Kyle Busch Had a Good Day Going Right Up Until the Laws of Texas Racing Took Over
Kyle Busch spent much of Sunday near the front, which lately has felt about as rare as a calm airport in Florida during hurricane season.
Kyle Busch spent much of Sunday near the front, which lately has felt about as rare as a calm airport in Florida during hurricane season.
After years of grumbling about the track, Elliott left Texas Motor Speedway with another trophy and Denny Hamlin still stuck in his rearview mirror.
Bell was leading and looking dangerous before a spinning car ahead turned another promising race into another frustrating finish.
The final laps of the NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts at Texas looked less like stock car racing and more like two fighter pilots trying to occupy the same piece of sky.
At a track where mistakes arrive faster than Texas weather, Daniel Suarez believes the racing groove is finally opening up — and that could make Sunday very interesting.
Few drivers have had a rougher relationship with their home track than Chris Buescher, whose Texas luck has included tire failures, rain and enough frustration to fill a Buc-ee’s parking lot.
The man changing tires for John Hunter Nemechek once worked for Jeff Gordon and Dale Earnhardt Jr., and at Texas that experience could matter more than ever.
Fresh off his first Cup win at Talladega, Carson Hocevar backed up the swagger Saturday by grabbing the pole at Texas Motor Speedway by a microscopic 0.003 seconds.
For Carson Hocevar, success arrived a week early.
Forget chaos and cautions—this was a win built lap by lap, the old-school way.