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- What to expect from California’s fall race next season
- What does the future hold for Logano?
- Do we need to ask if Busch is still immature? Didn’t think so
- A battle of words between manufacturers—break out the popcorn
- No more hyping Bristol’s night race, there’s too much risk; Gibbs gets hammered by penalties
- The Chase looks like it’ll be down to two; missteps at Gibbs (UPDATED)
- Musings on silly season, which took another step on Friday
- Once again, Martinsville holds its breath
- Where has Stewart’s swagger gone?
- Childress or not, 2009 will be a make-or-break year for Mears
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Syndicate
Back from the Northwest
Brian Hunsicker
Jul 12, 2006
Though I can’t really say I’m thrilled to be back from vacation — who is? — I kept brief tabs on racing while visiting family in the Northwest. (Though that’s not always an easy assignment, as NASCAR is not the presence in Seattle and Portland that it is along the eastern seaboard.)
What’s interesting — at least to me, a member of the media — was the play it got. The Oregonian, the main paper in Portland that is regarded as the state’s paper of record, had a write-up on the Chicagoland Cup race that was part of its briefs section.
The hazard of plate racing: The Big One
Brian Hunsicker
Jun 30, 2006
You’ve heard the old adage that if you have to rely on others, you’re better off doing a task yourself. That plays into many drivers’ trepidation about racing at NASCAR’s two biggest tracks, Talladega and Daytona, where the series stops for Saturday night’s Pepsi 400.
At those two tracks, the cars run energy-sapping restrictor plates to keep speeds down. But that also decreases overall engine power, meaning no driver by himself can pass a train of cars in line.
France speaks on the state of NASCAR
Brian Hunsicker
Jun 29, 2006
NASCAR Chairman and CEO Brian France held a press conference on Thursday morning in Daytona. And as one might have expected, the run-of-the-mill commissioner press briefings have interesting tidbits here and there, but rarely any bombshells (a press conference for a bombshell is typically an event unto its own).
Among the highlights:
A driver’s story - but not that driver
Brian Hunsicker
Jun 28, 2006
While perusing the net to see if I’d missed anything in NASCAR world during the past 18 hours, Jayski.com has a link to an interesting story from the Orange County (Calif.) Register about No. 01 driver.
No, not Joe Nemechek, but the man responsible for getting Nemechek’s cars and the crew’s equipment to the track each week. The story is called The Haul Truth by staff writer Damian Dottore.
That’s one of the many behind-the-scenes looks at what it takes to run a Cup team during the season, and I tend to like those stories best.
How will Busch survive Montreal’s road course?
Brian Hunsicker
Jun 27, 2006
The Busch series is reportedly set to head north of the border. For weeks, writers and others in the know have speculated that the Busch boys will have the most famous Canadian road course on their schedule: the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve in Montreal.
The 2.786-mile track sits on a man-made island on the St. Lawrence River and already hosts a Champ Car race and a Formula One race.
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