We are closing in on the final handful of weeks of the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series season, the stock car series’ 75th anniversary campaign. To celebrate, each week through the end of the season, Ryan McGee is presenting his top five favorite things about the sport.
Top five best-looking cars? Check. Top five toughest drivers? We’ve got it. Top five mustaches? There can be only one, so maybe not.
Without further ado, our 75 favorite things about NASCAR, celebrating 75 years of stock car racing.
Thus far we’ve had lists of tough guys and great races, including great races featuring tough guys, but why do all these tough guys run all these great races in the first place? To win championships! Dale Earnhardt himself admitted on countless occasions that he’d trade in any and all of his 76 race wins — yes, including his long-sought 1998 Daytona 500 victory — for another Cup.
“People think I’m lying about trading that Daytona 500 trophy, but in the end, the end of the season is what this is all about,” The Intimidator said to me in 2000. “It’s about winning championships.”
So, with that sentiment fresh in our mind, exactly what were the greatest title bouts in NASCAR Cup Series history? Grab a Cup, any Cup, be it Strictly Stock, Grand National, Winston, Nextel, Sprint or today’s massive sponsorless chalice, and read ahead as we present our top five greatest NASCAR title bouts.
Honorable Mention: 1950 — Cracking engines at Occoneechee
NASCAR’s second Cup Series season was also one of its craziest, from 14 winners in 19 races to the introduction of Darlington Raceway. In the season finale at Occoneechee Speedway in Hillsborough, North Carolina, Bill Rexford of Conewango, New York, entered as the points leader, but his Oldsmobile popped an engine early. Sitting on a stack of tires, he watched Fireball Roberts take the lead in the race and the championship … but then the future NASCAR Hall of Famer blew his motor while battling Fonty Flock and eventual race winner Lee Petty for the win.
Why didn’t Roberts take it easy and clinch the title? “Winning the race paid $1,500,” Fireball explained later. “I wanted the money.”
5. 1979: Richard Petty over Darrell Waltrip
When Waltrip crashed the NASCAR establishment in the 1970s with his nonstop chatter and seemingly limitless confidence, he made zero friends in the garage. Bobby Allison hated him. Cale Yarborough nicknamed him “Jaws” because he said the guy from Owensboro, Kentucky, was always running his mouth. Even Richard Petty, who rarely said a cross word publicly, became vocal about Waltrip and his overeager pioneering in the ways of talking smack.
By early June 1979, Waltrip had already won four races and seized a lead in the point standings that had ballooned to more than a full race’s worth of an advantage by midsummer. Then, The King started whittling away. He finished sixth or better in the season’s final seven races and suddenly he became the vocal one, visibly rattling Waltrip and his DiGard team.
They swapped the championship lead in each of the final four events. When Waltrip spun out in the Ontario, California, season finale, he finished three spots behind Petty, a lap down, and lost the title by a scant 11 points.
4. 1990: Earnhardt being Earnhardt
After back-to-back nail-biter title bouts vs. Rusty Wallace, Earnhardt battled Mark Martin for the 1990 Cup.
Martin won at Richmond, Virginia, in February but was penalized 46 points when NASCAR ruled that his Jack Roush Ford had used a carburetor spacer that was a half inch too thick. The team’s appeal was denied. Meanwhile, at Charlotte, North Carolina, in October, Earnhardt was not penalized when his crew disobeyed orders from race control, running out to his car to reattach a loose tire after his Chevy had left the pits.
Adding to the drama, Ford, desperate to defeat Earnhardt, sent Martin to Atlanta for a test session prior to the finale, but had him hopping between cars from all of the Blue Oval-supplied teams. It was a frantic mess. Sensing their panic, Earnhardt, also at the test, put four left-side tires on his car, posted a super-fast lap, and then went to sleep in his car where Martin could see him, all for no reason other than to get into his rival’s head. It worked.
Martin had led the standings nearly all season, but never got a handle on the Ford he was put in at Atlanta, a borrowed Thunderbird from Robert Yates. Earnhardt led 42 laps and finished third. Martin finished sixth. Earnhardt won the title by 26 points. Without the penalty, Martin would have earned the Cup by 20 points. Instead, he still carries the title “Best to Never Win It All.”
