Updated throughout the day with quick takes from staff.
by Jeff Gluck • Nov 11, 2011 11:05 AM EST
Kyle Busch didn't rape or murder anyone. Nor did he molest children or rob someone at gunpoint. He didn't fail a drug test or get caught drunk driving.
But based on the reaction to his intentional crash of Ron Hornaday Jr. at Texas, you would have thought Busch was right up there with Jerry Sandusky.
Grab your torches and pitchforks! Burn him at the stake!
Now, even Busch's sponsor M&M's has joined in adding to the hysterics. Mars, which owns M&M's, pulled its sponsorship of Busch for the final two races of the season while at the same time saying it would return as his sponsor next year.
Why?
I could understand Mars cutting ties with Busch for the rest of the year if the company wanted to end its relationship with the driver permanently. But trying to send a message to Busch, who already paid for his lapse in judgment by getting parked at Texas, amounts to public humiliation.
What Busch did was bad, no doubt. Not this bad, though.
This can be a difficult thing to say, but I feel sorry for Busch. Mars is clearly not a good fit for his hard-edged personality, yet he's stuck trying to sell candy to kids and families while he should be sponsored by a company that embraces everything about the driver – warts and all.
When Tony Stewart drove for The Home Depot, it often seemed he had the company's unwavering support. And Kevin Harvick seems like he can do no wrong in Budweiser's eyes.
Busch and Mars, though, is like trying to fit a square peg in an M&M's-shaped hole.
I don't agree whatsoever with what Busch did to Hornaday at Texas. But at the same time, what did he do that was so much more outrageous than other drivers' retaliatory actions over the last two seasons?
Even Brad Keselowski said there was no difference between Busch intentionally crashing Hornaday and Carl Edwards flipping Keselowski at Atlanta.
Being the lightning rod he is, Busch was penalized in part for his past history. NASCAR felt Busch's actions were particularly blatant, and so officials issued a weekend suspension.
That's fine. I have no problem with that.
But the NASCAR punishment should have been enough and sent the message to Busch that further actions were unacceptable.
Instead, it seems everyone – including Busch's sponsors – just keep piling on.
And of course, Busch has no choice but to listen. He has to make it work at Joe Gibbs Racing because he's already burned nearly every other bridge to a competitive team.
Hendrick Motorsports? Been there, done that.
Roush Fenway Racing? No way Jack Roush would hire a Busch brother.
Richard Childress Racing? That team's owner has already tried to kick Busch's ass.
Penske Racing? One Busch brother is probably enough.
So aside from perhaps second-tier teams like Earnhardt-Ganassi Racing and Michael Waltrip Racing, where could Busch go? Stewart-Haas? Start his own Cup team?
Busch will come into the media center today and apologize and say all the right things and pledge to change. He has to. There are no other options, because that's what M&M's wants.
The chocolate company, it seems, wants to Busch to introduce its newest flavor: Vanilla.
13 comments
Jeff Gluck:
Opinion: Why Kyle Busch Is Getting A Raw Deal From M&M's
Jeff Gluck:
Opinion: Why Kyle Busch Is Getting A Raw Deal From M&M's
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Comments
Enough Already
Well said Gluck.
If the 18 wins on Sunday, here’s hoping he dedicates the victory to Interstate Batteries, who we now know has some very big cogliones.
by longtimeracefan on Nov 11, 2011 11:19 AM EST reply actions
HOUSTON, WE HAVE A PROBLEM
There is much to be said, but I will shorten it to this. Fans are beginning to be as disgusted with the media as they are with Kyle Busch. This fawning over a driver who has been a punk since he started driving for Nascar is sickening. Perhaps you should read this http://www.frontstretch.com/mmclaughlin/36338/ and the comments to discover how most fans feel.
by factfinder on Nov 11, 2011 11:31 AM EST reply actions
factfinder, That was a great article and very true.
by carol-88-fan on Nov 12, 2011 7:18 AM EST up reply actions
Joe Gibbs JGR has chosen to keep Kyle & I’m going to support that because I think his potential is still worth it. But I’ll believe M&M Mars when I see them back on the 18.
by DRLDeBoer on Nov 11, 2011 12:01 PM EST reply actions
I think it’s absolutely ridiculous to take themselves off for the final two races when they’re coming back next year. Either you support him or you don’t. Make up your mind Mars.
by Tiffany Dufrene on Nov 11, 2011 12:12 PM EST reply actions
Huh?
