NASCAR Drops the Hammer on Hill for Wrecking and Raging
Wreck a veteran, drop F-bombs on the radio, and NASCAR just might give you the weekend off. Austin Hill found that out the hard way.
Wreck a veteran, drop F-bombs on the radio, and NASCAR just might give you the weekend off. Austin Hill found that out the hard way.
Stewart Friesen walked into Quebec chasing a win. He left in an ambulance, facing surgeries and a season in jeopardy.
Ty Gibbs didn’t need to win the Brickyard—he just needed to outlast a Cinderella named Dillon. One got the money. The other got smashed on a restart.
Bubba Wallace stared down fuel fumes, Kyle Larson, and a rogue rain shower to win one of NASCAR’s crown jewels in an overtime thriller at the Brickyard.
Turn 4 at Indy turned into a demolition derby, Austin Hill got parked, and Richard Childress turned up the volume on what he perceives to be NASCAR’s double standards.
Corey Heim clinched the regular-season title, but Layne Riggs stole the show at IRP with a dominant drive straight out of a racing fairy tale.
Denny Hamlin’s back with JGR. Because you don’t split up Batman and the Batmobile.
NASCAR’s newest street race isn’t on Main Street — it’s on a Navy base where SEALs train. Welcome to Coronado, where Hell Week meets horsepower.
Christopher Bell’s Sunday was equal parts pace, promise, and pirouettes.
In the real world, Cinderella doesn’t drive a stock car.