3. 1973: Benny Parsons over Yarborough
In 1973, Parsons was driving for underfunded team owner L.G. Dewitt, who lived in Rockingham, North Carolina, and Parsons himself lived in nearby Ellerbe. So, when they took the green flag as the points leaders in the season finale, held at the North Carolina Speedway in Rockingham, the hometown crowd was on their side.
Luck was not.
Parsons was involved in a huge crash on Lap 13 that ripped the entire right side off his unsponsored Chevy. That seemingly opened the door for Yarborough to run away with the championship. Then a miracle happened.
All of the crew members on all of the other independent teams started running back to the garage to help Parson reconstruct his destroyed car. He made it back out, finishing 183 laps behind factory-supported Yarborough but scoring just enough points to win the Cup, the last time an independent team took home the title … and in this case took it to their home just a few miles from the track. Read more about that day in this piece I wrote in 2011.
2. 2011: Tony Stewart over Carl Edwards
When the Chase for the Cup format was introduced in 2004, it immediately changed the way Cup Series titles were won, instantly creating every-year reset-button drama that hadn’t existed before. That very first year, Kurt Busch somehow dodged the pit wall as a tire came off his Ford and went on to clinch the Cup. But the gold standard of the Chase/Playoff era is and will forever be the Homestead-Miami finale of 2011.
Stewart had struggled all season, and crew chief Darian Grubb had been told he was being let go at the end of the year. Then Stewart won the first two races of the 10-race postseason. Then he won twice more. When he won for the fifth time in 10 races in the finale, it not only tied Edwards for the points lead after 36 races but also clinched the tiebreaker and won the title. Edwards led the most laps in the race — 119 to Stewart’s 65 — and finished second in the race, even done in by an ill-timed rain shower that opened the door for Stewart to get back into the fight for his third and final title.
1. 1992: Alan Kulwicki defeats Bill Elliott and Davey Allison
This is the second week in a row the 1992 Hooters 500 has topped our top-5 list. That’s how incredibly epic the day was.
Allison came into Atlanta Motor Speedway with the points lead but wrecked midway through the day. That left the fight between Kulwicki, the self-titled “Underbird,” and his self-built team and Elliott, driving for superpower Junior Johnson and Associates.
Elliott won the race, but Kulwicki finished second and, doing quick math, had deftly stayed out under caution to lead an extra lap. In the end, he led one more lap than Elliott, 103 to 102, and those 10 bonus points for leading the most laps on the day made the difference. They both finished the day with 180 points, but Kulwicki finished the season with a 10-point advantage.
Making the day even more poignant in retrospect, by the next summer Kulwicki and Allison were gone, killed in separate plane and helicopter crashes.
Pittsburgh Pirates CEO Travis Williams said the organization is committed to winning but declared to frustrated fans that owner Bob Nutting will not sell the team.
Williams addressed fans’ frustration over Nutting’s ownership Saturday during a Q&A session at the Pirates’ annual offseason fan fest.
As Williams was responding to the first question, one fan in attendance shouted, “Sell the team,” prompting some applause from the audience. At that point, several fans started chanting, “Sell the team!”
Greg Brown, the Pirates’ longtime television play-by-play announcer, asked the fans to stop the chant and to “be respectful.” Another fan then asked Williams, who was seated next to Pirates general manager Ben Cherington and manager Derek Shelton, why Nutting was not in attendance.
“We know, at the end of the day, this is all passion that has turned into frustration relative to winning,” Williams said, according to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. “I think the points that you are making in terms of ‘Where is Bob?’ That’s why he has us here, we’re here to execute and make sure that we win.”
Williams added that Nutting, who has owned the Pirates since 2018, was scheduled to attend the event and interact with fans at some point later Saturday.
“To answer your immediate question that you said earlier, Bob is not going to sell the team,” Williams said. “He cares about Pittsburgh, he cares about winning, he cares about us putting a winning product on the field, and we’re working towards that every day.”
Nutting has been widely criticized by fans and local media in recent years as the Pirates have toiled at or near the bottom of the National League Central standings.
The Pirates went 76-86 last season en route to their fourth last-place finish in the past six seasons. They have not finished with a winning record since 2018, have not reached the playoffs since 2015 and have just three postseason appearances since 1992.
