NASCAR says noose found in Bubba Wallace’s garage at Talladega - Juicy 2.0?

NASCAR says noose found in Bubba Wallace's garage at Talladega

A noose was found in the garage stall of Bubba Wallace at Talladega Superspeedway in Lincoln, Alabama, on Sunday, less than two weeks after Wallace, who is NASCAR's only black driver, successfully pushed the stock car racing series to ban the Confederate flag at its tracks and facilities.

"Late this afternoon, NASCAR was made aware that a noose was found in the garage stall of the 43 team. We are angry and outraged, and cannot state strongly enough how seriously we take this heinous act," NASCAR said in a statement. "We have launched an immediate investigation, and will do everything we can to identify the person(s) responsible and eliminate them from the sport.

"As we have stated unequivocally, there is no place for racism in NASCAR, and this act only strengthens our resolve to make the sport open and welcoming to all."

Bubba Wallace is NASCAR's only black driver. "This will not break me, I will not give in nor will I back down," he tweeted after Sunday's incident at Talladega. AP Photo/Steve Helber
Wallace never saw the noose, ESPN's Marty Smith reported. It was first seen by a member of Wallace's team, who immediately brought it to the attention of NASCAR, Smith reported. NASCAR told Fox Sports that it will work with law enforcement on the incident.

Wallace, who drives the No. 43 Chevrolet for racing icon Richard Petty, said in a statement that he was "incredibly saddened" by the act.

"Today's despicable act of racism and hatred leaves me incredibly saddened and serves as a painful reminder of how much further we have to go as a society and how persistent we must be in the fight against racism," Wallace wrote on Twitter. "Over the last several weeks, I have been overwhelmed by the support from people across the NASCAR industry, including other drivers and team members in the garage. Together, our sport has made a commitment to driving real change and championing a community that is accepting and welcoming of everyone.

"Nothing is more important and we will not be deterred by the reprehensible actions of those who seek to spread hate. As my mother told me today, "they are just trying to scare you." This will not break me, I will not give in nor will I back down. I will continue to proudly stand for what I believe in."

NASCAR has spent years trying to distance itself from the Confederate flag, long a part of its moonshine-running roots from the its founding more than 70 years ago. Five years ago, former chairman Brian France tried to ban flying the flags at tracks, a proposal that was not enforced and largely ignored.

This year was different and it was Wallace who led the charge, calling for the sanctioning body to prohibit the flag.

But outside the track on Sunday, vehicles waving and flying Confederate flags lined the boulevard running past the massive speedway, and a plane flew above the track pulling a banner of the Confederate flag that said, "Defund NASCAR."

NASCAR has not said how it plans to stop fans from displaying the flag on track property, and none of the instances Sunday at Talladega were inside the facility.

Andrew Murstein, the co-owner of Richard Petty Motorsports, told Sports Business Journal that he was "shocked and saddened" by the incident, adding, "You would like to think that the country has changed for the better in the last 40-plus years. Unfortunately, in many ways it hasn't."

Michael McDowell, who drives the No. 34 Ford, tweeted: "God help us. The level of evil it takes to do something like this is disgusting. This is enraging and heartbreaking all at the same time."

Los Angeles Lakers superstar LeBron James also weighed in on Twitter, writing: "Sickening! @BubbaWallace my brother! Know you don't stand alone! I'm right here with you as well as every other athlete. I just want to continue to say how proud I am of you for continuing to take a stand for change here in America and sports! @NASCAR I salute you as well!"

Dale Earnhardt Jr., who is among the nominees for NASCAR's next Hall of Fame class, wrote on social media: "Hope Bubba wins it tomorrow."

Sunday's race, which was pushed back to 3 p.m. ET Monday because of inclement weather, is the first amid the coronavirus pandemic for which NASCAR opened the gates for up to 5,000 fans.

 
Wow, strong women standing by her man.



Bubba Wallace said on Wednesday that he was “relieved” that a rope tied into what resembled a noose found in his garage at Talladega Superspeedway wasn’t meant to be a message of hate directed at him, and his girlfriend is also “thankful” it was a misunderstanding.

