Denny Doubles Down: Darlington Win Adds Fuel to Championship Fire
If Denny Hamlin’s win a week ago at Martinsville, Va. was a competitive relief, his victory Sunday at Darlington, S.C. was championship swagger.
If Denny Hamlin’s win a week ago at Martinsville, Va. was a competitive relief, his victory Sunday at Darlington, S.C. was championship swagger.
Sunday night at Darlington Raceway, William Byron stood on pit road like a man who’d spent three hours building a sandcastle only to have the tide come in and wash it all away.
In the end, it was all about Denny Hamlin
After diligently working through a 98-race winless streak over the last three NASCAR Xfinity Series seasons, Joe Gibbs Racing’s Brandon Jones reminded his competitors — and his fans — Saturday that he’s still a race winner and a title contender.
We almost lost it. Darlington Raceway, that worn-out, egg-shaped monument to stock car glory, was damn near left for dead.
There’s a situation that has developed in NASCAR that no one wants to talk about.
NASCAR officials met with the entire field of Xfinity Series drivers early Friday morning before any track activity at Darlington Raceway.
Darlington Raceway is known as the track “Too Tough to Tame” – and perhaps too that end, its long and distinguished list of winners includes a noticeable group of veterans.
The last Spring weekend Brad Keselowski spent in Darlington, S.C., he left South Carolina with a big trophy.
Hendrick Motorsports’ William Byron won pole position for Sunday’s Goodyear 400 at Darlington Raceway.