“We know that there is frustration, frustration because we are not winning, with the expectations of winning,” Williams said. “At the end of the day, that’s not due to lack of commitment to want to win.”
Spurred by the arrival of ace pitcher Paul Skenes, the reigning NL Rookie of the Year, the Pirates were 55-52 at the trade deadline last season before a 21-34 free fall through the final two months dropped Pittsburgh to last in the NL Central.
“We can just look at last year,” Williams said. “It was a big positive going through the middle of the season, we were going into August two games above .500, but unfortunately we had a tough run in August and that tough run in August took us out of the hunt for the wild card. … From myself to Ben to Derek to lots of other people that are here today and throughout the entire organization, but that’s not for a lack of commitment or desire to win whatsoever.
“That’s from the top all the way down to the bottom of the organization. We are absolutely committed to win; what we need to do is find a way to win.”
ESPN baseball reporter. Covered the L.A. Rams for ESPN from 2016 to 2018 and the L.A. Angels for MLB.com from 2012 to 2016.
The Los Angeles Dodgers have added left-hander Tanner Scott, arguably the best relief pitcher on the free agent market, agreeing to terms on a four-year, $72 million contract, sources told ESPN’s Jeff Passan on Sunday.
The addition of Scott likely puts the finishing touches on another busy offseason for the reigning World Series champions.
Before Scott, the Dodgers signed Blake Snell, one of the best starters on the market; brought back Teoscar Hernandez and signed Michael Conforto, solidifying the corner outfield; signed Korean second baseman Hyeseong Kim, freeing up a trade of Gavin Lux; extended Tommy Edman; and, in one of the winter’s biggest developments, lured phenom Roki Sasaki.
Originally a sixth-round pick in 2014, Scott has established himself as a dominant force over these past two years. With the Miami Marlins and San Diego Padres from 2023 to 2024, Scott posted a 2.04 ERA in 146 appearances, striking out 188 batters and issuing 60 walks in 150 innings.
With Scott, the Dodgers’ luxury tax payroll is estimated to be somewhere in the neighborhood of $375 million, about $70 million more than that of the second-place Philadelphia Phillies.
The New York Yankees are the only other team with a competitive balance tax payroll projected to be over $300 million.
ATLANTA — “Think traditionally, but without traditional thinking.”
Those were the words of Ross Bjork, the still-new Ohio State athletic director during the Saturday morning media day ahead of Monday night’s College Football Playoff National Championship game. The question was about the balanced approach taken by his football program, and also by the opponent, Notre Dame. The Buckeyes and Fighting Irish inarguably rank among the most tradition-rich teams in the 155-year history of college football. Yet, here they are, after a combined 271 seasons, the second- and fourth-winningest programs of all time, having steered their way to the final game of this season by embracing modernized approaches to the sport while honoring the history that is as much a part of their DNA as helmets and shoulder pads.
Maintaining the shine on those silver and gold helmets by piling up silver and gold in the form of NIL money.
“We want to work at these places because of what they are and what they have been and the success they’ve enjoyed,” Bjork said. “But we have also been charged with ensuring that’s what they continue to be.”
Bjork said that just as the Buckeyes were ending their media day session and the players who earned a spot in the title game, the ones who cost $20 million to assemble, according to Bjork, filed in around him and headed for the team bus. His mantra about respecting the past while moving toward the future was uttered as 45-year-old head coach Ryan Day was holding court at a podium just over his boss’s shoulder. Day’s big-game failures lit the spark needed to raise those millions to sign those players who are now in Atlanta needing only one more win to earn Ohio State’s first national title in a decade.
When the Buckeyes exited the room, their seats were filled by their counterparts at Notre Dame, whose roster includes 10 additions via transfer, once a taboo subject in South Bend, Indiana. The players opted to play in northern Indiana partly due to the just-established coffers of name, image and likeness money. Those new arrivals included the quarterback from Duke who led the Irish downfield late against Penn State in the CFP semifinals, setting up the transfer kicker from South Carolina who kicked the game-winning field goal. Now, Notre Dame football is on the cusp of its first national title since 1988, when cell phones were still carried in shoulder bags. As the Irish players took their places, coach Marcus Freeman, the human energy shot, immediately and unknowingly parroted Bjork.
