Can Constant Change in Sports Go Too Far?
Change is abundant in sports: F1 has sprint races; IndyCar’s adjusted its Indy 500 qualifying format; NASCAR has undergone multiple changes. How much change is too much?
Change is abundant in sports: F1 has sprint races; IndyCar’s adjusted its Indy 500 qualifying format; NASCAR has undergone multiple changes. How much change is too much?
Dye’s suspension stems from an arrest in Florida on April 26.
We’re slowly starting to see the effects of this now years-long bump, such as an NBC Sports column where Kevin Harvick lamented on how popular Formula 1 has gotten with his son and his friend group.
It’d be foolish for RCR not to have contacted ForeverLawn or any of their other partners on Monday following Talladega and not started the effort of putting Earnhardt back in the No. 3 at the August Daytona and October Talladega Xfinity races.
There’s an eight-letter word that isn’t uttered, at least not often, at Trackhouse Racing Team’s headquarters in Concord, N.C.
Now the reserve driver for Stewart-Haas Racing, Ryan Preece is only chasing wins as he enters his first NASCAR Cup Series race of the season.
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It’s hard to fathom there would ever be a time when Chase Elliott was leading the points after a good chunk of the NASCAR Cup Series season and the overall reaction would be one of … indifference?