NASCAR star Kyle Larson uses racial slur during virtual race

The Associated Press
Jenna Fryer

CHARLOTTE, N.C.–NASCAR star Kyle Larson used a racial slur on a live stream during a virtual race–the second driver in a week to draw scrutiny while using the online racing platform to fill time during the coronavirus pandemic.
Larson was competing in an iRacing event last night when he appeared to lose communication on his headset with his spotter. During a check of his microphone, he said, “You can’t hear me?” That was followed by the N-word.
Bubba Wallace one week earlier “rage quit” an official NASCAR iRacing event televised live nationally and his sponsor fired him immediately. Wallace had been wrecked, and, fed up, quit the game and admitted it was out of anger on Twitter. Blue-Emu, a topical pain reliever who had sponsored Wallace for the virtual race and has an association with him for real, replied to the tweet firing Wallace.
It was not clear this morning what fallout there could be for Larson, who was parked during the race Wallace quit a week earlier by iRacing officials for intentionally wrecking another driver.
“NASCAR is aware of insensitive language used by a driver during an iRacing event yesterday, and is currently gathering more information,” NASCAR said.
NASCAR in 2013 suspended Xfinity Series driver Jeremy Clements for using the same word Larson used while Clements was speaking to a reporter. Clements was re-instated after completing a sensitivity training course and still competes.
Larson is half Japanese–his grandparents spent time in an interment camp in California during World War II–and he climbed from short track racing into NASCAR through its “Drive for Diversity” program. He is the only driver of Japanese descent to win a major NASCAR race.
The season has been suspended due to the Coronavirus outbreak.
NASCAR quickly pivoted to create an iRacing league of virtual racing that has engaged viewers and set records for esports television viewership. One of the draws of the platform is that drivers can link into one another on a live stream, where they banter, argue, make jokes and discuss the racing. Fans can eavesdrop through the gaming app Twitch.