Monday Morning Teardown: NASCAR Penthouse to Outhouse, Vol. 3
You can go from the penthouse to the outhouse in just one weekend. Take Tony Stewart, for example.
You can go from the penthouse to the outhouse in just one weekend. Take Tony Stewart, for example.
Gaining double-digit positions over the course of a race isn’t easy and at Dover it’s even harder.
Ron Hornaday Jr. took the checkered flag 0.438 seconds ahead of Austin Dillon to win the Kentucky 225 Saturday evening (Oct. 1) at Kentucky Speedway.
Jimmie Johnson may have had the dominant car for much of the day, but when it was all said and done, it was Kurt Busch beating Johnson to the checkered flag
NASCAR is all about how much valuable exposure you can bring someone else and it is for this fact that Brian France created the Chase.
One thing I’ve learned from almost a lifetime in and around the sport of NASCAR is that people are quick to use four-letter words.
Did You Notice? That for all the talk of just how boring Sunday’s race at Loudon was, NASCAR scored a major TV ratings coup?
Tony Stewart won for the second week in a row at New Hampshire and took the points lead. Can Stewart sustain it and win the title from 10th place at Richmond?
“We’ll be back in the Nationwide Series next year,” says Eric McClure of himself and his Hefty sponsorship. “That’s a big deal. Last year, I wanted to retire.”
Beginning this season, across all three series, NASCAR implemented a new “43 to 1” points system, which is exactly what it sounds like.