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TheOldProgrammer
July 27th, 2010, 8:33 AM
WTF??? As if NA$CAR doesn't have enough problems, this should be good for business... :13:

AP Source: NASCAR fines drivers for comments
http://sports.yahoo.com/nascar/news;_ylt=AonqpS6lTU9Oi7ULicrY.KzTv7YF?slug=ap-nascar-driversfined

NASCAR gets tougher to protect its brand
http://sports.yahoo.com/nascar/news;_ylt=Aon6.uD6CVzBAwlTswrP9oPov7YF?slug=ap-nascar-inthepits

:smoke

Rick
July 27th, 2010, 8:48 AM
Heil Hitler! How's that for branding an all American sport?

They have ways to make drivers shut the hell up!

TheOldProgrammer
July 27th, 2010, 8:57 AM
From Jayski...


Report: NASCAR fines unnamed drivers for comments: UPDATE: NASCAR has fined at least two of its star drivers this season for making critical comments about the racing series, The Associated Press has learned. People familiar with the penalties told the AP the comments were considered disparaging to the sport. The people spoke on condition of anonymity because NASCAR is not publicly identifying the topflight drivers it fined. They say one driver was penalized as much as $50,000. The decision to fine competitors for critical comments puts NASCAR in line with many other professional sports leagues. The NFL and NBA both routinely issue fines for criticism of officiating. It also backs up NASCAR's season-long campaign to rebuild the slumping sport through an improved on-track product and off-track promotion from its drivers.(Associated Press/ESPN.com)(7-26-2010)
UPDATE: The Associated Press has learned that NASCAR warned teams during the offseason that public criticism of the sport would no longer be tolerated, and at least two star drivers have been fined-one as much as $50,000-for comments that were deemed destructive to the industry. NASCAR spokesman Ramsey Poston on Monday night confirmed some action had been taken, but would not discuss details. "It is the sanctioning body's obligation on behalf of the industry and our fans to protect the sport's brand," Poston said. "Any action taken by NASCAR has nothing to do with the drivers expressing an opinion-it's focused on actions or comments that materially damage the sport. We have specifically discussed this in meetings with teams, drivers and stakeholders." Drivers all declined to publicly discuss the policy, but it shouldn't come as any surprise-considering NASCAR's heightened effort this year to re-ignite interest in a sport that's been fighting sagging attendance, declining television ratings and overall fan apathy for several seasons. NASCAR has taken several aggressive steps toward improving the on-track product, but its top brass decided that outstanding events aren't enough to overcome the negative perception created every time a driver publicly blasts the series.(Associated Press)(7-27-2010)
:smoke