Tuesday's
Sports In Brief The Associated Press
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join the chorus calling for removing the Confederate flag ProFootball Talk on
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site eBay to ban listings of Confederate flags Reuters
Steve
Spurrier’s 2007 comments on Confederate flag worth revisiting NBC Sports
They
fly over motorhomes. They adorn clothing. They are regular fixtures, just like
Ford and Chevrolet, and that is unlikely to change any time soon.
NASCAR
probably would like to see them go away.

The
sanctioning body for the motorsports series backed South Carolina Gov. Nikki
Haley's call to remove the Confederate flag from the Statehouse grounds in the
wake of the Charleston church massacre. NASCAR issued its statement Tuesday,
the same day South Carolina lawmakers agreed to discuss removing the flag and
one day after Haley said "the time has come" to take it down. And
that is as far as NASCAR appears willing to go for now.
"As
our industry works collectively to ensure that all fans are welcome at our
races, NASCAR will continue our long-standing policy to disallow the use of the
Confederate flag symbol in any official NASCAR capacity," NASCAR said.
"While NASCAR recognizes that freedom of expression is an inherent right of
all citizens, we will continue to strive for an inclusive environment at our
events."
International
Speedway Corp., NASCAR'S sister company that owns a majority of the tracks,
echoed the sanctioning body's response.
"We
join NASCAR in support of South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley's position on the
Confederate flag," ISC President John Saunders said in a statement.
"ISC strives to ensure all fans are welcome to enjoy our events and
maintains an inclusive environment at our facilities nationwide. ISC will
continue our long-standing practice to prohibit the sale of Confederate flag
material on our property."
Saunders
declined a request by The Associated Press for further comment. Other tracks
did not respond to requests for comment.
View
galleryFILE - In this Feb. 15, 2008, file photo, flags,
including …
FILE
- In this Feb. 15, 2008, file photo, flags, including a Confederate flag, fap
in the wind durin …
Nine
people were slain last week at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church,
and Dylann Storm Roof, 21, is charged with murder. The white man appeared in
photos holding Confederate flags and burning or desecrating U.S. flags, and
purportedly wrote of fomenting racial violence.
Big
retailers like Wal-Mart, Amazon, Sears, eBay and Etsy all said they would
remove Confederate merchandise from their stores or websites and politicians
across the South called for various steps to move away from the symbol that
many associate with racism.
NASCAR
has faced criticism over the years for various issues, often involving
sponsors. A decade ago, there were questions when hard liquor companies emerged
as potential sponsors for a sport built around fast cars and a series whose
founding in 1948 gave ex-moonshiners a place to race. More recently, the
National Rifle Association drew attention when it struck a sponsorship deal
with Texas Motor Speedway not long after the Sandy Hook Elementary School mass
shooting in Connecticut.
Confederate
flags have been flown by fans at NASCAR races for years. For NASCAR's Southern
500 at Darlington Raceway, a two-and-a-half-hour drive north of Charleston, a
Confederate flag theme was part of poster merchandise from the 1950s into the
late '70s.
Tracks
have long and detailed rules for fans, but none involving the content of flags.
Although NASCAR has eliminated the use of Confederate flags in any official
capacity, it could take things a step further and include language in
sanctioning agreements that would ban them altogether at tracks.
But
that would be difficult to enforce at tracks with hundreds of acres of infield
space and sometimes more than 100,000 fans.
"There's
only so much that you can do with an issue like this if you're NASCAR,"
said Brad Daugherty, a former NBA star and current co-owner of JTG Daugherty
Racing.
"But
I will tell you, being an African-American man going to the racetrack and
seeing the Confederate flag - and I'm a different egg or a different bird
because I'm a Southern kid, I'm a mountain kid, I hunt and fish, I love racing,"
Daugherty said Tuesday on Sirius XM radio. "But to walk into the racetrack
and there's only few that you walk into and see that Confederate flag - it does
make my skin crawl. And even though I do my best to not acknowledge it or to
pay any attention to it, it's there and it bothers me because of what it
represents."
In
2012, NASCAR and track officials canceled plans to have pro golfer Bubba Watson
drive the car from the television series "The Dukes of Hazzard" at
Phoenix International Raceway, which is owned by ISC. Officials cited concerns
about a negative reaction to an image of the Confederate flag on the roof of
the "General Lee."
"The
image of the Confederate flag is not something that should play an official
role in our sport as we continue to reach out to new fans and make NASCAR more
inclusive," NASCAR spokesman David Higdon said at the time. Watson said he
didn't "stand for the Confederate flag" and noted that NASCAR was
"built on moonshining," an occasional theme in the TV show.
Former
"Dukes" actor and ex-Georgia Congressman Ben Jones criticized that
decision.
"As
a cast member of 'The Dukes of Hazzard' and the owner of several 'General
Lees,' I can attest that the car and our show reflect the very best of American
values, and that Hazzard County was a place where racism was not
tolerated," said Jones, who played the mechanic Cooter on the show.
"This action by NASCAR is a provocative and unnecessary overreaction to a
problem that doesn't exist. It is a disgraceful and gratuitous insult to a lot
of very decent people."
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