Reese Witherspoon tweeted a high-five emoji for her A-list stamp of approval that NASCAR banned the Confederate flag.
NASCAR's decision to ban the Confederate flag from its races and venues grabbed headlines and stars like Witherspoon and New Orleans Saints running back Alvin Kamara were quick to praise the stock car series for ridding itself of a symbol long associated with slavery and racism.
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Kamara tweeted as the laps ticked off -- he requested NASCAR send him a car so he can take a spin -- and the sport suddenly had a slew of new, energized fans.
Now comes the tricky part.
In a matter of days, NASCAR will be faced with a daunting question: How to enforce the ban at its sprawling, rowdy tracks once fans are allowed back in and campers start setting up their RVs for race weekends? Approximately 1,000 members of the military will be allowed into Sunday's race near Miami and become the first fans at a NASCAR event since the pandemic shut down sports in March.
The enforcement question is much more likely to be an issue when the series holds races June 20-21 at Talladega, Alabama, where up to 5,000 fans are expected to be allowed in. Flags are a common sight at the superspeedway in the heart of NASCAR's Southern base. NASCAR will work to develop protocols around enforcement, though it's not known where the ban ends? Will security be tasked with policing every Rebel flag string bikini or scrape off all the bumper stickers?
Take off that shirt, or else!
Or else, what?
βThat will certainly be a challenge. Weβll try to do that the right way,β NASCAR executive vice president Steve OβDonnell told SiriusXM on Thursday. βWeβll get ahead of it as we are today in letting people know that, βHey, weβre all about pride, weβre all about America, fly your U.S. flag high, fly your drivers flags high and come on into the track.β But if we see something displayed at the track weβre going to have react and we will. More details to come but Iβm confident weβll do that and weβll do that in a smart way.β
Fellow drivers were quick to credit Bubba Wallace, NASCARβs lone black driver, for pushing NASCAR to enact the ban. Years of bad press and hand-wringing over the fate of the flag evaporated within 48 hours once Wallace publicly condemned the relic of racingβs good olβ boy roots.
βIβve seen too many comments and too many stories from first-time fans that come to a race in years past and the first thing they say, βIβve seen the Confederate flag flying and it made me feel uncomfortable,ββ Wallace told the βTodayβ show. βWe shouldnβt have anybody feeling uncomfortable.β
Wallace finished 11th at Martinsville on Wednesday night, hours after the ban was announced, driving a Black Lives Matter paint scheme with βCompassion, Love, Understandingβ emblazoned on the hood.
βIt was really cool to see what Bubba was able to do,β 2018 NASCAR champion Joey Logano said. βHe should be proud of the movement heβs made for the African-American community in our sport. He always has just by being here, but when you look at the comments he made on CNN the other day and then NASCAR completely answered it. Kudos to NASCAR. Kudos to Bubba for bringing it up and using his platform for something good.β
Brad Daugherty, the lone black Cup Series team owner, told the AP he was βtouched to the coreβ NASCAR banned the flag.
βWhile some might say, βNASCAR, what took you so long?β I feel that is not the right response," he said. "This is a big step in the right direction and now is the time to envision the future. You canβt be looking in the rear-view mirror when you are going 200 mph.β
There were, of course, fans furious at the decision, howling on social media that their rights are being been trampled on and they would continue to wave the stars and bars. NASCAR helmet artist Jason Beam, who paints designs for Jimmie Johnson, Kyle Busch and other star drivers, tweeted that he did not support βerasing only particular elements of historyβ to please a particular audience.
Wallace ripped Beam on social media, tweeting: β You made it clear of where you stand in todayβs matter. All respect lost for ya dawg.β
Johnson, the seven-time NASCAR champion, also cut ties with BEAMdesigns.
βDue to recent posts on social media I have decided to end my relationship with Beam Designs,β Johnson tweeted.
Busch and Ryan Blaney also severed relationships with the helmet designer.
For weeks, NASCAR has been one of the the only live U.S. sports on television and ratings are up a tick in this most unusual of seasons. Through the first 11 races, Cup Series racing on FOX/FS1 is averaged a 2.38 share, up 1% over last yearβs average of 2.35 out of 44 market averages. Martinsville scored 1,711,000 viewers for a weeknight race on FS1.
And now comes the publicity surrounding the flag ban.
The surge of celebs engrossed with NASCAR could be a one-night only instance or perhaps the the star-power support signals the series is headed toward a revival.
βAs far as the optics, NASCAR didnβt have a choice,β NASCAR historian Dan Pierce said. βI applaud the drivers for standing up. But the cynical person in me, especially when youβre dealing with NASCAR, is, did they get the OK from their sponsors ahead of time or from NASCAR? You have to give them credit for making a stand, which isnβt necessarily popular with a significant portion of their fan base.β
