gjdavis60 said:I didn't know Keselowski was an owner (or that JD was a PED!). But what I find interesting is the relationship between sanctioning body, teams, sponsors, and drivers in NASCAR (and other pro motorsports) and how that informs the culture of substance policy violations.
Even a whiff of impropriety - not even limited to PEDs - can blackball a driver for the balance of his or her career because sponsors will not touch them, and owners have no use for drivers who cannot attract sponsorship.
While I question the rigor of NASCAR's testing, I think the severe consequences of a positive test weigh heavily on drivers who have secured an illusive Sprint Cup ride because they know that they would probably never be let back in the door; even if NASCAR reinstates them. There is some self-policing going on here.
Interesting contrast to the culture within pro cycling where doping and violations are the norm and riders returning from suspension are as eagerly anticipated as MLB players coming off the DL.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shane_Hmiel
Here's a guy who tested positive for heroin, got a second chance, then tested positive for marijuana and cocaine, got a third chance and then tested positive again.