NASCAR 101: Most Dominating Coca-Cola 600 Performances
This weekend marks the 56th running of the Coca-Cola 600, or, for longtime fans of the sport, the World 600. The premise of the race …
This weekend marks the 56th running of the Coca-Cola 600, or, for longtime fans of the sport, the World 600. The premise of the race …
Leave it to Bristol Motor Speedway to capitalize on its rough-and-tumble reputation in what was perhaps the most creative game of the day in terms of the actual racing at that track. Everyone has seen the carnival games where someone has to launch a beanbag or a ball through a deceptively small hole to win a prize. But for Bristol, could there be a more appropriate version of this one than a helmet toss, paying homage to, among other incidents, Tony Stewart’s display of anger toward Matt Kenseth last summer? Apparently not, because in order to win Bristol’s prizes, fans had to fire a miniature helmet smack through the driver’s side windshield of a cardboard racecar. Sometimes things are simply right, and this game was one of those times.
Brad Keselowski had a dominating win at Kentucky on Saturday night. Is the No. 2 team a championship contender?
10. Signed autographs for members of the Level Cross Volunteer Fire Company after they tried lighting the candles on his cake.
Saturday night (May 12) at Darlington was defined by history, a milestone 200th victory for NASCAR’s most successful modern-era car owner, Rick Hendrick.
NASCAR drivers are well known for the uncanny ability to rattle off a huge list of companies to thank after winning a race or even after a wreck.
While he painted a brave face on it over the weekend, Bruton Smith was apparently a bit stung by the size of the crowd that attended Sunday’s race at Bristol.
In his post-race comments at Martinsville, Tony Stewart said that some of the young drivers in the sport “need their butts kicked.”
Sometimes the magic was real and for three hours, 44 minutes and 20 seconds on Nov. 15, 1992, it took our collective breath away.
The Southern 500 vs. the Kentucky Derby. 800 horsepower vs. real horsepower.