacked on-track aggression, particularly Jeff Burton, who was angry about getting caught up in an incident Sunday between Gordon and Martin Truex Jr.

"We have drivers who think it's OK for them to do something, but it's not OK for somebody to do it to them," Burton said Monday at Bristol. "Jeff Gordon's a perfect example."

But Gordon said he didn't intentionally wreck Truex.

"Martin completely checked up in front of me," he said. "The problem is I was an inch off his rear bumper when it happened. He did not have any time for error. Jeff Burton is mad because he got caught up in the wreck."

Gordon now heads to Martinsville Speedway, where he swept both races last year. It's a short track like Bristol and tempers have been known to erupt. Don't be surprised if Gordon is one of them now that he isn't shying away from controversy.

"Now that I've established myself, I'm older and I understand life a little more, really the way to enjoy life and enjoy racing more is to be me," he said. "I guess that's maybe the Jeff Gordon that has evolved over the years. In the past I've reserved a lot of my emotions. I'm not afraid to show them these days. I'm just being me."
 
muntz.gif
 
$10K, well at least he won't have to skip lunch. His sweetie prolly spends that much on press on nails in a month.
But, me, I like the new and improved Jeff. He doesn't need the money so let's start taking people out. Fines be damned...
 
Thats alot of money for a shove. What a load of crap. Why is nascar trying to turn its broadcasts into a childrens show?
 
What I saw was Kenseth with a slower car BLOCKING and Jeffy got tired of it and gave him a tap.. Then Kenseth came back hard and knocked Jeffy around. What did Jeffy lose, 15 or 18 places? That is a lot of points! For ten grand I'd be hunting him again next week. Jeffy ain't even yet.
Betsy
 
I don't see why Jeff Burton considers what Jeff G did to Truex and what Matt did the same thing? A rookie being a lap down at the end of a race at Bristol better just keep his head down. You can tell what kind of attitude he had to start when he went back out there and tried to mess with lead lap cars that were up front!

I guess since Truex races for Jr he expects the same level of respect? Maybe Burton is whining cause he is usually the guy thats a lap down.
 
02Pace said:
I don't see why Jeff Burton considers what Jeff G did to Truex and what Matt did the same thing? A rookie being a lap down at the end of a race at Bristol better just keep his head down. You can tell what kind of attitude he had to start when he went back out there and tried to mess with lead lap cars that were up front! I guess since Truex races for Jr he expects the same level of respect? Maybe Burton is whining cause he is usually the guy thats a lap down.


Burton, after a successful stint early on, was running less competitively for a couple of years but is now with a team that is coming together is running at the front.

As for Jeff Gordon, what he did NOT do was bump Kenseth.
A replay of the pass entering and leaving the turn shows NO contact between Jeff Gordon and Matt Kenseth. There might have been contact earlier but the pass was executed with no contact at all. Not even close.

Jeff Gordon passed Matt Kenseth clean and for Kenseth to retaliate in the manner he did was mostly out of frustration because of the earlier action by Kurt Busch.
 
Jeff Gordon passed Matt Kenseth clean and for Kenseth to retaliate in the manner he did was mostly out of frustration because of the earlier action by Kurt Busch.

So maybe if Matt is truly sorry he steps up and pays the fine for Jeff. That would go a long way in showing that he's not Matt the Brat as Robbie Reiser used to call him.
 
barelypure said:
So maybe if Matt is truly sorry he steps up and pays the fine for Jeff. That would go a long way in showing that he's not Matt the Brat as Robbie Reiser used to call him.

Has Jeff ever paid for a car he ""accidently"" put in the wall. Jeff chose to be the hot head, Jeff deals with it.
 
Bucky Badger said:
Has Jeff ever paid for a car he ""accidently"" put in the wall. Jeff chose to be the hot head, Jeff deals with it.


The business about Jeff Gordon being the "hot-head" is incorrectly applied as described. Matt was the "hot-head" and took his frustrations out on Gordon, erroneously. Jeff Gordon was the "hot-head" after Matt "hot-head" Kenseth's, inappropriate on-track action.

If I remember the scenario in the proper order of events, Matt led many laps at Bristol with Busch closing and finally catching Kenseth in the closing laps.

