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myLot brian vickers commmentary
| Ready to roll | | And so, here we are on Sunday, nine months to the day since the 2006 Nextel Cup season was born just a few hundred miles up the eastern Florida coast in Daytona Beach. And like a typical pregnancy that runs its full course of gestation, Sunday's Ford 400 will give birth to a new champion in the world of stock car racing. Sure, there have been labor pains along the way, including Tony Stewart missing the Chase for the Nextel Cup, thus being unable to defend last year's championship. Even as the season was conceived, there were issues like Chad Knaus being suspended for the first four races after trying to play fast and loose with the rules at Daytona. And on the way to full term, there was the occasional kicking – OK, maybe booting might be a better choice of words – like when Brian Vickers punted both Dale Earnhardt Jr. and current points leader Jimmie Johnson – the clear title favorite – out of the way on the final lap at Talladega. There also was morning sickness every Monday after the first nine Chase races, as several Chase competitors still were sick to their stomachs over the horrible races they had endured the day before. Looking around... | |
| | Biffle finished season on high note -- again. | |
Greg Biffle is getting used to winning and being overlooked at Homestead-Miami Speedway. On Sunday, for the third straight year, Biffle won the season finale and watched the series champion get most of the attention.
This time it was Jimmie Johnson, who finished ninth and wrapped up his first series title, standing in the spotlight while Biffle was mostly ignored. The media horde was mostly interested in drivers involved in the championship battle. Biffle shrugged off the cold shoulder. ``I still get the check and I still get the trophy and, when we go to Daytona in February, I'm the most recent winner,'' Biffle said, smiling. His second victory of the year and the 11th of his career was a big one for Biffle, who has struggled most of this season after being the series runner-up in 2005. ``It does a lot for us,'' Biffle said. ``Everybody knows this has been a tough year for us. It seems like we haven't been in the right place at the right time and then haven't had fast enough race cars and have had mechanical failures.'' Biffle has won the Homestead race each of the last three years. ``I'll tell you this Ford Fusion was awesome. This is the... | |
| | Johnson finally joins NASCAR's elite with first career Cup | | Jimmie Johnson thought he had it made two years ago, when he started to get that "tingling feeling" that he was about to win the NASCAR Nextel Cup championship. The only problem was he forgot to tell Kurt Busch, who went on to defeat Johnson by just eight points. After finishing ninth in Sunday's Ford 400 at Homestead-Miami Speedway, Johnson could celebrate his first Nextel Cup crown. The wait was worth it to the driver who started the season by winning the Daytona 500, captured the Allstate 400 at the Brickyard in August and closed the season by hoisting NASCAR's biggest prize, the Nextel Cup. In the process, he removed the burden of being one of the best drivers in the sport who had yet to win the championship - a characterization Johnson felt was inaccurate. "I don't see it as a burden and I don't think anyone on our race team does," Johnson said. "It's our fifth season together. We look at it as a compliment to hear that response. "Don't get me wrong, we didn't want to miss an opportunity when we were in the position to become a champion." Johnson certainly has nothing to be ashamed of despite the fact he entered "The Chase for the... | |
| | 2006 a time of change for NASCAR | | Jimmie Johnson opened and closed the 2006 season on top, for very different reasons. The year began with the controversial suspension of his crew chief, who was caught cheating before the Daytona 500 and kicked out of the garage for four weeks. It ended with Johnson and Chad Knaus hoisting the Nextel Cup trophy as the championship winning team.
