Who’s Hot/Who’s Not in Sprint Cup: Lucky 7 Edition (Chicagoland, Too)
Kasey Kahne’s cheat sheet worked wonders with the No. 99 at Chicagoland, Carl Edwards looking like a man possessed in a good way.
Kasey Kahne’s cheat sheet worked wonders with the No. 99 at Chicagoland, Carl Edwards looking like a man possessed in a good way.
What do Kurt Busch, Alan Kulwicki and Rusty Wallace have in common? They’re the only Cup champs without a Daytona or Talladega victory in the plate era.
Junior’s three points from a reeling Carl Edwards in 12th, heading to a Daytona track that gift-wraps top-five finishes for him as if they’re stocking stuffers.
So what can we learn from 110 laps of playing the feud at Sonoma? They say only the strong survive, but in this case strong gets replaced with strongarm.
It was bad enough for Red Bull that Brian Vickers is out with blood clots. But for his interim replacement Casey Mears to spin out Scott Speed at Michigan?
Much has been written about Denny Hamlin’s late-race charge to the front, but Pocono’s action-packed ending only had room for so many to make a comeback.
After the Coca-Cola 600, several superstars found themselves chewed up and spit out by the “Beast of the Southeast.”
After a 100-lap exhibition at Charlotte, it’s hard to add to regular-season trends which typically define this Hot/Not column.
Typically, the Monster Mile is notorious for chewing up seasons and spitting them out into the crushing cement of its outside wall. But on a …
The JGR duo of Kyle Busch and Denny Hamlin was melting the asphalt at Darlington this weekend.