Chase Briscoe Calls Battling SVG Like Trying to Guard Michael Jordan in His Prime
Chase Briscoe didn’t beat Shane van Gisbergen—but for a moment, it looked like he might, and that alone tells you how far he’s come.
Chase Briscoe didn’t beat Shane van Gisbergen—but for a moment, it looked like he might, and that alone tells you how far he’s come.
It wasn’t even a stage break when tempers boiled over at lap 62 at Sonoma Sunday—but the yellow flag flew, and suddenly pit road turned into a low-budget sequel to Days of Thunder.
Sonoma was less a race and more a performance—starring Shane van Gisbergen and 35 background cars.
For the second straight weekend, Shane van Gisbergen dominated NASCAR time trials—and predictably so.
He says it’s just a holiday, but Shane van Gisbergen is once again the road course driver everyone else is chasing.
What started with a bump in Chicago ended with a dinner in California—Bowman and Wallace are back on good terms.
The Next Gen car may have widened the tech gap, but for JRM, it created a sweet spot for independence—and wins.
The only thing tougher than the Sonoma course? Beating your own teammate to stay alive in NASCAR’s $1M challenge.
NASCAR’s opening act returns to Bowman Gray — where the walls are close, the fans are louder, and the chaos is guaranteed.
There’s a line about the pinball wizard in the Who’s rock opera “Tommy” that goes “What makes him so good?”