Mark Martin may have been the only person happier than Matt Kenseth on Wednesday morning at the NASCAR Hall of Fame after it was officially announced that Kenseth would be returning to Roush Fenway Racing.
Mark Martin may have been the only person happier than Matt Kenseth on Wednesday morning at the NASCAR Hall of Fame after it was officially announced that Kenseth would be returning to Roush Fenway Racing.
Just like fellow 18-year Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series veteran Dale Earnhardt Jr., Matt Kenseth will take his presumed bow out of the top level of stock car racing in a car echoing his first on Sunday at Homestead-Miami Speedway.
With only Ford Championship Weekend remaining out the windshield, Race Chaser Online’s Motorsports Madness will set up the NASCAR title deciders and hear from the big winners in Phoenix tonight at 7 p.m. ET on the Performance Motorsports Network.
Though Matt Kenseth refused to say he was calling it a career Saturday evening at Texas Motor Speedway, the 2003 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series champion plans to take some time away from the driver’s seat after the end of this season.
It was a long and stressful wait for Matt Kenseth Saturday night at Richmond Raceway, but after an overtime-extended finish to the Federated Auto Parts 400, the 2003 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series champion found himself with a spot on the playoff grid and a chance to contend for his second title.
BRISTOL, Tenn. — Kyle Busch became the first person in NASCAR history to complete two separate weekend sweeps of NASCAR’s national […]