NASCAR Orders Denny Hamlin To Complete Sensitivity Training After 'Offensive' Tweet

NASCAR announced on Tuesday that driver Denny Hamlin must complete a sensitivity training course after posting a meme from the show Family Guy directed towards Kyle Larson. Hamlin must start the course by the end of this week, according to NASCAR.

On Monday, Hamlin tweeted a post which depicts a stereotype of female Asian driver. Hamlin intended for it to make light of an accident that Larson caused at the end of Talladega last weekend. In the post, Larson's name is superimposed over the character.

On the final lap of the race on Sunday, Larson, who is half-Japanese and the reigning Cup Series champion, attempted to block Kurt Busch but took out both Busch and fellow 23XI driver Bubba Wallace in the process.

Here is the tweet that resulted in the NASCAR punishment.










Denny Hamlin released a statement on Twitter after deleting the first post.






Toyota, which manufactures all cars for 23XI, released a statement late Tuesday evening saying they supported the decision to mandate sensitivity training for Hamlin.

“We have spoken with Denny Hamlin regarding his tweet from yesterday. Toyota supports NASCAR’s decision to mandate sensitivity training for Denny and we will all move forward together.”

Here is the wording that NASCAR has in its Cup Series rule book.

“NASCAR Members shall not make or cause to be made a public statement and/or communication that criticizes, ridicules, or otherwise disparages another person based upon that person’s race, color, creed, national origin, gender, sexual orientation, marital status, religion, age, or handicapping condition.”

We will see whether Hamlin discusses the matter later this week when the NASCAR series heads to Dover International Speedway.

 











Written by
Trey Wallace is the host of The Trey Wallace Podcast that focuses on a mixture of sports, culture, entertainment along with his perspective on everything from College Football to the College World Series. Wallace has been covering college sports for 15 years, starting off while attending the University of South Alabama. He’s broken some of the biggest college stories including the Florida football "Credit Card Scandal" along with the firing of Jim McElwin and Kevin Sumlin. Wallace also broke one of the biggest stories in college football in 2020 around the NCAA investigation into recruiting violations against Tennessee football head coach Jeremy Pruitt. Wallace also appears on radio across seven different states breaking down that latest news in college sports.