Matt McLaughlin Mouths Off: NASCAR Racing Against the Media-ocrity
To put it politely, NASCAR Cup racing in 2009 hasn’t been very good.
To put it politely, NASCAR Cup racing in 2009 hasn’t been very good.
When it comes to the ramblings of Brian France, even the makers of Rosetta Stone would throw up their hands and declare it some sort of “Crackerbonics.”
There was no shortage of accolades being heaped on the crew of Jimmie Johnson’s Hendrick Motorsports No. 48 by the ABC broadcast crew.
Phoenix represents the closest thing remaining on the schedule to a short-track race, meaning that beating and banging will be seen once again.
Keith: You talked about your feedback. Being a short-tracker, obviously these longer ovals are something different.
NASCAR has said that it would like the television crews to refrain from talking about the quality of racing on television. Is that a legitimate request?
Did You Notice? Some questions from my NASCAR media brethren that made me blush this week?
The Dickies 500 at Texas Motor Speedway this past weekend in some way served as a microcosm for the entire 2009 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series.
Since many NASCAR races have come down to fuel mileage this season, fans have been asking how drivers manage to squeeze every drop out of their fuel cells.
Not only did Jimmie Johnson maintain his first-place position in unanimous fashion, he maintains a rather healthy points lead in our Power Rankings after Texas.