Nashville Prices Fans Out of a Day at the Races
Two weeks ago, I visited Nashville Superspeedway’s website in search of tickets to last Saturday’s Nationwide race and found the cheapest at $35 a pop.
Two weeks ago, I visited Nashville Superspeedway’s website in search of tickets to last Saturday’s Nationwide race and found the cheapest at $35 a pop.
The result of Jason Leffler’s lone-wolf maneuver was NASCAR’s new standard punishment: a three-race probationary period.
NASCAR parked Jason Leffler at Nashville after Leffler, apparently intentionally, put James Buescher in the wall. Was the three-race probation appropriate?
So who are the best NASCAR drivers gunning for a ride at the sport’s top level (or young enough to still get that second chance?)
Latch onto the fates of these often-hidden but talented individuals in our latest look at Who’s Hot/Not in NASCAR’s other top-two series: Nationwide and Trucks.
Just when you thought full-time Sprint Cup Series drivers could exert no more dominance over NASCAR’s Nationwide and Truck series, think again.
Bad economy? Awkward weekend? Or is it possible that NASCAR’s cash-cow decision to let Cup drivers run rampant all over their AAA league is now biting them?
Saturday brought the Nationwide Series to Nashville Superspeedway for their fifth race of the season. This event was televised on ESPN as opposed to ESPN2.
This Saturday in Nashville, Kevin Harvick’s No. 33 was the class of a very stout field in what’s turning into a regular occurrence for 2010.
Justin Allgaier may have the best shot that any driver has had in a long time to be the dragon slayer that brings one back for the home team.