Sitting out today's race at Watkins Glen was the right thing -- the only thing -- for Tony Stewart to do.
It never should have been a question.
Hours
after his team's tactless announcement that it would be "business as
usual" despite Stewart hitting and killing Kevin Ward Jr. during a
sprint car race in upstate New York on Saturday night, Stewart wisely
reversed course. The emotions were simply too much for everyone
involved, Stewart said in a statement, acknowledging that a race track
was the last place he should be right now.
Though police say charges have not been ruled out, there is no
evidence of criminal intent. But a man is dead and, criminal or not,
Stewart is responsible as the driver of the car that hit Ward. Racing
not even 24 hours later would have trivialized the gravity of the
situation.
Everyone grieves in different ways, and it's true that
sports have provided much-needed solace during times fraught with
emotion and sadness. The NFL and Major League Baseball helped the entire
nation heal in the dark days following 9/11. Adrian Peterson played two
days after the death of his young son while Brett Favre took the field
the day after his father died.
But Ward's death was far too
personal for Stewart to go anywhere near a track. He needs time to cry,
to question, to grieve, to be surrounded by the love and support of
those closest to him.
It's not the time for him to climb into a race car.
Racing is a dangerous sport, and anyone who climbs into a car has
made his or her peace with that. But there is a big difference between
taking your life in your hands and taking someone else's life, and
Stewart needs time to process the emotional fallout. He said in his
statement that "there aren't words" to describe his sadness at the
crash, and police said he was "visibly shaken" after.
There is no
room for distraction in a car that weighs more than a ton and can go
well over 200 mph, and Stewart would have been faced with reminders of
Ward and the fatal crash at every turn. It's a good bet Stewart didn't
get much, if any, sleep on Saturday night, either, and that surely would
have affected his reactions.
Some said Stewart should have raced
to honor Ward's memory. Others crassly said Stewart would be a fool to
give up the precious points that could get him into the Chase. (Regan
Smith will drive Stewart's car, instead.)

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