Once Kurt Busch caught Kenseth, it was time to go. Busch moved Kenseth up the hill as they exited the turn. Nice "bump and run ", properly executed.

Kenseth continued to lose ground as Busch pulled away and Jeff Gordon closing fast.

When Jeff Gordon closed on Kenseth, Matt held his line and when exiting the corner, left the bottom open and Jeff took advantage.

This is the important part, Jeff Gordon never touched Matt Kenseth before or during the pass.

Look at the replay.

The pass Jeff Gordon made was as clean as a white cotton sheet !!!

After Jeff passed Matt, Kenseth could only catch Jeff by driving deep in the corner, a sign of retaliation rather than that of a faster car.
In other words, Kenseth was ticked at Busch and took it out on Gordon.

"Hot-head" entered the picture when the pot began to boil between Matt and Kurt. It boiled over onto Jeff, who became the victim of Kenseth's "hot-headed" retaliation and disappointment.
Once Kenseth realized how foolish his action was regarding Gordon, Matt tried to apologize but by this time the pot had boiled, again, for a valid and obvious reason. :)
 
This was all orchastrated by NASCAR for a ratings blitz. Since when does NASCAR DIRECT a 21st place car to enter pit road for inspection and pit NEAR a car he had just tangled with on the track (IE: Matt Kenseth). Why was this done you ask? Because they knew it would be good TV!!!
 
Whizzer said:
The business about Jeff Gordon being the "hot-head" is incorrectly applied as described. Matt was the "hot-head" and took his frustrations out on Gordon, erroneously. Jeff Gordon was the "hot-head" after Matt "hot-head" Kenseth's, inappropriate on-track action.

If I remember the scenario in the proper order of events, Matt led many laps at Bristol with Busch closing and finally catching Kenseth in the closing laps.

Once Kurt Busch caught Kenseth, it was time to go. Busch moved Kenseth up the hill as they exited the turn. Nice "bump and run ", properly executed.

Kenseth continued to lose ground as Busch pulled away and Jeff Gordon closing fast.

When Jeff Gordon closed on Kenseth, Matt held his line and when exiting the corner, left the bottom open and Jeff took advantage.

This is the important part, Jeff Gordon never touched Matt Kenseth before or during the pass.

Look at the replay.

The pass Jeff Gordon made was as clean as a white cotton sheet !!!

After Jeff passed Matt, Kenseth could only catch Jeff by driving deep in the corner, a sign of retaliation rather than that of a faster car.
In other words, Kenseth was ticked at Busch and took it out on Gordon.

"Hot-head" entered the picture when the pot began to boil between Matt and Kurt. It boiled over onto Jeff, who became the victim of Kenseth's "hot-headed" retaliation and disappointment.
Once Kenseth realized how foolish his action was regarding Gordon, Matt tried to apologize but by this time the pot had boiled, again, for a valid and obvious reason. :)

:rolleyes:
 
The ? is was Matt blameless for the pit road incident. Even he said maybe he should have waited before trying to approach Jeff. In hindsight that was probably good advice. But, in that he had never seen Jeff go off on someone I'm sure he thought it would be business as usual. He (hehe) apologizes and goes on. This time it rose up and bit him in the butt. And, frankly made him look quite foolish on TV with his reaction to Jeff. All in all it was just good TV...
 
wolfcub said:
This was all orchastrated by NASCAR for a ratings blitz. Since when does NASCAR DIRECT a 21st place car to enter pit road for inspection and pit NEAR a car he had just tangled with on the track (IE: Matt Kenseth). Why was this done you ask? Because they knew it would be good TV!!!

BS Wolfie, and the ratings were off AGAIN for that race.

We all can debate the situation as much as we choose, but we can't change NASCAR'S decicions.
 
Kat, I'm not sure I read you on this, but if you don't believe that NASCAR loved what happened, then you are very naive about the sport and the sanctioning body. The very fact that they levied a 10 grand fine on the young man tells you plenty about NASCAR. What's more, NASCAR would love to see this happen after each and every race so they could reap the benefits. Of course, they wouldn't like it to happen with the same drivers all the time, but if it happened with Matt and Jeffy a couple more times, they would absolutely love it. Just think of the revenue it would cause. We could see t-shirts and bumper stickers proclaiming either I was the pusher or the pushee. No matter what anyone thinks the NASCAR has control over, the one thing that stands over all and that is it's revenue from TV. Without that, the sport will be only another roundy round racing sport. Keep em glued to the set to see what "might" happen this week generates millions of bucks.
 