It was a headlining year for Johnson, but he hardly stole the show. NASCAR's 2006 season was thick with story lines, subplots and drama that didn't involve Johnson at all. There was NASCAR's intense focus on the future, two elite teams moving in opposite directions and the defending Nextel Cup champion embarking on his own rollercoaster season. Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Jeff Gordon both returned to the top of the sport -- with Gordon making a pit stop to get married along the way -- while a handful of former contenders dropped to the back of the field. But the main theme of the season was change as everyone spent most of the year preparing for what's to come in 2007: A foreign automaker, a Colombian driver, a futuristic car and a new television network. NASCAR chairman Brian France is confident the new... | |
| | Top stories of 2006 | |
It's never easy recapping the top 10 stories of a typical NASCAR season. Try as you may, something notable invariably misses the cut. This year it was particularly difficult to come up with a top-10 list because newly crowned Jimmie Johnson played such a major part in several of the top stories. In fact, it would be easy to make this an all-Johnson list. Of course, that wouldn't be fair to those drivers and teams who fought so hard this year. So the solution is simple: combine all of Johnson's top storylines into just one item, even though that will dwarf the other items considerably. So here are my picks for the top 10 stories of 2006, with a few additional honorable mentions that can't be overlooked: 1. Jimmie Johnson. Without question, Johnson was the biggest story of the season, which culminated in him winning his first Nextel Cup championship this past Sunday. Along the way, Johnson figured in numerous other major stories. There was the controversy-filled win in the season-opening Daytona 500 without suspended crew chief Chad Knaus, and more major victories in the Nextel All-Star Challenge and the Allstate 400 at the Brickyard – plus additional... | |
| | Who Is Your Favorite NASCAR Driver/Drivers? | | As a huge fan of the sport I like to find out who other fans like, who is your favorite driver and why? How long have you been following them and watching NASCAR?My favorite driver is Jimmie Johnson, I know this can cause a big debate but you can like who you like, this is why we live in America. I've been following Jimmie since 2002 and I've been watching NASCAR since around that time as well, I use to see clips when I was younger but never really understood it and was too busy with other things. My second favorite is Brian Vickers, I've been following him since 2003 and followed him all the way to Hendrick and now onto Red Bull.I don't want this post to cause fights since I know sports can and especially NASCAR and who likes and dislikes who, I just want to know who everyone is cheering for each week. | |
|
|
myLot brian vickers commmentary
| Ready to roll | | And so, here we are on Sunday, nine months to the day since the 2006 Nextel Cup season was born just a few hundred miles up the eastern Florida coast in Daytona Beach. And like a typical pregnancy that runs its full course of gestation, Sunday's Ford 400 will give birth to a new champion in the world of stock car racing. Sure, there have been labor pains along the way, including Tony Stewart missing the Chase for the Nextel Cup, thus being unable to defend last year's championship. Even as the season was conceived, there were issues like Chad Knaus being suspended for the first four races after trying to play fast and loose with the rules at Daytona. And on the way to full term, there was the occasional kicking – OK, maybe booting might be a better choice of words – like when Brian Vickers punted both Dale Earnhardt Jr. and current points leader Jimmie Johnson – the clear title favorite – out of the way on the final lap at Talladega. There also was morning sickness every Monday after the first nine Chase races, as several Chase competitors still were sick to their stomachs over the horrible races they had endured the day before. Looking around... | |
| | Biffle finished season on high note -- again. | |
Greg Biffle is getting used to winning and being overlooked at Homestead-Miami Speedway. On Sunday, for the third straight year, Biffle won the season finale and watched the series champion get most of the attention.
