Voices From the Heartland: Sometimes NASCAR Media Doesn’t Have a Clue
I have come to the conclusion that the only people who come close to the talents of political spin correspondents are the ones who cover NASCAR.
I have come to the conclusion that the only people who come close to the talents of political spin correspondents are the ones who cover NASCAR.
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.
Read this week’s Power Rankings and see if your driver was eating lobster or wondering why his tire bead melted in Loudon.
The sky is falling, Jimmie’s bawling and Chad is crawling back to start, trying to figure out a way to salvage the season before the Chase starts.
Given Kevin Harvick’s on-track shenanigans at Pocono, was a warning necessary or is NASCAR going too far?
In the crazy laboratory of Jimmie Johnson and Chad Knaus, the lab techs are interchangeable.
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.
Ryan Newman managed to clear Clint Bowyer on fresher tires following a lap 229 restart and never looked back, scoring his third career victory at Loudon.
Jimmie Johnson finished fifth, wondering what might have been if he’d had the closing laps to race for the win instead of to recover at Loudon.
“Happy” Harvick was more like “Pissed-Off” Harvick after Sunday’s race at Loudon (July 17).