turbof1 wrote:Just throwing this in as a commenter, but are we really suspecting Stewart of deliberately hit or scare Ward?
Yes of course he's a hothead and had that reputation. However, he came out of a corner behind someone else at reduced pace, probably still pissed off. A driver's focus is bound to drop at that point. On top of that it was a night race and Ward has a black overall, so barely visible unless right in your lights.
Given all of that, I think Stewart didn't notice him until Ward was right in the middle of the corner. At such moments you can only react anymore on reflexes. Deliberately trying to scare or even hit an other driver isn't a reflex; it needs thought processing. The time frame just isn't there for that.
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If any other driver would have hit Ward, then this discussion would have never taken place.
Deliberately hit? No, absolutely not. He's a top professional racing driver that risks his life on a regular basis, I just expect him to have a higher regard for life that to hit somebody like that on purpose.
Scare? I honestly don't know. That's the unfortunate part of all this, he's made a brand out of his temper. And the sport has supported that. He's done things which very easily could have injured others in the past, intentionally. That's the key to all of this. And maybe 'scare' isn't quite the right word, maybe it was more like 'teach a lesson' or 'send a message.'
I'm a lurker here for the most part, I don't want to fan the flames the wrong way but I find the suggestion of lower focus curious. Personally, I sort of lump all the top racing drivers together in the same general bucket. They all risk their lives, have passions and strong emotions on the track, have acute reflexes. The top ones all take their craft pretty seriously, they train, they use simulators and tools, they look at mistakes, they do stuff to help them win. They drive different vehicles on different tracks but I personally think there is a lot more similarity than many fans would like to admit. Tony Stewart is a multi-time 'world champion' in top flight stock car racing and he's won substantial championships in open wheel racing, he's competed in top level endurance racing events. He is as accomplished, if not more so than some F1 world champions, albeit in different sports; maybe that's not a completely fair comparison but I'm making it anyways. Do those guys let their focus drop on the track? Do they not know what's going on on the track? Do they not see or not know where competitors are? Did he not feel the contact that caused the accident in the first place? It took two people for this accident to happen and I honestly believe it was an accident in that Tony didn't intend to injure or kill anyone but he's a very elite world class racing driver, isn't he? I just can't fathom him being unaware of what's going on on the track, especially when he caused the accident that lead to it. He's not some young upstart that just got promoted up, he's been racing a long long time with lot of success.