Happy Hour: There is No New Kyle Busch – There Wasn’t Even an Old One
I doubt there is an “old” Kyle Busch or “new” Kyle Busch.
I doubt there is an “old” Kyle Busch or “new” Kyle Busch.
Just ask Denny Hamlin and he’ll tell you: “All he does is win.” At Pocono, however, that’s no joke.
In his second full year at the Cup level, Scott Speed now finds himself the lead driver at Red Bull Racing. Since moving from open-wheel, Speed has struggled.
The mention of Kurt Busch, let alone him actually winning the All-Star Race and then the Coca-Cola 600, no longer evoked the same emotions than in the past.
I must admit as a guy who has called Pennsylvania home for going on four decades now I feel a great deal of affection for the Pocono track.
Is Casey Mears’s image with corporate America enough to keep him in the Red Bull car with results like he has earned so far?
Pocono provides a prime opportunity to turn things around in a hurry. Tony Stewart and Carl Edwards have both had tremendous success at the track.
Do not adjust your TV screen. There actually are a few chinks in the formerly unblemished armor of Jimmie Johnson’s No. 48 team.
While inter-team rivalry is nothing new to NASCAR, the airing of dirty laundry in public between drivers is a relatively new practice.
Sunday at Charlotte was FOX’s final race broadcast in 2010. What grade does the network get for its coverage and what do they need to change in 2011?