Try 6 of them.
Name them.
Junior Johnson - 0 - 50 wins
Bobby Allison - 1 - 84 wins
Donnie Allison - 0 - 10 wins
Buddy Baker - 0 - 19 wins
Benny Parsons - 1 - 21 wins
Cale Yarborough - 3 - 83 wins
Neil Bonnett - 0 - 18 wins
Harry Gant - 0 - 18 wins
Try 6 of them.
If I had to assemble a top ten drivers list, mine would look something like this:
1. Dale Earnhardt
2. Jeff Gordon
3. Darrell Waltrip
4. Jimmie Johnson
5. Cale Yarborough
6. Bobby Allison
7. Tony Stewart
8. Kyle Busch
9. ?
10. ?
9. Dale Jarrett
10. Ernie Erving
Nascar has been eating itself from the inside for the last 20 years.
I was a big NASCAR fan back in the day rooting for Bill Elliott, Davey Allison, etc, then Mark Martin. Hated Earnhardt. I just lost interest at some point...I think when all the cars started to look the same. I tried tuning in recently and I had no clue about the stages, nor who was who, other than a couple big names.
I'm surprised there seems to be little interest on this site for IMSA, WEC, PWC, etc. I enjoy the hell out of watching those races.
I'm surprised there seems to be little interest on this site for IMSA, WEC, PWC, etc. I enjoy the hell out of watching those races.
Maybe, but I rarely see any posts about this type of racing. No discussion on Briscoe looping it at the very end of the Sebring race due to out of class traffic, nothing on the crazy rain at Daytona, possible Hypercar/DPi merging, etc. There's some outstanding racing in the GS class with Kohr Motorsports and Multimatic running their GT4 Mustangs.There's plenty of interest. They just don't get the TV time, or coverage the bigger series' do.
Maybe, but I rarely see any posts about this type of racing. No discussion on Briscoe looping it at the very end of the Sebring race due to out of class traffic, nothing on the crazy rain at Daytona, possible Hypercar/DPi merging, etc. There's some outstanding racing in the GS class with Kohr Motorsports and Multimatic running their GT4 Mustangs.
IMSA's coverage sucks as I've had numerous problems going through a third party to get access. I usually watch the in car footage off the IMSA site and listen to the radio broadcast.
And I haven't started any threads either, so I'm part of the problem...
Why did NASCAR wait so long to open the pits on the caution right before the end of stage 1?201 today! 202 tomorrow...
Why did NASCAR wait so long to open the pits on the caution right before the end of stage 1?
You could be right, and you could be a little jaded.Because NASCAR. It wouldn't have mattered either way, nobody had anything for Kyle today.
You could be right, and you could be a little jaded.
It would have been more fun though if they'd let the pit strategy play out a little bit.
Don't get me wrong, I'm not saying the outcome woulda been any different but, c'mon NASCAR, when you have an opportunity to add some excitement, why not take advantage of it?
And I know the answer to my own question.
They'd better do something, and quick, to turn it around. There must've been all of 300 people at that race today. And they've been having trouble selling out a lot of the cup races for years. Thanks Brian France.
But he may not have been if they would've opened the pits earlier during that first caution.Kyle was on the same pit strategy as everyone else most of the race. At the end he was on older tires. That's not being jaded, that's just facts. Kyle wasn't losing this race unless he received a penalty or wrecked. Lol
But he may not have been if they would've opened the pits earlier during that first caution.
The pit strategy went out the window when the stages were implemented.
Meh.I'm failing to see your point other than NASCAR messed up the call when to open pit road, which I agree with you on, but... (see below)
This.