Memories
Stock Car Racing History
No one remembers these either I bet.... and only 10 cents
Can you name the place
http://play.smilebox.com/SpreadMoreHappy/4e444d7a4d5463774d6a453d0d0a
Glad to see you enjoyed yourself -- if you took any photos of any of those great Flat heads at the auction some of us really like to see them and any others you have.
There are some of you who dont like Toyota in Nascar being it has anemblem from across the pond. Others dont like because its not one of the Big Threeand then theres the driver part that some dont like. Give the devil its due but Kyle drove the wheels off that car Sunday to pull off a performance that was displayed in Homestead.
True he got into the chase on a note not heard of but he made it on points by running that Toyota like no other could.
The guy can drive and his car seems asthoughit has a mind of itsown. It ran good every race but man where did the speed come from at Homestead.
True he took away Jeffs ending thunder but others were going to also.
He drove that last race like another we all liked and miss today. All I can say is job well done Kyle. That grin tells the tale..
#18 M&M's Crispy Toyota, poses for a portrait at Homestead-Miami Speedway on November 22, 2015 in Homestead, Florida. (Photo by Jared C. Tilton/NASCAR via Getty Images)">
yes but look at the ones that were left out because of the upset by him winning. Alot of sour faces after the wreck. This is going to be a good one at Homestead next weekend..
Would you call this an upset? Sure made a couple of drivers go home thinking
It appears to still be as shown setting just off US 421 in Nc
A driver said very early on we were racing at Bristol in 2004 maybe or 2005, and another driver is a mentor of mine, he is one of my heroes and helped me a ton in my career and during that race he ran into the back of my car -- it was all I could do to not wreck," the driver recalled.
"At the time, I wondered what happened and didn't know what was going on. On Monday, I called him, 'Hey Bud.' He said, 'Hey .' I said, 'Remember that race when you ran into the back of me and I didn't know if there was something that I needed to know there?' He said, 'No, for the last few races you've been racing me hard and I thought you were taking a little more and I just figured if that's how you want to race, that's how you want to race.' I was like, 'Whoa, no I don't want to race like that.' He said, 'Okay, fine then don't and we won't.' 'Okay, cool.' He said, 'See you next week.' That was the end of that.
In "Car racing everybody drives their car and you just have to do what you think is the best and what is the right thing to do at the time and all of us have done all sorts of things. Some of them were right, some of them definitely weren't right," . "You just have to go out there and race everybody the way you want to be raced. In some ways you have to demand the same in return."
While driver code may still not be the clearest of pictures for one driver -- or any one else on the track or around it, for that matter -- he did get his first lesson in it about a decade ago from a potential future NASCAR Hall of Famer.
Certainly a subjective concept, driver code is interpreted differently from driver to driver, a gray area not unlike baseball's "unwritten rules." There's so many factors in this situation with so many different things happening, it's really difficult to line it all up and say, 'Okay, this is why this happened and this is how to proceed going forward.' It seems pretty complex. I'm just going to focus on my deal and we'll move on." So see you next week is the norm unless ------#2 Wurth Ford, qualifies for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series AAA Texas 500 at Texas Motor Speedway on November 6, 2015 in Fort Worth, Texas.">