Holding a Pretty Wheel: Never Fear, Underdog is Here! & He’s Saving the NASCAR Season
In today’s NASCAR, an underdog win is a rarity. David Reutimann grabbed one last year, the only real surprise of 2010, and one a year is average these days.
In today’s NASCAR, an underdog win is a rarity. David Reutimann grabbed one last year, the only real surprise of 2010, and one a year is average these days.
While Furniture Row Racing has to be riding cloud nine as a team, they head to Dover, where Regan Smith nor the No. 78 has ever had a top-20 finish.
After Regan Smith’s win at Darlington, here are the five greatest upsets from the past 20 years of NASCAR racing.
If I were to come up to you and ask you who you thought the most influential athlete in America was, would you honestly spout out Jimmie Johnson?
In the past couple of weeks, the talk of the NASCAR world has been about drivers behaving badly.
NASCAR seems to be trying to walk a line between participants’ safety and ratings-friendly entertainment.
NASCAR has been devoting time and energy lately to managing driver conflict. This is nothing new for the sport.
Now the schedule shifts to another tough track on drivers and equipment: Dover. Chances are we won’t see an upset like last week.
As Wednesday dawns in NASCAR-land, the bigger story continues to be not surrounding the man that won but the punishment doled out to two men who lost.
TJ Bell, a Truck Series veteran took the next step by making his Sprint Cup debut at Darlington, qualifying an impressive 33rd with a brand new team.