Angry NASCAR Driver Attacks Opponent, Kicks Car
NASCAR Driver Attacks Opponent.
During a hysterical episode at Martinsville Speedway in Virginia, NASCAR driver Andrew Grady attacked his opponent Davey Callihan. On Saturday, Grady was seen striking Callihan as he sat in his car, and the entire incident was caught on camera.
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Grady continued his assault, kicking the truck before he was scooped up and led away by an employee. After striking Callihan multiple times and kicking his car, other individuals were seen trying to calm Grady down. When Grady and Callihan collided in their heat race for a promotion, Grady let loose with his bombardment. He said that Callihan had flipped him off, and that he had subsequently lost his cool.
Driver Said To Racing America.
He flicked me off," the driver said to Racing America. So I proceeded to give his brain a Mike Tyson beating. We ended up doing really well. It was a fast-moving car. But yeah, you get these d*ckheads who come in here and run with us, and they have no business driving a late-model, let alone a lawn mower.
He wasn't even in close range when he dove on me and hooked me. Then when I tried to approach him, he rudely dismissed me. So I began to punch him in the face, like Mike Tyson. The sport you're participating in is one for men. You can get away with flogging a mature man's a** if you "destroy a man." As for me, that's how I feel about it.
Callihan allegedly denied flipping off Grady, as reported by Racing America editor-in-chief Matt Weaver. No, he responded, he had never flipped somebody the bird. He walked right up to me in the race vehicle and began punching me. I can see why he's mad, but remember, we were battling for our very lives when we fought for that transfer seat.
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To get their take on this, Newsweek has reached out to NASCAR.
Emotions run high in NASCAR, both on and off the track, and many of the sport's greatest drivers have spoken frankly about their own experiences. After his son Adam was killed in a car accident, Kyle Petty told Newsweek that he still had no second thoughts about continuing to race.
His response was a firm "No." Never. The thought of slowing down never occurred to me. To the contrary, I felt compelled to keep racing, possibly for a longer period of time than I should have, in honour of Adam.
"Racing has been a part of my life since the moment of my conception. It's in my genes. Growing up in a rural North Carolina mill and farming community, I learned that life didn't stop when the crops failed or the textile business shifted. Because it was all you'd ever known, you learned to adapt and keep going. Your ability to persevere through adversity and tragedy speaks volumes about your character. Yeah, I did it, too.
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