Home Subscribe
Jobs Cars Homes Shopping Travel Weddings Golf Best of Las Vegas Photo
IN-DEPTH



SPORTS EXTRAS
Local Events




Wednesday, October 06, 2004
Copyright © Las Vegas Review-Journal

Expletive deletes Earnhardt's Cup lead; Busch up to No. 1

By MIKE HARRIS
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS



Dale Earnhardt Jr.
NASCAR takes away 25 points



Kurt Busch
Not rejoicing over lead

A slip of the tongue on television cost Dale Earnhardt Jr. first place and $10,000, penalties imposed by an increasingly image-conscious NASCAR.

Earnhardt was docked 25 points Tuesday in the Nextel Cup standings for using a vulgarity in an NBC interview after his victory at Talladega Superspeedway, dropping him to second place with seven races left in the season. He will appeal the point penalty.

Earnhardt still gets credit for the 14th victory of his career Sunday, and he has plenty of time to make up the deficit on new leader Kurt Busch, with up to 190 points available at each race.

Busch, a Las Vegas native, wasn't celebrating over his newly gained points lead.

"Hopefully these 25 points won't come into the final factor because we want to beat (Earnhardt) on the racetrack," Busch said. "I want to go into the last race with a 155-point edge and that way we won't have to worry about anything.

"(The penalty) is unfortunate. The emotions in victory lane overcame him. He was the dominant car all day and deserved to win."

Nevertheless, Earnhardt's team criticized the punishment as too harsh, and the action served as another example of how NASCAR is trying to shed its image as a sport that traces its roots to Good Ol' Boys running moonshine through the hills of Georgia and the Carolinas.

"The popularity of this sport is based on colorful personalities and the fact that everyone can relate to these drivers and their emotions," said Richie Gilmore, director of competition for Dale Earnhardt Inc. "Now it seems like that's a detriment."

Enjoying tremendous growth in mainstream popularity, the racing series landed a $2.8 billion television contract with NBC and Fox that began in 2001, and this season switched the sponsorship of its top division from cigarette maker R.J. Reynold's Winston brand to telecommunications giant Nextel.

As part of the scrubbing-up process, NASCAR president Mike Helton told drivers in February to watch their language on radio and television. Less than a month later, he showed he meant it: Johnny Sauter lost 25 points for swearing during a radio interview after a Busch Series race in Las Vegas.

Ron Hornaday Jr. also was fined and lost 25 points for cursing during a live radio interview in June during a Busch race in Dover, Del.

"Helton made it clear ... that we, as a family sport, were taking this very seriously and adhering to FCC guidelines," NASCAR spokesman Mike Zizzo said. "The timing is unfortunate for Dale Jr., but NASCAR also made it clear to the competitors that we would police the last 10 races just like we did the first 26."

It's also part of a trend in sports and media, the most talked-about example being Janet Jackson's "wardrobe malfunction" during her halftime performance at the Super Bowl. CBS was fined a record $550,000 by the FCC for Jackson's breast-baring.

NBC does not use a delay to censor its NASCAR telecasts. That's why viewers in nearly 7 million homes were able to hear Earnhardt use a vulgarity when he was asked about the significance of his fifth victory at Talladega. Earnhardt told NBC, "It don't mean s--- right now. Daddy's won here 10 times."

Earnhardt's father, the most popular driver of his era, was killed in a last-lap crash at the Daytona 500 in 2001.

Father and son won the adoration of millions in part because they built reputations for speaking their minds. Some have criticized NASCAR for trying to turn its drivers into colorless automatons, whose victory lane celebrations revolve around repeated mentions of sponsors.

"This incident is going to force everyone in the sport to rethink showing any excitement in what should be a jubilant moment," Gilmore said.

Earnhardt Jr. wasn't available for comment Tuesday. On Sunday, he defended his use of colorful language.

"I hope they understand that it was in jubilation and I know me and those other guys that got fined let it slip, but it's two different circumstances. I think that when you're happy and joyous about something and it happens, I think it's different than being angry and cursing in anger," he said.

"If anybody was offended by the four-letter word I said ... I can't imagine why they would have tuned into the race in the first place."

Review-Journal writer Jeff Wolf contributed to this report.





POINTS FLIP-FLOP

The Nextel Cup standings after the 25-point penalty assessed to Dale Earnhardt Jr.:

1. Kurt Busch - 5530

2. Dale Earnhardt Jr. - 5518

3. Jeff Gordon - 5482

4. Mark Martin - 5432

5. Matt Kenseth - 5393

6. Tony Stewart - 5391

7. Ryan Newman - 5384

8. Elliott Sadler - 5377

9. Jimmie Johnson - 5371

10. Jeremy Mayfield - 5263

---
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS


Advertisement