Nascar Kyle Busch Cars
the NASCAR Title!
Each year NASCAR hosts 36 racess in their Sprint Cup series. Drivers running in the 1st 26 races are awarded points every week for finish position and laps led. Due to this unique scoring system, a driver does not need to win lots of races, and instead only needs to solidly finish near the apex of the pack to amass enough points so he can compete in the NASCAR Chase Championship, which comprises the final 10 races of the year. And since NASCAR holds those 36 events on differing kinds of tracks, with different lengths and alternative designs, the eventual winner of the NASCAR Chase is hands-down the best overall driver.
The art of racing is one that requires a strong sense of confidence in what you are doing. When you are going 200-MPH and only a few inches separate you from the other 40 cars you have to believe in what you're doing in order to keep everyone in one piece. These truly are the best drivers in the world.
Across the season, drivers must master Short Courses, Super-speedways, Intermediate Tracks and Road Courses. Each particular track type offers different risks and rewards, and usually, drivers prefer one over another. For instance, Nascar driver Jeff Burton has excelled on flat tracks during the past, and Dale Earnhardt Junior has about half his career victories on super-speedways. That doesn't suggest a driver can't win at their fave track type, it just usually means that a driver like Tony Stewart or Jeff Gordon, who excel on all track types, sometimes has a better chance at taking down the Nascar Chase title.
Take a quick look at the 2012 season so far. The first four races were run on four different track types. So it should be no surprise that we've had four separate winners so far. Matt Kenseth won the Daytona 500 this year, with Denny Hamlin winning the Subway Fresh Fit 500 title at the Phoenix World Raceway (PIR). Daytona is a restrictor plate race run on a 2.5 mile track with 31 degree banking in the turns, while PIR is a 1.0 mile track with a minimum banking of only 9 to 11 degrees. Week three saw Tony Stewart win the Kobalt Tools 400 at the Las Vegas Motor Speedway, with week 4 winner Brad Keselowski finishing 1st in the Food Town 500 at the Bristol Motor Speedway. Vegas is home to an intermediate 1.5 mile track with 20 degree banking, and Bristol is a short track, at only over 0.5 miles with 24 to 30 degree banking.
As can clearly be seen, with so many different track types, and 43 drivers fighting for a win every week, just making it into the Nascar Chase is a designation of all round driving skill and talent. And while every year well-known names like Tony Stewart, Jimmie Johnson, Carl Edwards, the Busch siblings Kyle and Kurt, and Jeff Gordon are common in victory circle, other drivers like Kasey Kahne, Clint Bowyer, Paul Menard and Joey Logano will push hard to make a name for themselves. Hence who do you actually think will win the Nascar Chase in 2012? Regardless of how your driver does this week, the week after next always provides your driver with another race, that would help put him in the Nascar Chase.
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NASCAR Richard Childress Punches Kyle Busch Kansas Speedway 6.4.11