A Sequel of The Smoke and Kyle Show Coming to a Track Near You?
Kyle Busch doesn't know when to leave bad enough alone. By stomping away from Daytona last week like a little child that didn't get the ice cream cone he wanted, he made himself look bad enough.
But only a fool steps in the same poop with both feet. Enter Nascar's biggest court jester, Kyle Busch.
He had five days to listen to every commentator and driver who cared to comment on the wreck simply explain it as "wrecking himself" with a badly misjudged blocking attempt that caught the front of Tony Stewart's car.
He had five days to examine the footage that clearly shows his car striking Tony's in that block, not the other way around.
So what does he say Thursday when he finally met with the press?
You guessed it, it was all Tony's fault.
He told reporters that Tony Stewart "dumped him" on the last lap to earn the victory, and he couldn't even just say that and shut up. No not Kyle.
He went on to say, "I think NASCAR can take a step in looking at it, and if the second-place driver bumps the leader, then black-flag (that driver), he doesn’t get the win."
This from a man who has bumped more cars than a Winn Dixie shopping cart.
Such behavior is getting old with his fellow drivers and even his own fan club gets that kind of 'fingernails on the black board' cringe when they hear him say stupid things like that.
The question is no longer how stupid is Kyle Busch, but how long will he remain that stupid.
So will the Tony and Kyle show have a second chapter?
Not from Stewart, who also sometimes takes risks, but drives like a champion who sees the big picture. But from Kyle who seems to only be interested in "style points," who knows?
Should he try and further act like a toddler on a temper tantrum and 'even the score' with Stewart, his stupidity will start costing him valuable driver's points and possible suspensions.
A spokesman for NASCAR said the fault of the wreck was from a bad block move on Kyle's part and Stewart was not talked to about it.
What they could have or should have said was, "Sometimes you win with a risky move, sometimes you lose with one. Kyle lost with one today."
Had Kyle said that instead of whining like a spoiled three year old, he could have come out with at least a little respect.
This way, he just left with a little less.

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