This time it was Jimmie Johnson, who finished ninth and wrapped up his first series title, standing in the spotlight while Biffle was mostly ignored. The media horde was mostly interested in drivers involved in the championship battle. Biffle shrugged off the cold shoulder. ``I still get the check and I still get the trophy and, when we go to Daytona in February, I'm the most recent winner,'' Biffle said, smiling. His second victory of the year and the 11th of his career was a big one for Biffle, who has struggled most of this season after being the series runner-up in 2005. ``It does a lot for us,'' Biffle said. ``Everybody knows this has been a tough year for us. It seems like we haven't been in the right place at the right time and then haven't had fast enough race cars and have had mechanical failures.'' Biffle has won the Homestead race each of the last three years. ``I'll tell you this Ford Fusion was awesome. This is the... | |
| | Johnson finally joins NASCAR's elite with first career Cup | | Jimmie Johnson thought he had it made two years ago, when he started to get that "tingling feeling" that he was about to win the NASCAR Nextel Cup championship. The only problem was he forgot to tell Kurt Busch, who went on to defeat Johnson by just eight points. After finishing ninth in Sunday's Ford 400 at Homestead-Miami Speedway, Johnson could celebrate his first Nextel Cup crown. The wait was worth it to the driver who started the season by winning the Daytona 500, captured the Allstate 400 at the Brickyard in August and closed the season by hoisting NASCAR's biggest prize, the Nextel Cup. In the process, he removed the burden of being one of the best drivers in the sport who had yet to win the championship - a characterization Johnson felt was inaccurate. "I don't see it as a burden and I don't think anyone on our race team does," Johnson said. "It's our fifth season together. We look at it as a compliment to hear that response. "Don't get me wrong, we didn't want to miss an opportunity when we were in the position to become a champion." Johnson certainly has nothing to be ashamed of despite the fact he entered "The Chase for the... | |
| | 2006 a time of change for NASCAR | | Jimmie Johnson opened and closed the 2006 season on top, for very different reasons. The year began with the controversial suspension of his crew chief, who was caught cheating before the Daytona 500 and kicked out of the garage for four weeks. It ended with Johnson and Chad Knaus hoisting the Nextel Cup trophy as the championship winning team.
It was a headlining year for Johnson, but he hardly stole the show. NASCAR's 2006 season was thick with story lines, subplots and drama that didn't involve Johnson at all. There was NASCAR's intense focus on the future, two elite teams moving in opposite directions and the defending Nextel Cup champion embarking on his own rollercoaster season. Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Jeff Gordon both returned to the top of the sport -- with Gordon making a pit stop to get married along the way -- while a handful of former contenders dropped to the back of the field. But the main theme of the season was change as everyone spent most of the year preparing for what's to come in 2007: A foreign automaker, a Colombian driver, a futuristic car and a new television network. NASCAR chairman Brian France is confident the new... | |
| | Top stories of 2006 | |
It's never easy recapping the top 10 stories of a typical NASCAR season. Try as you may, something notable invariably misses the cut. This year it was particularly difficult to come up with a top-10 list because newly crowned Jimmie Johnson played such a major part in several of the top stories. In fact, it would be easy to make this an all-Johnson list. Of course, that wouldn't be fair to those drivers and teams who fought so hard this year. So the solution is simple: combine all of Johnson's top storylines into just one item, even though that will dwarf the other items considerably. So here are my picks for the top 10 stories of 2006, with a few additional honorable mentions that can't be overlooked: 1. Jimmie Johnson. Without question, Johnson was the biggest story of the season, which culminated in him winning his first Nextel Cup championship this past Sunday. Along the way, Johnson figured in numerous other major stories. There was the controversy-filled win in the season-opening Daytona 500 without suspended crew chief Chad Knaus, and more major victories in the Nextel All-Star Challenge and the Allstate 400 at the Brickyard – plus additional... | |
