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Bob Dillner (born November 29, 1969) is an American motorsports journalist and television broadcaster. Born in Huntington, New York, he owns and operates Speed51.com.He was also the creator of Trackside Long Island, which first aired in 1992.
NASCAR Trackside was a NASCAR race themed show hosted by Krista Voda on Speed Channel. The show also featured former NASCAR driver Kyle Petty and SPEED personalities Rutledge Wood and Kaitlyn Vincie. [1] Elliott Sadler and former NASCAR crew chief Jeff Hammond occasionally occupied the seat in Petty's absence.
Trackside may refer to: NASCAR Trackside , an American automotive television series which ran from 2010–2013 TAB Trackside , a New Zealand horse racing and sports broadcast network
American Speed Association; Champ Car (2002–2006) European Touring Car Championship; Formula One – given to NBC Sports; IMSA GT Championship – SPEED showed its successor, the ALMS, until 2011 as well as the spinoff RSCS; IndyCar Series (USA; IRL qualifying and the 1999 VisionAire 500K) REV-OIL Pro Cup Series; Speed World Challenge (now on ...
[1] [2] [3] An "international" version of the network, now known as Fox Sports Racing, concurrently launched in Canada, the Caribbean and the U.S. territory of Puerto Rico to replace the domestic feed, airing archived Speed programming and live simulcasts of motorsports events carried by Fox Sports 1 and Fox Sports 2 in the United States that ...
John Roberts (2014–2018) Truck Series pre and post-race show host, also hosted NASCAR RaceDay on NASCAR on Speed (retired from broadcasting after 2018 season). Kenny Wallace (2007–2018) Select pre and post-race shows, Truck Series pit reporter at Eldora, also hosted NASCAR RaceDay on NASCAR on Speed (retired from broadcasting after 2018 ...
During July 2011, Max Q Motorsports announced that Scott Speed signed a three race contract with the team to race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Watkins Glen International and Pocono Raceway. Following the announcement, Speed commented, "I am excited to get back to the track. Max Q Motorsports seems to have a good operation and a great group ...
The live broadcasting of horse racing in the New Zealand dates back to the launch of a racing radio network in 1978. The station, originally known as Radio Pacific and later as bSport and LiveSport, became TAB Trackside Radio. [4] A racing television station launched in 1992, initially known as Action TV and later as Trackside, is now Trackside 1.