Shakedown Session: The Good, Bad & Ugly About Twitter in NASCAR
Unless NASCAR fans have taken residence under a rock, it’s very hard to ignore the presence of the social networking site Twitter.
Unless NASCAR fans have taken residence under a rock, it’s very hard to ignore the presence of the social networking site Twitter.
It’s that time of year again, NASCAR fans, where the Sprint Cup Series travels to wine country for the first of two road-course races on the schedule.
NASCAR drivers like to fashion themselves as something resembling humanitarians, racing for fashionable causes.
The owner of the Nationwide Series’ No. 79 2nd Chance Motorsports organization, Rick Russell, allegedly fired his entire team after the race at Kansas.
In this week’s edition of the Shakedown Session, we’ll be taking a look at 10 NASCAR drivers who might not be household names yet.
Kimi Raikkonen, following a mid-pack Truck Series finish, has been promoted to the Nationwide Series and has even tested a Cup car (and crashed it).
NASCAR fans have seen more than their fair share of developmental drivers come and go.
In the past couple of weeks, the talk of the NASCAR world has been about drivers behaving badly.
At the NASCAR Nationwide Series at Nashville, with Cup drivers dominating everything in sight, the atmosphere was like being alive for one’s own funeral.
It’s the question of who will wind up potentially being the odd man out at Roush Fenway Racing. Will it be Trevor Bayne or Ricky Stenhouse Jr.?