| | Who Is Your Favorite NASCAR Driver/Drivers? | | As a huge fan of the sport I like to find out who other fans like, who is your favorite driver and why? How long have you been following them and watching NASCAR?My favorite driver is Jimmie Johnson, I know this can cause a big debate but you can like who you like, this is why we live in America. I've been following Jimmie since 2002 and I've been watching NASCAR since around that time as well, I use to see clips when I was younger but never really understood it and was too busy with other things. My second favorite is Brian Vickers, I've been following him since 2003 and followed him all the way to Hendrick and now onto Red Bull.I don't want this post to cause fights since I know sports can and especially NASCAR and who likes and dislikes who, I just want to know who everyone is cheering for each week. | |
|
|
myLot brian vickers commmentary
| Ready to roll | | And so, here we are on Sunday, nine months to the day since the 2006 Nextel Cup season was born just a few hundred miles up the eastern Florida coast in Daytona Beach. And like a typical pregnancy that runs its full course of gestation, Sunday's Ford 400 will give birth to a new champion in the world of stock car racing. Sure, there have been labor pains along the way, including Tony Stewart missing the Chase for the Nextel Cup, thus being unable to defend last year's championship. Even as the season was conceived, there were issues like Chad Knaus being suspended for the first four races after trying to play fast and loose with the rules at Daytona. And on the way to full term, there was the occasional kicking – OK, maybe booting might be a better choice of words – like when Brian Vickers punted both Dale Earnhardt Jr. and current points leader Jimmie Johnson – the clear title favorite – out of the way on the final lap at Talladega. There also was morning sickness every Monday after the first nine Chase races, as several Chase competitors still were sick to their stomachs over the horrible races they had endured the day before. Looking around... | |
| | Biffle finished season on high note -- again. | |
Greg Biffle is getting used to winning and being overlooked at Homestead-Miami Speedway. On Sunday, for the third straight year, Biffle won the season finale and watched the series champion get most of the attention.
This time it was Jimmie Johnson, who finished ninth and wrapped up his first series title, standing in the spotlight while Biffle was mostly ignored. The media horde was mostly interested in drivers involved in the championship battle. Biffle shrugged off the cold shoulder. ``I still get the check and I still get the trophy and, when we go to Daytona in February, I'm the most recent winner,'' Biffle said, smiling. His second victory of the year and the 11th of his career was a big one for Biffle, who has struggled most of this season after being the series runner-up in 2005. ``It does a lot for us,'' Biffle said. ``Everybody knows this has been a tough year for us. It seems like we haven't been in the right place at the right time and then haven't had fast enough race cars and have had mechanical failures.'' Biffle has won the Homestead race each of the last three years. ``I'll tell you this Ford Fusion was awesome. This is the... | |
| | Johnson finally joins NASCAR's elite with first career Cup | | Jimmie Johnson thought he had it made two years ago, when he started to get that "tingling feeling" that he was about to win the NASCAR Nextel Cup championship. The only problem was he forgot to tell Kurt Busch, who went on to defeat Johnson by just eight points. After finishing ninth in Sunday's Ford 400 at Homestead-Miami Speedway, Johnson could celebrate his first Nextel Cup crown. The wait was worth it to the driver who started the season by winning the Daytona 500, captured the Allstate 400 at the Brickyard in August and closed the season by hoisting NASCAR's biggest prize, the Nextel Cup. In the process, he removed the burden of being one of the best drivers in the sport who had yet to win the championship - a characterization Johnson felt was inaccurate. "I don't see it as a burden and I don't think anyone on our race team does," Johnson said. "It's our fifth season together. We look at it as a compliment to hear that response. "Don't get me wrong, we didn't want to miss an opportunity when we were in the position to become a champion." Johnson certainly has nothing to be ashamed of despite the fact he entered "The Chase for the... | |
| | 2006 a time of change for NASCAR | | Jimmie Johnson opened and closed the 2006 season on top, for very different reasons. The year began with the controversial suspension of his crew chief, who was caught cheating before the Daytona 500 and kicked out of the garage for four weeks. It ended with Johnson and Chad Knaus hoisting the Nextel Cup trophy as the championship winning team.
