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It Was Time For Kahne To Go
Oct 21st, 2010 by T.C.

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Just as I was about to complete and publish a post on Wednesday night about Kasey Kahne and his lame duck situation, the story broke that Kahne had been released from Richard Petty Motorsports.  And just like that, my 600 word post was out the window.  Oh well.  I then spent the next 30 minutes or so watching the story develop on Twitter (follow us @nascarinsider - shameless plug over), along with all the reactions from fans, media, and the like.  And what I’ve decided, after all that has transpired this season and over the last four days specifically, is that Kahne’s release needed to happen as soon as possible.

What I had written about in my other, now defunct, post for Thursday was that in a nutshell, Kahne brought this lame duck situation on himself.  His days as the top driver at RPM were over the second he announced his intentions to leave.  He was still going to get good stuff, but the full brunt of RPM’s resources would now be focused on their future.  If that angered or frustrated him, he really had nobody to blame but himself.

With that said, I understand his frustration over part failures and bad performance.  He wants to run well, and from his perspective, the cars were not letting him do that.  I would have been mad too.

But, even with how the season has gone and knowing what transpired at Charlotte, I have to say this: you absolutely never quit on your team.  His guys have been behind him all season, and to quit on them in a moment of anger is a complete slap in the face.  I don’t care if he was sick or not.  Kahne is a very talented driver and has a very bright future with Hendrick, but in this case he was wrong.  And it was his refusal to get back into the car after it was wrecked that sealed his fate at RPM.

In the end, this move benefits all parties involved.  RPM is rid of an unhappy driver who wanted out anyway, and Kahne gets to make his move to Red Bull early (which we all expect will happen at any second).

What will be interesting to see now is just how well Kahne is able to perform in the Red Bull equipment.  They have struggled all season with their own performance woes, and now Kahne will have just a few races in 2010 before taking over for another lame duck season in 2011.  Not exactly a positive combination of factors.

In the end, for me personally anyway, I will remember this situation more for Kahne’s antics at Charlotte than for RPM releasing him early.  If a driver wants his guys to fight for him every week for 36 weeks, he must do the same for them.  It’s this ability to fight through adversity that separates the good drivers from the great drivers.

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