“Our everyday walk is spent with one foot firmly planted in our past, but that other foot is always stepping in our future.”
Is that easy, Coach?
“No. But it’s also not a burden. It’s a privilege. Once you understand that, it’s worth it. And what makes it worth it is … well …”
With a smile, the 39-year-old coach — a former All-Big Ten Ohio State defender — swept his hand broadly, toward Mercedes-Benz Stadium across the street, toward the gold-wearing Notre Dame faithful in the nearby Playoff Fan Central craning their necks to see their Irish, and toward the cylindrical gold CFP championship trophy, sitting atop a podium in Freeman’s sightline.
“You win football games by being smart and working hard, that’s no secret,” Freeman’s quarterback, Riley Leonard, said. “But you also have to evolve. I think that in college football now, as much as it keeps changing, programs and universities have to change with it. Your choice is to either do that or get left behind.”
But evolution is also a choice. The dinosaurs didn’t have to walk into the tar pits. And college football programs — even old-timers such as Ohio State and Notre Dame — don’t have to walk into the quicksand of mediocrity, led there by the blinders of obligation to keep on keeping on the same way that Knute Rockne and Woody Hayes did.
“The greatest challenge isn’t changing the minds of the people inside the football building. They are living it. They are going to do whatever it takes,” former Notre Dame QB Brady Quinn, now a college football analyst for Fox, said in December as his alma mater began its CFP run. “It’s making the people who support the program understand what needs to be done. Making them understand that the way it always worked, the way their favorite teams were built, is not how it works now. And then explaining that their support that might have always just been rooting for the team, even buying season tickets, that support needs to be backed monetarily. That makes some people uncomfortable, but it is also the reality. And it pays off. Literally.”
Freeman’s predecessor at Notre Dame, Brian Kelly, has come under fire from those who love the Irish, and some of that is warranted. But criticism that he didn’t understand the modern business model like Freeman does isn’t entirely accurate. That model has changed dramatically since Kelly’s sudden departure for LSU three years ago. Even while he still had the job, finishing his 12 seasons only 13 wins shy of Rockne’s record 105, Kelly openly described the daily tug-of-war between pulling Notre Dame into the current times while also wrestling with the longtime program backers who resisted change, aka “the Gold Seats.”
For example, replacing the analog clock and scoreboards that had long sat atop the end zone edges of Notre Dame Stadium became a battle as Kelly hoped to add videoboards. After a years-long debate, the compromise was to add the TV screens, but keep them to a modest size, similar to the old scoreboards, and immediately prior to and after games, the displays on those screens were to be changed to digital images of the old clock and scoreboard.
“Those are the challenges that you face at a university like Notre Dame that I don’t believe you do anywhere else, and I certainly coached at a lot of other places,” said Lou Holtz, chuckling when discussing his 11 years in South Bend, winning that 1988 national championship and finishing right behind Rockne with 100 victories. “There is no question that it took cooperation from the administration, after some hard conversations about where we wanted Notre Dame football to be in the future, for me to get a player like Tony Rice [QB on the ’88 team] into school. I went to [then-president] Father Joyce and appealed to him directly. But I was told he would be admitted only if he proved himself academically for a year, to go nowhere near a football game. And guess what? Tony Rice has his degree from Notre Dame and to this day, is one the most beloved players in the history of the program. We found his place, and we did it within the framework of what one might call the Notre Dame Way.”
It was with that same mentality that Freeman went about selling the idea of bringing in transfers — a practice rarely entertained by a school understandably proud of its academic reputation — as something that could still fit into the parameters of the Notre Dame Way. The 2024 roster additions were carefully selected. They were established stars but also largely graduate transfers already with college degrees. Two players were required to wait until summer to enroll after their degrees were completed, and in the meantime, were relegated to spring practice observers.
Leonard is an undergrad, but no one questions Duke’s academic credentials. He is also a Notre Dame legacy, the great-grandson of James Curran, a 1940 Irish graduate who played football under head coach Elmer Layden, one of the fabled Four Horsemen.
