Happy Hour: The Odd Story of NASCAR’s No. 11 Car
Should the No. 11 car take NASCAR’s Sprint Cup, it would be a fourth title for Joe Gibbs Racing.
Should the No. 11 car take NASCAR’s Sprint Cup, it would be a fourth title for Joe Gibbs Racing.
The Nationwide Series, on the other hand, was officially decided last week at Texas, with Brad Keselowski taking this year’s title.
Carl Edwards led early and often, running up front for 153 laps en route to an easy five-second victory in the Wypall 200 at the Phoenix International Raceway.
With Brad Keselowski set to end the Nationwide Series season, it’s only fitting that this week Frontstretch recaps the top-10 moments for the Series.
For all the tire strategy that made Saturday night’s Great Clips 300 both interesting and confusing, it didn’t pave the way to victory lane at Atlanta.
Nationwide Series fans should be accustomed to Cup drivers setting meaningless milestones in the minor leagues and Friday’s Food City 250 was no exception.
Anyone who saw the first half of Saturday’s CARFAX 250 at Michigan wouldn’t be surprised that Brad Keselowski scored his fourth victory of the 2010 season.
Marcos Ambrose led all but 22 laps and proving to be untouchable at the front en route to his third consecutive NNS win in the Zippo 200.
Kyle Busch scored his ninth Nationwide Series victory of the year in the US Cellular 250, putting down a spirited early challenge from polesitter Trevor Bayne.
Kyle Busch capitalized on a dominating performance to score his eighth Nationwide Series win of 2010 in the Kroger 200.