The Cool-Down Lap: The Kyle Busch Conundrum, Sunday Meltdown Latest Fault of His Fire
He may be his own worst enemy. There are many adjectives to describe Kyle Busch, who absolutely shot himself in the foot during Sunday’s Cup race at Texas.
He may be his own worst enemy. There are many adjectives to describe Kyle Busch, who absolutely shot himself in the foot during Sunday’s Cup race at Texas.
Sunday’s AAA Texas 500 was an absolute barnstormer of a NASCAR race – an instant classic – some of the best competition we’ve had all year, without question.
Time to take another look at the race telecasts that we all watch. The Sprint Cup, Nationwide and Camping World Truck series were all at Texas Motor Speedway.
Matt Kenseth and Denny Hamlin squared off in a three-lap shootout at the end of the race that had the fans at home and in the stands at Texas on their feet.
It only took a few laps before Sunday’s AAA Texas 500 turned into what PR staff at the track referred to as “an Eddie Gossage dream.”
Before Jimmie Johnson and Chad Knaus morphed into a well-calibrated machine, Rick Hendrick had to host a kindergarten-style milk and cookies meeting.
This week, here’s a sneak peek at what they all were thinking following the AAA Texas 500 at Texas Motor Speedway.
Kyle Busch took the checkered flag 0.386 seconds ahead of Johnny Sauter to take the win in the WinStar World Casino 350K at Texas Friday night.
The AAA Texas 500 was almost a fight. It might have been one if NASCAR officials hadn’t stepped in. The real surprise was the participants.
FORT WORTH, Texas – The suspense! Did Brad Keselowski finish better than 21st at and clinch the Nationwide Series title, two races early?