Joe Gibbs Racing suspended two members of Martin Truex Jr's pit crew after getting involved in an argument at Indy (Google Images) |
However, Truex's tire changers and Busch's crew chief Adam Stevens got into a heated argument on pit road. Front-tire changer Chris Taylor and rear-changer Lee Cunningham were the two Truex crewmen involved in the shouting match.
One of the tire changers can be seen in this video clapping sarcastically as Stevens walks past their pit box. The No. 18 crew chief steps over and the two exchange words. The second Truex tire changer steps in and attempts to escort Stevens from their pit box, telling his "I don't care who you are! Get out of my box!" several times. No punches were thrown, no shoving was done, this was simply a case of a few passionate crewmen voicing their displeasure with each other over a racing incident. The No. 78 team has every right to not want a rival crew chief in their pit box
But while this should have been the end of this minor flare up, it wasn't. Both Cunningham and Taylor received three-week suspensions for their role in the argument. However, it NASCAR that handed down the sanctions this time. It also wasn't Furniture Row Racing. Both men were benched by Joe Gibbs Racing.
This news left a bad taste in the mouths of many NASCAR fans, and more still feel this is a very bad look for the sport as a whole. Apparently, the terms of the technical alliance between FRR and JGR also stipulate that JGR provides FRR with a pit crew. This means that even though they pit a car for another team, Truex Jr's pit crew consists of Joe Gibbs Racing personnel. This makes them JGR employees, which makes it Coach Gibbs' choice to reprimand them if need be. That's all fine and good.
But that doesn't mean it was needed in this instance. JGR officials should have simply "swallowed the whistle" on what should've been a non-issue.
Ever since entering their technical partnership prior to last year, Joe Gibbs Racing and Furniture Row Racing have been next to unstoppable. Truex won four times last year, while JGR's quartet of drivers won 12 races between them. That's almost half of the races run last season.
This year, however, Truex has already won three races, 14 stages, 29 playoff points, and is well on his way to the regular season points championship and the 15 playoff point bonus that comes with it. Hamlin's win at NHMS two weeks ago is JGR's lone win this season. They have been close many times with Busch, but they have not been able to get any of their other drivers in the win column.
Busch is riding a 365+ day winless streak and on the cusp of potentially missing the playoffs. Throw in the fact that Stevens was not penalized for his role in the argument, and many fans have perceived this to be a very politically-charged statement by JGR.
Furniture Row has outrun JGR all season long, which can't make the folks at JGR all that happy. So, as many fans said on social media yesterday, if you can't beat 'em, suspend 'em, right? It would appear that JGR is reminding FRR that they are nothing more than a satellite team of the JGR mothership and that JGR is the reason for all of their success. Not because of Martin Truex Jr's driving talent. Not because of Cole Pearn's race-winning calls. Not because of the boys and girls that work tirelessly at the FRR shop in Denver. It is only because of the parts and pieces supplied by Joe Gibbs Racing.
While it might not have been intended this way, this clearly looks like a power grab by JGR to reassert their dominance in the Toyota camp and slow down their stiffest competition. Especially since Stevens was not reprimanded.
JGR does some things differently than most teams and one of those things is treating their crew chiefs as executives in the organizational structure. If they are going to be treated as middle-management, are JGR's crew chiefs not expected to rise about petty squabbling? Rather than defend themselves and their team, were Taylor and Cunningham just supposed to say, 'Sorry Mr. Stevens, it won't happen again?' They might be JGR employees during the week, but on Sunday's they pit a car for a rival team. Come race day, they are competitors with the four JGR cars.
Many fans and media members also brought up the fact that Busch was not reprimanded by JGR officials this year at Las Vegas for walking halfway down pit road to punch Joey Logano after the race was over. Busch getting off scot-free for assaulting another driver while two crewmen get a three-week suspension for calmly escorting a crew chief from your pit box is a pretty glaring double-standard.
So where do we go from here?
Barney Visser, owner of Truex's No.78, issued the obligatory press release saying that they supported the actions taken by JGR. But it's hard to imagine this sitting too well with him and the folks at FRR.
Is Truex supposed to not race the JGR cars as hard as the 36 others on the track? If he winds up racing one of them for the championship, is he supposed to roll over when the race winds down?
Optics are everything, especially in NASCAR racing. Whether it was meant as a shot across the bow of Furniture Row Racing or not, that's what these suspensions appear to be. Technical alliances can clearly be difficult to understand, especially now that the line between teams is that much blurrier, but they have become a necessary part of the game for smaller teams to stay competitive.
It will be very interesting to see how this story plays itself out and if there will be any further repercussions from it.
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