- NASCAR driver Bubba Wallace, who has no reported history of anti-Asian behavior, has been accused of anti-Asian hate for attacking Kyle Larson after they crashed at the Las Vegas Motor Speedway on Sunday.
- The heated confrontation began at Stage 2 of the South Point 400, where the pair ended up racing side-by-side after Larson attempted to make a three-wide pass.
- Larson’s Chevrolet bumped Wallace’s Toyota into the wall, which resulted in the latter allegedly retaliating by spinning Larson out.
- Both drivers ultimately crashed into the wall, after which Wallace exited his vehicle and shoved Larson multiple times.
- While Wallace was not reported to have attacked Larson for being Asian American, a number of Twitter users — who appear to be non-Asian and are critical of the Black Lives Matter movement — alleged that he acted out of anti-Asian hate.
Bubba Wallace has been accused of anti-Asian hate for attacking Kyle Larson after they crashed at the Las Vegas Motor Speedway on Sunday.
The confrontation began at Stage 2 of the South Point 400, where Wallace — who won Stage 1 — ended up racing side-by-side with Larson in Turn 4 of the track. Larson, who was driving the #5 HendrickCars.com Chevrolet, bumped Wallace’s #45 McDonald’s Toyota into the wall while trying to make a three-wide pass.
Wallace bounced back and followed Larson down to the apron, where he appeared to spin the latter out before they both crashed into the wall.
Wallace then exited his vehicle, charged toward Larson and shoved him against his Chevrolet. Wallace pushed Larson several more times before a safety worker managed to separate them.
NASCAR DRAMA!
Bubba Wallace goes after Kyle Larson after a crash that took them both out in Las Vegas @rubbinisracing pic.twitter.com/tVRqHyfNzU
— Barstool Sports (@barstoolsports) October 16, 2022
It has been a challenging year so far for both drivers, with Wallace failing to qualify for the playoffs and Larson — the reigning NASCAR champion — being eliminated last week. Now, NASCAR is expected to penalize them for their latest actions.
“I’m smart enough to know how easily these cars break, so when you get shoved into the fence deliberately like he did trying to force me to lift, the steering was gone,” Wallace said after the race, as per the Associated Press. “Larson wanted to make a three-wide divebomb, but he never cleared me and I don’t lift.”
When asked to explain his actions after the crash, he simply said Larson “knows” why.
“He [Larson] knows what he did was wrong. He wanted to question what I was doing, and he never cleared me.”
But aside from a possible penalty, Wallace’s display of aggression has earned him allegations of racism and anti-Asian hate. Larson, who is visibly smaller in stature, is Japanese American.
“Bubba Wallace, who falsely claimed that someone hung a noose in his garage last year, violently attacks one of the only Asian drivers in NASCAR. Violence against Asians needs to stop,” conservative commentator Ian Miles Cheong wrote in a now-viral tweet.
Bubba Wallace, who falsely claimed that someone hung a noose in his garage last year, violently attacks one of the only Asian drivers in NASCAR. Violence against Asians need to stop. pic.twitter.com/u7SEeUUh9Q
— Ian Miles Cheong (@stillgray) October 17, 2022
Others echoed the sentiment:
“Bubba” Wallace is a racist. Picking on the poor Asian dude.
— Dean Mills (@Millsvideo) October 16, 2022
Bubba Wallace hates Asian people. #StopAsianHate #NASCARPlayoffs
— Sammy Lee (@SammyL45) October 16, 2022
#bubbawallace Bubba Wallace shoved the smallest Asian in Profesional racing. Where is Asian Lives Matter at this morning? #NASCAR pic.twitter.com/Lj2ow0oWm7
— Ukfa Ua (@UkfaUa) October 17, 2022
An enraged Bubba Wallace assaulting and harassing an Asian man is the most @McDonalds thing I’ve ever seen outside of an actual McDonalds.
We used to have to go inside McDonalds for these kinds of hate crimes. But thanks to McDonalds and Bubba Wallace, we can access them at home
— Corn Pop Was a Bad Dude (@parkedin) October 17, 2022
Bubba Wallace is anti Asian American obviously
— Justin Carrier (@JCarrier713) October 16, 2022
While Wallace evidently shoved Larson, the accusations against him appear to be unfounded as he has not been reported to have uttered anything racist or anti-Asian during the incident. Additionally, the 29-year-old has no known history of anti-Asian behavior, and it was actually Larson who made headlines in 2020 after using the N-word during a virtual race.
Cheong, whose allegation appears to have received the most engagement thus far, also accused Wallace of making false claims about a noose the driver had found in his garage. Two days after a member of Wallace’s team reported the noose to NASCAR in June 2020 — and nearly a month after the police murder of George Floyd and the popular rise of Black Lives Matter — the FBI confirmed that it had been present in the garage since October 2019, but whether Wallace conjured a hoax has not been proven.
Besides Cheong’s, many of the anti-Asian claims lobbied against Wallace appear to stem from users who are not Asian and are critical of the Black Lives Matter movement, which the NASCAR driver has been a proponent of.
Every fan has heard time and time again when BLM driver Bubba Wallace makes History for being the first black man to do this or that.
Well, huge congrats to Bubba Wallace for being the first black NASCAR driver to Assault the smallest Asian driver in the sport on live NBC TV. pic.twitter.com/qEv396uLkI— 🇺🇸 Stroker Ace 🇺🇸 (@StrokerAce90) October 16, 2022
If the roles were reversed, NASCAR would hold a press conference denouncing the racist actions of Kyle Larson, announce an immediate 3 race suspension, take away points and donate 1 Million $ to BLM in Bubba Wallace’s name.
— JokeBiden (@JokeBiden10) October 17, 2022
Where is the outcry against Black on Asian violence after Bubba Wallace attacked Kyle Larson? @NASCAR
— MeHereNow (@immeherenow) October 17, 2022
Larson, for his part, acknowledged that he made the initial aggression on Sunday but stressed that Wallace’s race “wasn’t over until he retaliated.”
“I obviously made an aggressive move into [turn] three, got in low, got loose and chased it up a bit,” Larson recalled, according to AP. “He got to my right front, and it got him tight and into the wall. I knew he was going to retaliate.”
Still, Larson said he prefers a fight over the potential damage that could have been done to their cars.
“He had every right to be upset. I would rather him do that [fight] than tear up our cars in a dangerous manner.”
Featured Image via NASCAR on FOX