Buckster, believe me, I am far from naive about the sport and sure don't go around with rose colored glasses where Jeffy is concerned.
Frankly, I believe that a lot of the media hypes stuff up for better ratings so they can "get their money's worth" for the next broadcast. Media is all about those ratings!
 
McReynolds Says Gordon Fine Absurd
Fox TV analyst and commentator spoke his mind on the fine levied on Jeff Gordon for his shove of Matt Kenseth folloing the Food City 500: Says McReynolds -- "After running third on the white-flag lap at Bristol, a driver got dumped, spun out, finished 21st and lost a lot of ground in the points race. He got out of his car, and the driver who spun him — regardless of his intentions — came up to the driver who got spun. The spinee simply shoved the spinner, and on Tuesday, the spinee got fined $10,000. It's one of the most absurd things I've ever heard of.

"I understand that NASCAR has to police the sport and stay in control. Drivers can't fight like the two men who took each other to the ground during the Grand Am race in Mexico City earlier this month. But NASCAR is taking the emotion out of our sport, and it's turning off fans. If Jeff Gordon had gone to Kenseth after the race or bumped the No. 17 car on pit road, I would understand the penalty. But I just don't get it.

"It breaks my heart because it's taking away the emotional side of our sport. I had to read the ruling twice to make sure that I was reading it correctly. While $10,000 to Gordon is probably like $10 to you and me, I don't care if it was $10, $10,000 or $110,000. It's the principle that the guy got dumped, and he didn't leave his racecar.

"When he saw Kenseth come toward him, Gordon took a couple of steps toward Kenseth to shove him. If Kenseth hadn't gone to the No. 24 car, I don't believe that anything would have happened. I do believe that Kenseth had good intentions, but sometimes you just need to let things lie for a little bit. For NASCAR to fine Gordon any amount of money is absurd, and I have no idea what probation means. All we hear is the word, but Gordon has been placed on probation through August 30, four days after the next Bristol race."(FOX Sports)
 
Again, you can blame all of this on sponsorship and the money. Too bad that Larry took so long to figure out where the sport is heading. When he was working with a car instead of in the booth, he could have done more, but when he rose up in protest, he was put in his place quickly and he would whimper out of the hauler like a whipped puppy. I guess when you on one side of the line in this sport, you don't see the forest for the trees. Now that he's on the outside looking in, he sees something totally different. Too bad that Benny and DW choose to keep their blinders on.
 
If NASCAR chose to be petty this could cost LarryMac his job. I'm sure they have control of who's in the booth. That's probably why you don't see others speaking out publicly. Schrader, Mikey and Vickers and DeSpain all spoke out before the fine. But, as drivers they have little to fear. And, Dave's future is secure as well.
 
barelypure said:
If NASCAR chose to be petty this could cost LarryMac his job.
No way. They wouln't go that far. And BTW, he was not alone with that opinion.
 
bumpzter said:
No way. They wouln't go that far. And BTW, he was not alone with that opinion.

I can't see Nascar as being vindictive like that, and besides, it's the NETWORK that employes him.
 
it's the NETWORK that employes him.

True enough but I'd bet NASCAR has some editorial control and who is in the booth. I'm not saying they would, but they could pull his credentials to be at the track.
 
fir. night i had a slow car in front of me, i tried to pass but they kept blockin me, so comming out of turn 4 i bumped em, drove around em, next thing i know i get spun out and sent to the infiled. and got stuck in some mud. DNF.

kind of the same deal with the 17 and the 24. if he walked up to me, i would of pushed him also
 
kat2220 said:
BS Wolfie, and the ratings were off AGAIN for that race.

We all can debate the situation as much as we choose, but we can't change NASCAR'S decicions.


Precisely!! Ratings have been down for all the races so NASCAR HAS to do something to boost ratings
 
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