Who’s Hot/Who’s Not in NASCAR: 2011 Indianapolis – Pocono Edition
With six races to go until the NASCAR Sprint Chase for the Cup cutoff begins, the major NASCAR touring series all invaded Indianapolis.
With six races to go until the NASCAR Sprint Chase for the Cup cutoff begins, the major NASCAR touring series all invaded Indianapolis.
After a last-place finish in Sunday’s Brickyard 400 (July 31), Robby Gordon’s on-again, off-again NASCAR team is very decidedly off.
Hello, race fans. Welcome back to Talking NASCAR TV, where we’re fine with innovation, as long as they benefit the final product.
9 – Brickyard 400s won by a Chevrolet.
Now boys, please listen. Manners are important. It is what people will remember when you’ve left for the day. I’m talking NASCAR here, in case you weren’t sure.
Remember back when the Brickyard 400 used to draw a standing room only 300,000 fans?
Five years. 167 starts. Four different NASCAR Sprint Cup organizations. For Paul Menard, the numbers were adding up everywhere but the victory column.
After 160 laps of racing in the Brickyard 400, the question fairly begged to be asked: did the finish of the race justify the previous 140 laps or so?
Landon Cassill learned a hard rookie lesson at Indy: no matter how wide the straightaways are, it’s impossible to go into the corner four-wide.
Paul Menard’s Brickyard win means that Brad Keselowski will likely be left in the cold unless he can catch another win.