Latest Sprint Cup Stories
Posted: Nov 9th 2009 6:24 PM ET by Geoffrey Miller (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Jeff Gordon, Jimmie Johnson, Kurt Busch, Kyle Busch, Mark Martin, Chase for the Sprint Cup, Sprint Cup
Notes, quotes and a dash of commentary from a NASCAR weekend in Texas.
What a difference a crew chief makes. Kyle Busch, a
Sprint Cup nobody in the last few weeks, rocketed back to his expected form with new team leader Dave Rogers calling the shots Sunday at Texas Motor Speedway. Busch had the dominant car and led 232 of 334 laps before a fuel miscalculation or a blind shot at a win kept him from making history by being the first driver to win three races in one weekend.
And strangely, Busch's old form of letting his crew chief do the post-race talking returned, too.
Posted: Nov 8th 2009 1:00 PM ET by Geoffrey Miller (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Carl Edwards, Jeff Gordon, Kyle Busch, Sprint Cup
The Essentials
Race: Dickies 500
Where: Texas Motor Speedway
Time: Sunday 3:15 p.m. EST
TV/Radio: ABC, PRN Radio
Twitter: @
FanHouseRacing Forecast: Mostly cloudy, Low 70s
Distance: 334 laps (501 miles)
Pole Winner: Jeff Gordon
2008 Winner: Carl Edwards
The Storylines
Ladies and gentleman, there was nothing wrong with last week's race at Talladega -- if you ask
Tony Stewart or NASCAR.
This week, each of them blamed the fan uproar solely on the media (mainly ESPN) for ultimately putting such ideas about the bad racing at Talladega into the heads of fans. Race fans, Stewart and NASCAR feel, were induced with propaganda by television to believe that they were getting shafted by NASCAR.
Posted: Nov 4th 2009 11:14 AM ET by Geoffrey Miller (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Jamie McMurray, Jeff Gordon, Jimmie Johnson, Mark Martin, Ryan Newman, Tony Stewart, Talladega Superspeedway, Sprint Cup
Notes, quotes & commentary from a NASCAR weekend at Talladega.
What a weekend it was, huh? Yes, I do have some comments and ideas about the overall product at Talladega this week. I'm going to wait, though, until the end of this post. First, the finer notes on Sunday.
Can anyone make sense of NASCAR's pit road penalties? Had Sunday's race been at another track where track position isn't so easily gained like it is at Talladega,
Jimmie Johnson,
Ryan Newman,
Tony Stewart and eventual race winner
Jamie McMurray would have been downright hosed.
And good or bad as it relates to your particular driver, the rule that nabbed them just isn't fair.
Posted: Nov 1st 2009 4:39 PM ET by Geoffrey Miller (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Ryan Newman, Talladega Superspeedway, NASCAR Crashes, NASCAR Videos, Sprint Cup

Ryan Newman left Talladega Superspeedway on Sunday obviously sore and presumably irritated after flipping violently in a late-race crash near the end of the NASCAR
Sprint Cup Series' AMP Energy 500.
Newman, who was uninjured, was trapped in the car for almost 15 minutes as safety crews cut him out from exactly the type of wreck he had warned NASCAR against after an amazing crash involving him and
Carl Edwards at the same track in April. And after being checked out of the infield hospital, Newman didn't hesitate to get on NASCAR again.
"Drivers used to be about to race each other and respect each other," said Newman. "Guys like Richard Petty, David Pearson and Bobby Allison -- all those guys have always done that. I guess they [NASCAR] just don't think much of us [drivers] anymore."
Posted: Nov 1st 2009 11:36 AM ET by Geoffrey Miller (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Jeff Gordon, Jimmie Johnson, Mark Martin, Talladega Superspeedway, Chase for the Sprint Cup, Sprint Cup
The Essentials
Race: AMP Energy 500
Where: Talladega Superspeedway
Time: Sunday 1:00 p.m. EST
TV/Radio: ABC, MRN Radio
Twitter: Updates @
FanHouseRacing
Forecast: Sunny, High 60s
Distance: 188 laps (500 miles)
Pole Winner: Jimmie Johnson
2008 Winner: Tony Stewart
The Storylines
Consider this as NASCAR's version of laying down the law, but with one problem -- will they actually enforce it?
NASCAR made big noise Sunday morning at Talladega when they told drivers in the pre-race meeting that bump drafting in today's race while racing through the corners would not be permitted. And to back up the rule, they promised to even swipe a victory away if a driver was found to be in violation.
It's a tough rhetoric that we've heard before from NASCAR, but this time it seems like they mean business.
Posted: Oct 29th 2009 7:53 PM ET by Geoffrey Miller (RSS feed)
Filed Under: A.J. Allmendinger, Sprint Cup

NASCAR and Richard Petty Motorsports look a little more spineless today.
NASCAR
Sprint Cup Series driver
A.J. Allmendinger was arrested for DWI early Thursday morning in Mooresville, N.C., after being pulled over and blowing a .08 on a Breathalyzer test -- the legal limit for intoxication in the state. Cited for a misdemeanor, Allmendinger will appear in court on the charge in December.
Allmendinger, though, won't be facing any music from his RPM team or NASCAR -- the same organization that will suspend crew members for racing with an illegal part.
Posted: Oct 27th 2009 1:21 PM ET by Geoffrey Miller (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Denny Hamlin, Jeff Gordon, Kyle Busch, Matt Kenseth, Chase for the Sprint Cup, Sprint Cup
Notes, quotes & commentary after 501 laps around a Virginian paperclip.
I get what NASCAR is trying do, I really do.
They want these races to be dramatic, to make good television and perhaps provide a sense of danger to fans like ESPN's Ed Hinton believes they crave. It's no different than any other sport, movie or story -- dramatic moments bring eyeballs.
But at some point, NASCAR needs to get a whole lot better at not allowing a stalled race car to sit in peril at the start/finish line in the name of a dramatic finish.