“The transfer portal has really helped us because it’s allowed us to address specific needs, but it’s also helped us distinguish ourselves as a program in the sense that our kids are still picking Notre Dame for a host of reasons, not just NIL,” said Jack Swarbrick, who served as Notre Dame’s AD from 2008 to 2024 and made the decision to promote Freeman after Kelly’s departure. “No one would come to Notre Dame just for NIL. It’s too hard. If all you worried about is the compensation, you’ll go get it somewhere else. … So, for all the schools that are just recruiting with an emphasis on compensation, we’re now even more distinct than we used to be, and I think that’s helped.
“We have to be very careful in the transfer portal. It’s why nine out of 10 are grad students. It’s just really hard to get undergraduate transfers into Notre Dame.”
As Freeman bolstered his roster in the most gold-helmeted fashion, many who had worn those helmets paved the NIL road. That effort was anchored by a collective kick-started by Quinn, with a stated mission of proving to those Gold Seats who feared the future that their shared alma mater could keep up with the times and still do it on their terms. Friends of the University of Notre Dame — FUND — paid athletes for charity work. Now that the NIL structure has changed again, FUND has been closed, handing over the reins to for-profit collective Rally, designed to better handle the next imminent sea change — revenue sharing.
“It is very important to all of us to do everything we can to honor the hard work and investment that so many people are putting in us, especially the former players,” said sophomore defensive back Christian Grey, who hauled in an interception that set up that final CFP semifinal-winning drive for Leonard & Co. “To me, that’s also learning the history of Notre Dame football. My high school English teacher [in St. Louis] was a Notre Dame grad and he taught me that as soon as I committed. He gave me a Four Horseman poster and it’s been on my wall ever since. It reminds me of what we are playing for. Past and present.”
Meanwhile, it was Ryan Day who spurred the NIL and roster revolution in Columbus. Bjork took over as Ohio State AD one year ago, mere days after Buckeyes archenemy Michigan had won its first national championship in 26 years — this after beating OSU for the third straight season. Bjork hadn’t even unpacked his office when Day approached him with a detailed plan on how to catch up to Michigan. Together, they drummed up financial support, having to point only to the Wolverines’ title run as the reason to start cutting checks. Among those listening were former players.
“We had started a collective, the Foundation, in 2023 because we saw what was happening at places like Texas, Alabama, Michigan, you name it, and we knew our school was falling behind,” said Cardale Jones, quarterback on Ohio State’s 2014 team that won the inaugural CFP title. “Sadly, we didn’t get a lot of support from the school itself. But once that commitment started coming from the inside, you see what happened.”
What happened was that $20 million shopping spree that led to a stunning influx and retention of talent, the most impressive offseason this side of the Philadelphia Eagles. And just when it appeared that de facto Avengers assemblage might not pay off — see: two regular-season losses, including a fourth straight to Michigan — the team that entered the newly expanded 12-team CFP as an at-large invitee has been a Buckeye Buzzsaw. A return on investment.
So is there a long-term place in a universe of perpetual college football change for stuff like gold helmets and Buckeye helmet stickers? The House that Knute Rockne Built and the Horseshoe? “Wake Up the Echoes” and the script Ohio? Stories of Paul Hornung and Hopalong Cassady, or George Gipp and Archie Griffin? Is this fast-forward sport of checks and cascading spreadsheets a place where lighting candles in the Grotto and chanting “O-H! I-O!” is anything other than outdated?
Day and Freeman not only believe all of that can coexist within the framework of the modern college football world, but the two head coaches who will shake hands at midfield Monday night — one a champion — believe that all of the above is the key to survival. The grounding rod. The only way to properly digest — or enjoy — what this world has become.
It’s why Freeman reinstated the lost tradition of Notre Dame football players attending Mass as part of their pregame routine; he has converted to Catholicism. It’s why Day got misty-eyed Saturday morning when asked about Ohio State’s Friday night golf course dinners, with the homemade pecan rolls that became a staple of the Woody Hayes experience, and leading his team into pregame Skull Session pep rallies.
“We are in this to win games and championships, but also to do right by our players and by those who have spent their lives dedicated to the idea of Notre Dame football,” Freeman said. “You lose sight of any part of that, and you’ve lost sight of what this all means.”
Added Day: “As long as they have been playing college football, the greatest programs have stayed great by adapting to the times they are in. You evolve your defense. You evolve your offense. So you also have to evolve how you run your program. But you can’t run away from who you are. You cannot let that happen. Ever. That’s when you lose a lot more than some football games.”