Voice of Vito: Jimmie Johnson’s Struggles Have Created Power Vacuum in Sprint Cup Standings
The last few weeks have been quite unkind to Jimmie Johnson.
The last few weeks have been quite unkind to Jimmie Johnson.
The All-Star Race saw Kurt Busch go from zero to hero, charging by feuding JGR teammates Kyle Busch and Denny Hamlin in the final laps
The first All-Star Race back in 1985 was 70 laps long and concluded in just over 40 minutes. We need this bloated freak show to get back to its roots.
With no points on the line and a testing ban in place by NASCAR, Saturday night’s All-Star Race provides the perfect scenario to try new and experimental parts.
It’s NASCAR All-Star Week, meaning it’s late May with temps in the low 80s – and the fish are biting. All’s right in the world.
Today, we grade the drivers from AJ Allmendinger to Brian Vickers, the top 40 in the NASCAR Sprint Cup standings to date.
Dover’s Monster Mile was more like Monsters, Inc. this past weekend, but the G-rated version still served up a little mixture among the Power Rankings.
We’re a third of the way through the 2010 NASCAR Sprint Cup season and just one race from the halfway point to the start of the Chase.
Jimmie Johnson had a dominant car, but a rare unforced error by the four-time champ (speeding on pit road) handed the win to Kyle Busch at Dover.
This week, here’s a sneak peek at what they all were thinking following the Autism Speaks 400 at Dover International Speedway.