Daytona to Dirt: Kyle Larson Becomes 8th Driver to Win Multiple Knoxville Nationals
Daytona to Dirt saw NASCAR’s dirt ringers out and about in the open-wheel ranks as the Cup Series ran on a bastardized version of open wheel’s holy land.
Daytona to Dirt saw NASCAR’s dirt ringers out and about in the open-wheel ranks as the Cup Series ran on a bastardized version of open wheel’s holy land.
Daytona to Dirt saw NASCAR representation on the clay few and far between, but the drivers that did take to the track racked up big-time results.
Daytona to Dirt returns to recap two weeks of NASCAR’s big names making their presence felt on small car tracks across the country, as well as victory lane.
NASCAR (and SRX) moving up north to run on Northeast asphalt left its representation within the dirt ranks a bit more lacking this week.
Despite NASCAR heading down South to the land of Georgia clay, dirt racing exploits among the alumni base were down following the Independence Day holiday.
As NASCAR spent the weekend letting Chicagoland Speedway collect dust, plenty of their current and former alums made time to play in the dust.
NASCAR saw its dirt representation spread from sea to shining sea, with current and former pavement competitors making noise in a good and bad way.
NASCAR’s off-weekend saw a great number of its drivers and alumni take time off, but there were still those within the ranks that scored weekend hardware.
NASCAR’s trip to the West Coast over the weekend reduced its representation on the dirt tracks, but it didn’t stop former regulars from grabbing more hardware.
NASCAR’s return to the St. Louis area meant that many of its stars were in close proximity to Tri-City Speedway and many took advantage to sling dirt.