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BackNASCAR had the chance to make a stand and blew it (cont'd)

Threatening language has always been a part of technical bulletins and the rule book: "...the driver, car owner and crew chief are subject to a fine, and/or disallowance of qualifying time, and/or loss of Championship points, and/or loss of finishing position(s) in the Event, and/or disqualification, and/or suspension."

Quite a laundry list of possibilities, eh?

But never -- if you consider $100,000 fines, 100-point deductions and six-race suspensions minor -- has a major step been taken.

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This would have been the chance.

Sitting Kurt Busch out of a race -- even an exhibition event that in the big picture is inconsequential -- would have been significant. It might have delayed the onset of the next case of "the red mist" erasing a driver's every thought of reason and using his car as a 3,400-pound weapon.

The current schedule of sanctions hardly seems to work to great effect. Despite being on probation -- albeit for difference incidents -- for more than half of last year, Busch and Stewart have not proven to be quick learners.

The on-track confrontation at Dover last June that caused Busch to drive his car to within inches of Stewart's on an active, fully-occupied pit road; looked shockingly similar to what happened Friday night (watch video).

Specifically, it appeared that Busch moved his car from one lane on the racetrack to another that just so happened to be occupied by Stewart's -- and Stewart didn't appear to cut Busch one-quarter-of-an-inch of slack either time.

The result in both cases was Busch in the wall, followed by an irrationally agitated response.

All things considered, allegations of taunts by Busch being answered by one of Stewart's fists while in the NASCAR trailer for their initial defusing session should be answered next week when the sanctioning body issues whatever -- if any penalties -- it decides upon after "thinking it over," as Hunter put it.

Another non-point event remains for Busch between now and the Daytona 500: Thursday's Gatorade Duel qualifying race; but Hunter refused to be drawn into speculation of whether suspending Busch from that would be considered.

"One of the things that people overlook is how competitive this sport is," Hunter said. "They're running around out there 190 miles an hour, they're inches apart -- the flick of a finger or the bat of an eyelash is the time they have to make decisions. And in reviewing what we've seen so far, of that accident, it was a racing accident.

"What happened afterwards -- our guys have got to control their emotions when they're in that racecar. We can not let things get out of control on that racetrack, so I think that's the reason they're thinking this one through.

"We'll make a decision, and whatever that decision is, some people are going to like it and some people aren't going to like it. And we know that."

For now, NASCAR's admonishment that "we have made it very clear to these two drivers that it's in their best interest to put a lot of space between themselves and not put us in the position of having to make a judgment call -- they need to understand that and I think they do," as Hunter put it, will have to serve (read more).

But somehow, that seems to be a pity when such an otherwise strong statement could have been made, for the benefit of the rest of the garage full of competitors.

The opinions expressed are solely those of the writer

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