“I am so proud of you for standing up for what is right and continuing to do so without fear of the outcome. For continuing to stand faced with uncertainty and fear all with a smile on your face,” Amanda Carter wrote in an Instagram post.

“I am so proud of you for using your platform. I wish the people saying hurtful comments knew you.
I wish everyone knew you.”

Wallace and Carter, who works as a financial analyst in Charlotte, N.C., have been dating for several years and she was often seen at races with him before restrictions were put in place due to the coronavirus pandemic.

“I hope people continue to stand with you because you’re standing for so many others... so many little boys and girls who dream of going fast but haven’t seen someone who looks like them, for all the new and old fans who felt uncomfortable coming to a race and for everyone who has experienced racism,” her post continued.

“I am so thankful that this was not a purposeful act, I am so thankful you are safe.”

The noose was tied at the end of a rope used as a garage door pull. Following the discovery on Sunday, an FBI investigation determined that it had been present in the garage as early as October of 2019, when no one could’ve known Wallace’s team would be assigned to it. NASCAR officials have not released an official photo but said it was unusual and that an internal probe aimed at finding out who and why it was tied that way in the first place continues.

In a Twitter post on Wednesday, Wallace said "I think we'll gladly take a little embarrassment over what the alternatives could have been," in reference to NASCAR's initial reaction to the incident, which included a pre-race show of support for Wallace on Monday.
This guy is so incredibly white, is it even surprising he's got a honky gf? What is it with light-skinned black people and the need to be so militant?
 
The media is NASCAR are claiming this is an image of it:

noose-nascar.jpg
 
Why does it look oddly zoomed in? Just my optics?
It does look weird. The corrugation is slanted, but the edge of the door is very sharp vertical. And I'm not sure why they put the same photo side by side like that. I think maybe that is what is throwing it off a little. Plus the left side is lightened up more than the right.

It does look more like a noose in this photo. It also looks a lot bigger in this photo than it did in the other ones.
 
It's excruciatingly difficult to make out exactly how large it is in any of those pictures. I *think* you could fit a whole hand through it, but even in the worst case scenario I can't see it being anywhere near large enough to fit a head through it.

If silly buggers haven't been played at some point along the line and that is GENUINELY what was hanging up, then the reaction is mildly more understandable. It's not '15 FBI agents called in after Noose found hanging in NASCAR's only black driver's garage' worthy, but it's worse than it being one of those generic loops on the end of the garage door pulls that have shown up everywhere in footage.

I'm also mildly surprised that officials recognized that their initial statement went overboard.
 
I wonder how the other NASCAR drivers feel after they all volunteered to give Bubba pole position this weekend? I gather normally they tend to be big on drivers earning their place in the packs.

Probably just fine. It cost most of them little to nothing and everyone and their mother can see the long knives are out. They got families to think about.
 
The media is NASCAR are claiming this is an image of it:

View attachment 1406153
I'm almost speechless that they're STILL trying to double down on it.

This photo is pretty heavily zoomed in and at a specially-tailored angle. NASCAR just doesn't wanna admit that they immediately cucked out and wasted FBI time the instant their token minority driver cried wolf...
 
And people wonder why I call BS on the NASCAR statements.

If it was an actual hangman's noose NASCAR and the press would be making sure we all saw it because racism.

We have video and photographic evidence it was not a noose and it was not the only one in the bays contrary to Bubba's claims who said he didn't see it but willing to double down that its a noose.
"A noose!? In the middle of a locked garage, surrounded by security cameras, accessible exclusively by your own staff!?"

"Yes."

"May I see it?"

"... No."
 
"A noose!? In the middle of a locked garage, surrounded by security cameras, accessible exclusively by your own staff!?"

"Yes."

"May I see it?"

"... No."
And when NASCAR posted a photo of the alleged noose the rope is brand new despite the FBI saying a noose-like rope had been there since 2019. Gee whiz I bet this is totally normal. Whatcha doin' there, Driver?
 
And when NASCAR posted a photo of the alleged noose the rope is brand new despite the FBI saying a noose-like rope had been there since 2019. Gee whiz I bet this is totally normal. Whatcha doin' there, Driver?
the NASCAR person I know just keeps on playing "IT TOTTALLY WAS A NOOSE" despite the inconsistency.
 
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