Thanks to a controversial bump-and-run with seven minutes remaining and a subsequent no-call by the officials, Wayne Taylor Racing got their Cinderella story at Daytona Int’l Speedway on Sunday afternoon.
Preparing for the start of Saturday’s 55th annual Rolex 24 at Daytona, Jeff Gordon joked that he wasn’t at all prepared for the ‘culture shock’ of working with the Taylor brothers during the twice-around-the-clock endurance classic.
As the 2016 season NASCAR Sprint Cup Series is nearing it’s conclusion, so too is the window for Jeff Gordon.
For the past 14 years, nobody has been more dominate in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, quite the way Jimmie Johnson has. Whenever a new challenger would present themselves to the fight, Johnson would seem to find a way to end up leaps and bounds better than his competition, almost turning on a switch and lighting a fire so bright it could be seen from space.
In sport, nothing quite puts fans on the edge of their seat like a good playoff race.
It’s official, four-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion Jeff Gordon is coming out of retirement, at least for two more races.
Don’t sign the welcome back cards and hang the party decorations just yet, but in a shock announcement on Friday morning at New Hampshire Motor Speedway, Jeff Gordon was revealed to be part of Hendrick Motorsports’ backup plan for next week’s Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
LAS VEGAS — Story by Race Chaser Online Managing Editor Jacob Seelman — Audio courtesy of NBC and NASCAR Media […]
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Race Chaser Online/Performance Motorsports Network release — Jeff Zelevansky/Getty Images photo — Motorsports Madness hits the airwaves of […]