It was a headlining year for Johnson, but he hardly stole the show. NASCAR's 2006 season was thick with story lines, subplots and drama that didn't involve Johnson at all. There was NASCAR's intense focus on the future, two elite teams moving in opposite directions and the defending Nextel Cup champion embarking on his own rollercoaster season. Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Jeff Gordon both returned to the top of the sport -- with Gordon making a pit stop to get married along the way -- while a handful of former contenders dropped to the back of the field. But the main theme of the season was change as everyone spent most of the year preparing for what's to come in 2007: A foreign automaker, a Colombian driver, a futuristic car and a new television network. NASCAR chairman Brian France is confident the new... | |
| | Top stories of 2006 | |
It's never easy recapping the top 10 stories of a typical NASCAR season. Try as you may, something notable invariably misses the cut. This year it was particularly difficult to come up with a top-10 list because newly crowned Jimmie Johnson played such a major part in several of the top stories. In fact, it would be easy to make this an all-Johnson list. Of course, that wouldn't be fair to those drivers and teams who fought so hard this year. So the solution is simple: combine all of Johnson's top storylines into just one item, even though that will dwarf the other items considerably. So here are my picks for the top 10 stories of 2006, with a few additional honorable mentions that can't be overlooked: 1. Jimmie Johnson. Without question, Johnson was the biggest story of the season, which culminated in him winning his first Nextel Cup championship this past Sunday. Along the way, Johnson figured in numerous other major stories. There was the controversy-filled win in the season-opening Daytona 500 without suspended crew chief Chad Knaus, and more major victories in the Nextel All-Star Challenge and the Allstate 400 at the Brickyard – plus additional... | |
| | Who Is Your Favorite NASCAR Driver/Drivers? | | As a huge fan of the sport I like to find out who other fans like, who is your favorite driver and why? How long have you been following them and watching NASCAR?My favorite driver is Jimmie Johnson, I know this can cause a big debate but you can like who you like, this is why we live in America. I've been following Jimmie since 2002 and I've been watching NASCAR since around that time as well, I use to see clips when I was younger but never really understood it and was too busy with other things. My second favorite is Brian Vickers, I've been following him since 2003 and followed him all the way to Hendrick and now onto Red Bull.I don't want this post to cause fights since I know sports can and especially NASCAR and who likes and dislikes who, I just want to know who everyone is cheering for each week. | |
|
|
myLot brian vickers commmentary
| Ready to roll | | And so, here we are on Sunday, nine months to the day since the 2006 Nextel Cup season was born just a few hundred miles up the eastern Florida coast in Daytona Beach. And like a typical pregnancy that runs its full course of gestation, Sunday's Ford 400 will give birth to a new champion in the world of stock car racing. Sure, there have been labor pains along the way, including Tony Stewart missing the Chase for the Nextel Cup, thus being unable to defend last year's championship. Even as the season was conceived, there were issues like Chad Knaus being suspended for the first four races after trying to play fast and loose with the rules at Daytona. And on the way to full term, there was the occasional kicking – OK, maybe booting might be a better choice of words – like when Brian Vickers punted both Dale Earnhardt Jr. and current points leader Jimmie Johnson – the clear title favorite – out of the way on the final lap at Talladega. There also was morning sickness every Monday after the first nine Chase races, as several Chase competitors still were sick to their stomachs over the horrible races they had endured the day before. Looking around... | |
| | Biffle finished season on high note -- again. | |
Greg Biffle is getting used to winning and being overlooked at Homestead-Miami Speedway. On Sunday, for the third straight year, Biffle won the season finale and watched the series champion get most of the attention.