No, Jeff. A raw deal would have been if they dropped him outright on Monday morning. NASCAR is a business, and sponsors keep the sport going. All the talent in the world, as Kyle might actually possess, is meaningless if you can’t represent your team and sponsors in an acceptable manner. Under the circumatances, Mars’ response is actually pretty reasonable.
by Ron Frankl on Nov 11, 2011 12:32 PM EST reply actions
Not really Jeff
the “Chocolate Company” has been associated with all of Kyles bad press over the last week and i doubt it is publicity they particularly like.
Dropping him for a couple of weeks probably costs Kyle money and sends a message they won’t tolerate that nonsense.
by RichyJ on Nov 11, 2011 1:33 PM EST reply actions
I agree with RichyJ. Mars is sending Kyle a clear message—shape up or they’ll ship out and their sponsorship dollars won’t have problems landing at another top-tier Cup team when their contract with JGR expires. Nascar’s previous punishments for Kyle’s unacceptable actions obviously have had no affect on Kyle or Friday’s incident in Texas wouldn’t have occurred. Maybe M&M’s withholding sponsorship coupled with whatever plan of action Joe Gibbs probably has in store for Kyle going forward will drive home the message that he needs professional help to deal with his behavior issues. Kyle has only himself to blame for the public humiliation.
by NorCalSal on Nov 11, 2011 3:20 PM EST reply actions
Good article.
Good on Interstate Batteries for stepping in when M&Ms threw their own temper tantrum.
JGR should really consider sitting down with M&Ms and Home Depot and discuss swapping the sponsorships for Busch and Logano. Neither one is a good fit for right now, but swapping them would make a lot more sense. This assumes, of course, that Home Depot would take Busch.
by BrotherFlounder on Nov 11, 2011 4:44 PM EST reply actions
Not a "Raw Deal" but the "Golden Rule"...He who has the gold rules.
Kyle received what he deserved. And M&Ms is well within their rights…It is their money and their logo on the car. Anyone wanting to drive in NASCAR knows how the game is played.
If anything, instead of a raw deal, Kyle is lucky he drives for Gibbs.
by CaptK on Nov 12, 2011 6:22 PM EST reply actions
Its about his body of work!!
M&Ms was getting tired of his crap and sent him a message. The next time he messes up, and believe me, there will be a next time, I don’t want to hear any whining from the Kyle fanatics when M&Ms dumps him.
Also can the media please quit writing “Kyle is mature” articles? Nobody was buying it before and we definately won’t be now!!!
by Chris in Crestview on Nov 13, 2011 12:41 AM EST reply actions
Great article
Agree M&M’s isn’t a good fit for Kyle. Wish Interstate Batteries had the money to go full time with him. I agree Harvick can do anything without a peep from Budwiser. I guess wrecks and hand to hand combat is OK with them. At least Kyle doesn’t choke, punch people in their cars, and jump over cars to beat on people. I think that’s a worse image.
by MacRaven on Nov 15, 2011 6:31 AM EST reply actions
Perspective
If we were looking at one “issue”, the Hornaday issue, the punishment would seem fitting in that M&M’s Mars would declare a “cooldown” period and distance themselves from Shrub…until the media heat subsides.
This is not the case however. Shrub has adventured across the line several times this year, progressively escalating the severity of his actions. While Gibbs is stepping up to take the heat (admirably), Shrub still projects an air of “can’t touch this” immunity to consequence. Until the boy gets sat in a corner and can show (with actions, not words) that he understands there are (impacting) consequences to his bad behavior, Shrub will not change.
w³slinger = world wide webslinger
by W3slinger on Nov 16, 2011 12:55 PM EST reply actions
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