Dialing It In: NASCAR’s All-Star Race – To Test or To Win?
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.
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.
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.
Typically, the Monster Mile is notorious for chewing up seasons and spitting them out into the crushing cement of its outside wall. But on a …
0 – number of debris cautions in the Autism Speaks 400 presented by Hershey’s Milk & Milkshakes.
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.
At the Monster Mile of all venues, Joe Gibbs Racing’s 1-2 punch scored two top-five finishes, passed two gut checks and sent one strong message to the No. 48.
This week, here’s a sneak peek at what they all were thinking following the Autism Speaks 400 at Dover International Speedway.
Aric Almirola took the checkered flag 0.898 seconds ahead of James Buescher to win the Dover 200 Friday afternoon (May 14) at Dover International Speedway.
The No. 48 team is mortal. Despite having the dominant car at Dover and making every call correctly, Kyle Busch was able to keep up with Jimmie Johnson.