This time it was Jimmie Johnson, who finished ninth and wrapped up his first series title, standing in the spotlight while Biffle was mostly ignored. The media horde was mostly interested in drivers involved in the championship battle. Biffle shrugged off the cold shoulder. ``I still get the check and I still get the trophy and, when we go to Daytona in February, I'm the most recent winner,'' Biffle said, smiling. His second victory of the year and the 11th of his career was a big one for Biffle, who has struggled most of this season after being the series runner-up in 2005. ``It does a lot for us,'' Biffle said. ``Everybody knows this has been a tough year for us. It seems like we haven't been in the right place at the right time and then haven't had fast enough race cars and have had mechanical failures.'' Biffle has won the Homestead race each of the last three years. ``I'll tell you this Ford Fusion was awesome. This is the... | |
| | Johnson finally joins NASCAR's elite with first career Cup | | Jimmie Johnson thought he had it made two years ago, when he started to get that "tingling feeling" that he was about to win the NASCAR Nextel Cup championship. The only problem was he forgot to tell Kurt Busch, who went on to defeat Johnson by just eight points. After finishing ninth in Sunday's Ford 400 at Homestead-Miami Speedway, Johnson could celebrate his first Nextel Cup crown. The wait was worth it to the driver who started the season by winning the Daytona 500, captured the Allstate 400 at the Brickyard in August and closed the season by hoisting NASCAR's biggest prize, the Nextel Cup. In the process, he removed the burden of being one of the best drivers in the sport who had yet to win the championship - a characterization Johnson felt was inaccurate. "I don't see it as a burden and I don't think anyone on our race team does," Johnson said. "It's our fifth season together. We look at it as a compliment to hear that response. "Don't get me wrong, we didn't want to miss an opportunity when we were in the position to become a champion." Johnson certainly has nothing to be ashamed of despite the fact he entered "The Chase for the... | |
| | 2006 a time of change for NASCAR | | Jimmie Johnson opened and closed the 2006 season on top, for very different reasons. The year began with the controversial suspension of his crew chief, who was caught cheating before the Daytona 500 and kicked out of the garage for four weeks. It ended with Johnson and Chad Knaus hoisting the Nextel Cup trophy as the championship winning team.
It was a headlining year for Johnson, but he hardly stole the show. NASCAR's 2006 season was thick with story lines, subplots and drama that didn't involve Johnson at all. There was NASCAR's intense focus on the future, two elite teams moving in opposite directions and the defending Nextel Cup champion embarking on his own rollercoaster season. Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Jeff Gordon both returned to the top of the sport -- with Gordon making a pit stop to get married along the way -- while a handful of former contenders dropped to the back of the field. But the main theme of the season was change as everyone spent most of the year preparing for what's to come in 2007: A foreign automaker, a Colombian driver, a futuristic car and a new television network. NASCAR chairman Brian France is confident the new... | |
| | Top stories of 2006 | |
It's never easy recapping the top 10 stories of a typical NASCAR season. Try as you may, something notable invariably misses the cut. This year it was particularly difficult to come up with a top-10 list because newly crowned Jimmie Johnson played such a major part in several of the top stories. In fact, it would be easy to make this an all-Johnson list. Of course, that wouldn't be fair to those drivers and teams who fought so hard this year. So the solution is simple: combine all of Johnson's top storylines into just one item, even though that will dwarf the other items considerably. So here are my picks for the top 10 stories of 2006, with a few additional honorable mentions that can't be overlooked: 1. Jimmie Johnson. Without question, Johnson was the biggest story of the season, which culminated in him winning his first Nextel Cup championship this past Sunday. Along the way, Johnson figured in numerous other major stories. There was the controversy-filled win in the season-opening Daytona 500 without suspended crew chief Chad Knaus, and more major victories in the Nextel All-Star Challenge and the Allstate 400 at the Brickyard – plus additional... | |
| | Who Is Your Favorite NASCAR Driver/Drivers? | | As a huge fan of the sport I like to find out who other fans like, who is your favorite driver and why? How long have you been following them and watching NASCAR?My favorite driver is Jimmie Johnson, I know this can cause a big debate but you can like who you like, this is why we live in America. I've been following Jimmie since 2002 and I've been watching NASCAR since around that time as well, I use to see clips when I was younger but never really understood it and was too busy with other things. My second favorite is Brian Vickers, I've been following him since 2003 and followed him all the way to Hendrick and now onto Red Bull.I don't want this post to cause fights since I know sports can and especially NASCAR and who likes and dislikes who, I just want to know who everyone is cheering for each week. | |
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| You might also consider these brian vickers options: |
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