The Big 6: Questions Answered After the 2012 Southern 500 at Darlington
After seven months, car owner Rick Hendrick reached a milestone that only one other team has ever reached: 200 Cup Series wins.
Amy is an 20-year veteran NASCAR writer and a six-time National Motorsports Press Association (NMPA) writing award winner, including first place awards for both columns and race coverage. As well as serving as Photo Editor, Amy writes The Big 6 (Mondays) after every NASCAR Cup Series race. She can also be found working on her bi-weekly columns Holding A Pretty Wheel (Tuesdays) and Only Yesterday (Wednesdays). A New Hampshire native whose heart is in North Carolina, Amy’s work credits have extended everywhere from driver Kenny Wallace’s website to Athlon Sports. She can also be heard weekly as a panelist on the Hard Left Turn podcast that can be found on AccessWDUN.com's Around the Track page.
After seven months, car owner Rick Hendrick reached a milestone that only one other team has ever reached: 200 Cup Series wins.
One thing that you would never see back in the day at Darlington was a two-tire pit stop.
The next five points races – Darlington, Charlotte, Dover, Pocono and Michigan – are critical for those teams whose goal is to make the Chase.
The Aaron’s 499 saw more terminal engine failures than any race this year, with four.
Here’s my take on what’s behind the summer of NASCAR fans’ discontent.
It’s been well-documented where I’m at in my career with RAB Racing. It stung really bad not racing at Texas.
For a driver scaling back his schedule, Mark Martin certainly isn’t scaling back his driving.
The August race at Bristol will probably be a very good race, if taken for what it is. But it’s not the old days anymore.
It will be one of the biggest surprises of 2012 if AJ Allmendinger doesn’t win a race in his new Penske Racing ride
NASCAR nailed it the day they penciled in “Rockingham” on the CWTS schedule.