dpkimmel2001
Team Owner
Penalties should be announced this afternoon.
Big surprise.Cheated up rear skew, says Bob Pockrass.
Now, if only he had a loose lug nut..... Then we'd be talkin' bout a penalty!Why would they waste their time taking away 15 regular points that are essentially meaningless for a guy in Kenseth's position? Why not take away the 3 bonus points that he'll get to carry into the 1st round of the chase by winning the race? I mean good lord, is it that difficult to come up with a penalty that somewhat hits these guys where it hurts?
This is the guy tied with Johnson for making into the Chase the most times. Mr. Consistency can make up points in his sleep.I think if Kenseth had to choose his penalty between 15 regular season points and yanking out a nose hair, he'd opt for the 15 points each and every time.
Biffle and Kahne have also been penalized 15 points this year for failing post-race inspection. Look around here; I'm sure there are conversations related to their penalties.I would love to see what this conversation was like if it was anyone but Mat.
Why would they waste their time taking away 15 regular points that are essentially meaningless for a guy in Kenseth's position? Why not take away the 3 bonus points that he'll get to carry into the 1st round of the chase by winning the race? I mean good lord, is it that difficult to come up with a penalty that somewhat hits these guys where it hurts?
They are. They just aren't fast enough to get caught...yet.With these penalties Nascar is begging teams to cheat, any team that doesn't have a win should be cheating every week.
They need to learn how to cheat.They are. They just aren't fast enough to get caught...yet.
Why would they waste their time taking away 15 regular points that are essentially meaningless for a guy in Kenseth's position?
I remarked during the race that the Gibbs cars seemed more skewed than others (from a random partial sample that I saw).
So breaking the rules should only be "heavily" punished if we know and it is confirmed that it directly affected the outcome?Because what was wrong was meaningless.
I agree with all of this.So breaking the rules should only be "heavily" punished if we know and it is confirmed that it directly affected the outcome?
Rules are rules, and this little stuff won't go away until they start to make these guys actually care about the repercussions. The 15 points are completely meaningless, he's going to be slotted in the chase based on number of wins. Therefore, since his violation occurred in a race he won, why should he be allowed to start on a level playing field as every other guy with the same number of wins come chase time?
Make these guys think about what they're doing.
Paul Menard reacts to NASCAR's heavy handed penalty handed down to the #17 team.
View attachment 20053
So breaking the rules should only be "heavily" punished if we know and it is confirmed that it directly affected the outcome?
Rules are rules, and this little stuff won't go away until they start to make these guys actually care about the repercussions. The 15 points are completely meaningless, he's going to be slotted in the chase based on number of wins. Therefore, since his violation occurred in a race he won, why should he be allowed to start on a level playing field as every other guy with the same number of wins come chase time?
Make these guys think about what they're doing.
Being over-skewed is one thing, but when you mess with the Holy Trinity (fuel, tires, engine displacement), you're looking at Level 6 Death Penalty. See MWR's first Daytona weekend.Danica's team needs to add rocket fuel or nitrous to her fuel on a last pit stop to get the monumental win. Obviously, who cares about the points she'd lose. She would be a Nascar winner finally and circumstances would soon be forgotten o a degree. Have her place in the HOF cemented too!
Level 6 isn't a death penalty when you are practically dead anyway and part of a power team. The worst that happens is loss of 150 points (big deal when average finish is 20 something), $150-200K (no big deal unless you are a start and park), lose your CC for 6 races, probation for all involved until the end of year or 6 months, loss of any benefits from starting or finishing position, and loss of owner points earned.Being over-skewed is one thing, but when you mess with the Holy Trinity (fuel, tires, engine displacement), you're looking at Level 6 Death Penalty. See MWR's first Daytona weekend.
Danica's team needs to add rocket fuel or nitrous to her fuel on a last pit stop to get the monumental win. Obviously, who cares about the points she'd lose. She would be a Nascar winner finally and circumstances would soon be forgotten o a degree. Have her place in the HOF cemented too!
When you run in 20-somethings, 150 points is the equivalent of missing seven races. That's enough to drop a 20-something team below 30th in points, so that win won't get it into the Chase. It wouldn't matter if Ironhead himself showed up to drive; there wouldn't be a waiver for an L6 team.Level 6 isn't a death penalty when you are practically dead anyway and part of a power team. The worst that happens is loss of 150 points (big deal when average finish is 20 something), $150-200K (no big deal unless you are a start and park), lose your CC for 6 races, probation for all involved until the end of year or 6 months, loss of any benefits from starting or finishing position, and loss of owner points earned.
I don't see anything there that says you lose the win as Mr. France had wanted?
When you run in 20-somethings, 150 points is the equivalent of missing seven races. That's enough to drop a 20-something team below 30th in points, so that win won't get it into the Chase. It wouldn't matter if Ironhead himself showed up to drive; there wouldn't be a waiver for an L6 team.
Yeah but a 20 something place driver isn't making the Chase or getting a legitimate win anyway. The 10 team doesn't appear on their way to either so why not get a win? Heck, may not even get caught?
L6 Penalty would remove you from Chase eligibility anyway from how I interpret the punishment. But like I said, at least get your name in the record book.
So breaking the rules should only be "heavily" punished if we know and it is confirmed that it directly affected the outcome?
Rules are rules, and this little stuff won't go away until they start to make these guys actually care about the repercussions. The 15 points are completely meaningless, he's going to be slotted in the chase based on number of wins. Therefore, since his violation occurred in a race he won, why should he be allowed to start on a level playing field as every other guy with the same number of wins come chase time?
Make these guys think about what they're doing.
^ Yeah. I am so ready for zero rear skew before the race, after the race, and during the race. There is one camera angle at Loudon that has the cars near the wall off turn 4 and the crab-walking down the front straight is so obvious and looks so ridiculous. I remarked during the race that the Gibbs cars seemed more skewed than others (from a random partial sample that I saw). Not that such eyeball measurements mean anything... they don't.
I noticed the rear steer big time even in person at Loudon. It was huge.
....and NASCAR uses a laser to detect it when you can just look? How many degrees?
He knows that.Hey wise guy, they don't and can't laser measure the rear steer. That only occurs under load. During inspection there is no rear steer as the car is sitting static.
Hey wise guy, they don't and can't laser measure the rear steer. That only occurs under load. During inspection there is no rear steer as the car is sitting static.