These pic shows how tony was almost the same level as the no 45 car in front...and also car no 12 in front of 45 and tony was much much higher than those two
Rubbishing the claims that tony was higher
You appear to have assumed that Stewart saw enough of Ward to contemplate action.Moxie wrote:Return to an earlier post:
Was he trying to scare Ward?
Was he trying to throw dirt at Ward?
Was he trying to harm Ward?
Was he trying to take evasive action?
no oval racingJersey Tom wrote:And how much stagger did you have on the rear tires? Zero?marcush. wrote:guys ,i have campaigned a car with a locked diff in competition [...] All it wanted to do was go straight ahead
Exactly!DaveKillens wrote:You appear to have assumed that Stewart saw enough of Ward to contemplate action.Moxie wrote:Return to an earlier post:
Was he trying to scare Ward?
Was he trying to throw dirt at Ward?
Was he trying to harm Ward?
Was he trying to take evasive action?
Is it not possible that Stewart was not aware of Ward, and did not sight him until the moment the car ahead swerved?
Highly doubtful in an on track situation where you have another individual putting themselves at intentional risk. IMHO there would have to be intent.. not negligence. Negligence is on the part of the person breaking the rules allowing for the issue to happen in the 1st place. However IMHO, as I am not a lawyer.WilliamsF1 wrote:theblackangus wrote:I think another thing that some people are forgetting is that when you participate in an event like this you sign a form that pretty much says: If you die, that's your fault. Even if someone else hits you.
I'm sure if there was intent proven somehow, this may not stand up strongly. But with no intent.... that's jut racing.
don't need intent for criminally negligent
You missed the part where I said:MOWOG wrote:That's true. However, in the US, anyone can sue anyone else at any time about anything. (And frequently do... ) Perhaps the best example of this happened after the death of Mark Donahue. His executor filed suit against Goodyear and won, even though Donahue was on record as saying "If I ever die in a race car, blame me, not the car." The jury awarded his estate a fairly sizable sum of money anyway.some people are forgetting is that when you participate in an event like this you sign a form that pretty much says: If you die, that's your fault. Even if someone else hits you.
Some insurance company somewhere will pay a nice chunk of change to the deceased's heirs to make this go away because they are terrified of what "12 jurors tried and true" might do. Also, in most jurisdictions, civil jury decisions can be by majority vote. All the jurors do not have to agree. That's double trouble for defendants.
That was post incident... I'm not sure that really proves anything.Tim.Wright wrote:This doesn't really look like the trajectory of someone who was trying to avoid something to his right...
https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-JbqO ... tewart.JPG
That is after he hit wardTim.Wright wrote:This doesn't really look like the trajectory of someone who was trying to avoid something to his right...
Wrong Wrong Wrong It's not from anybodys PR dept.So whats your point? you copy and paste some BS from their from their PR dept and use that as referance. Anyway what is your point on the turning the car during a non racing period? there is noting on it.
Does not matter about the wing end plate, you can still see what is in front of you, there is no blind spot in front of the car.
I, for one, do not think that Stewart intended to scare Ward, or harm him. I think he saw Ward approaching him at the last second, and attempted to avoid him. We tend to get very detailed and nit picky in F1Technical forums and we like to consider all of the possibilities which are sometimes extreme. This is no different.turbof1 wrote:Just throwing this in as a commenter, but are we really suspecting Stewart of deliberately hit or scare Ward?
If any other driver would have hit Ward, then this discussion would have never taken place. The chances of getting by Stewart were of course a lot higher, since he choose to stand in front of that car.
Exactly, this is a F1 forum after all. I think that only a few members here follow dirt track (no offense to either who follows it or doesn't follow it). I myself have never watched it, but it doesn't take a whole lot of sence that when you see this:Moxie wrote:
Within this forum, there are knowledegeable race fans that know very little about dirt track sprint cars. It seems that they are not convinced about the concept of the cars yawing to the left because of throttle steer. If these seasoned race fans are difficult to convince, then it is worth considering the perceptions of twelve jurors. As criminal charges for Stewart have not been ruled out, I do think it is reasonable to discuss the possible legal strategies.