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.
Paul Menard’s Brickyard win means that Brad Keselowski will likely be left in the cold unless he can catch another win.
Let this officially be the end of all the talk of Paul Menard, according to detractors, only being in NASCAR on account of his father’s money.
The Brickyard 400 sits behind only the Daytona 500 on most driver wish lists.
This weekend brings us the 18th running of the Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
The issue stemming from Busch’s NNS win was whether his 100th career NASCAR victory was worthy of being considered a 100th career NASCAR victory.
During the final restarts of the New Hampshire NNS race, Kevin Harvick lamented to his team that NASCAR had warned him about continuing his war with Kyle Busch.
Once again the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race came down to fuel mileage, Kyle Busch won the Nationwide race and the Truck race was the best.
Yep. Seems like just another day at the office for NASCAR Nation.
However, Busch would be too obvious of a choice for a “hot” driver, as would his fellow NASCAR winners this weekend, Ryan Newman and Matt Crafton. Congratulations to all three of them, but we’re going to take a look at some of the less obvious choices in this edition of Who’s Hot/Who’s Not.
A winless Dale Earnhardt Jr. will likely struggle at Indy, where he’s been spotty at best and then the pressure mounts.