Horrifying crash at Daytona exposes risks to fans
The Associated Press
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — The risks of racing extend beyond
the drivers.
Fans can wind up in the danger zone,
too.
A horrifying crash on the last lap of a race at Daytona International
Speedway injured at least 30 fans Saturday and provided another stark reminder of what can happen
when a car going nearly 200 mph is suddenly launched toward the spectator
areas.
The victims were sprayed with large chunks of debris — including a
tire — after rookie Kyle Larson's machine careened into the fencing that is designed to protect the
massive grandstands lining NASCAR's most famous track.
"I love the sport,"
said Shannan Devine, who witnessed the carnage from her 19th-row seat, about 250 feet away. "But
no one wants to get hurt over it."
The fencing served its primary
purpose, catapulting what was left of Larson's car back onto the track. But it didn't keep
potentially lethal shards from flying into the stands.
"There was
absolute shock," Devine said. "People were saying, 'I can't believe it, I can't believe it. I've
never seen this happen, I've never seen this happen. Did the car through the fence?' It was just
shock and awe. Grown men were reaching out and grabbing someone, saying, 'Oh my gosh! Oh my gosh!'
It was just disbelief, absolute disbelief."
From Daytona to Le Mans to a
rural road in Ireland, auto racing spectators have long been too close to the action when parts
start flying. The crash in the second-tier Nationwide race follows a long list of accidents that
have left fans dead or injured.
The most tragic incident occurred during
the 1955 24 Hours of Le Mans, when two cars collided near the main stands. The wreck sent debris
hurtling into the crowd, while one of the cars flipped upside down and exploded in a giant
fireball.
Eighty-three spectators and driver Pierre Levegh were killed, and
120 fans were injured.
The Daytona crash began as the field approached
the checkered flag and leader Regan Smith attempted to block Brad Keselowski. That triggered a
chain reaction, and rookie Kyle Larson hit the cars in front of him and went airborne into the
fence.
The entire front end was sheared off Larson's car, and his burning
engine wedged through a gaping hole in the fence. Chunks of debris from the car were thrown into the
stands, including a tire that cleared the top of the fence and landed midway up the spectator
section closest to the track.
"I thought the car went through the fence,"
Devine said. "I didn't know if there was a car on top of people. I didn't know what to think. I'm an
emotional person. I immediately started to cry. It was very scary, absolutely scary. I love the
speed of the sport. But it's so dangerous."
The fencing used to protect
seating areas and prevent cars from hurtling out of tracks has long been part of the debate over how
to improve safety.
Three-time Indianapolis 500 winner Dario Franchitti
lost close friend Dan Wheldon at Las Vegas in the 2011 IndyCar season finale, when Wheldon's car
catapulted into the fencing and his head struck a support post. Since his death, IndyCar drivers
have called for studies on how to improve the safety barriers.
Franchitti
renewed the pleas on Twitter after the Daytona crash, writing "it's time (at)Indycar (at)nascar
other sanctioning bodies & promoters work on an alternative to catch fencing. There has to be a
better solution."
Another fan who witnessed the crash said he's long
worried that sizable gaps in the fencing increase the chances of debris getting through to the
stands.
"I've always thought the netting was very wide and pieces could fly
through," said Lenny Brown, who was attending races at Daytona for the fourth
time.
Among the most frightening accidents involving
fans:
— In 1987, Bobby Allison's car lifted off the track at Talladega
Superspeedway in Alabama while running over 200 mph, careening into the steel-cable fence and
scattering debris into the crowd. That crash led to the use of horsepower-sapping restrictor plates
at Talladega and its sister track in Daytona, NASCAR's fastest layouts. As a result, the cars all
run nearly the same speed, and the field is typically bunched tightly together — which plenty of
drivers have warned is actually a more dangerous scenario than higher
speeds.
— That same year, at the Indianapolis 500, a fan was killed when
struck by a tire that came off Tony Bettenhausen's car. The tire bounced off the front of Roberto
Guerrero's car and flew to the top row of the grandstand.
— In 1998, three
fans were killed and six others were injured in CART's IndyCar race at Michigan International
Speedway when Adrian Fernandez crashed, sending a tire and other parts into the
stands.
— The following year, three fans were killed at Charlotte Motor
Speedway during an Indy Racing League event when debris from an accident flew into the stands. The
track never held another IndyCar race.
— In 2009, Talladega was the scene
of another scary crash during a NASCAR Sprint Cup race. Carl Edwards' car sailed upside-down into
the front-stretch fence on a furious dash to the finish line, showering the stands with debris.
Seven fans sustained minor injuries.
— In 2010 at a National Hot Rod
Association event in Chandler, Ariz., a woman was killed by a tire that flew off Antron Brown's
crashing dragster at Firebird International Raceway. The wheel bounced a couple of times and soared
over the grandstands — missing the bulk of the spectators — before it hit the
woman.
— Also in 2010, at an off-road racing event in the Southern
California desert, a truck flew off a jump and landed on a group of spectators, sending bodies
flying. Eight were killed, 10 injured. There also have been deaths at the Baja 1000 and Dakar Rally,
the two most famous off-road races, though multiple-death crashes into the crowd like the one in
the Mojave Desert are rare.
— Last year, in a rally car race in Ireland,
a car went out of control on a rural road and crashed into a crowd of about 30 spectators, killing
two people and seriously injuring seven. Witnesses said the car crashed through a fence and into
the onlookers before coming to rest on its side beside a home.
At Daytona, workers
scurried to patch up the damaged fencing and left little doubt that the biggest race of the
weekend, Sunday's Daytona 500, would go on as planned.
Brown, who saw the
crash from his 38th-row seat in the Petty grandstand, said he would be back in the same section
for the season-opening Sprint Cup event. He has no qualms about his safety, sitting so high
up, but said he would think twice about the seats he had for the race two years
ago.
"The last time I was here, we were only about six rows up," Brown
said. "I had even told some people before the crash, 'I would never sit that close to the track ever
again.'"
But someone surely will — mindful of the risks but eager to be
among more than 100,000 fans cheering on stock car racing's biggest
stars.
"Here we are, paying money to sit next to cars going 195 mph,"
Devine said. "We do it because we love it. That's what we
expect."
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