Ads
related to: nascar contingency decals
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Contingency decals on a NASCAR car. The best known example of a series with many contingency sponsorships was the NASCAR Cup Series. The front fenders of the cars were mottled with rectangular decals that teams are either required or financially encouraged to display. [1]
In 2022, with the introduction of the Next Gen model car for the Cup Series, the door number was moved forward on all cars, taking the space formerly occupied by the contingency decals, and the driver name on the front windshield was shifted to the right (the same position as on Xfinity driver windshields for points-eligible drivers) to make ...
The 1989 NASCAR Winston Cup Series was the 41st season of professional stock car racing in the United States and the 18th modern-era Cup season. It began February 12 and ended November 19. Rusty Wallace of Blue Max Racing won the championship. This was the first year that every Winston Cup race had flag to flag coverage, with almost all of them ...
A. J. Allmendinger (left) holding the Pole Award trophy (at the time sponsored by Coors Light) after winning the pole for the 2015 Toyota/Save Mart 350. The Busch Light Pole Award, also called the Anheuser-Busch Pole Award if the driver is under 21 years of age (minimum age for alcohol advertising and consumption), and previously the Busch Pole Award (1979-1997, 2004–2007 in the second-tier ...
At the Rebel 500 retro round in 2017, his final full-time Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season in 2017, his 1998 Xfinity Series championship livery was used with current Nationwide decals. For the October 2017 Martinsville race, the Jeff Gordon Nationwide #88 scheme, except with current-era Nationwide logos, was used. (Gordon's car carried ...
Despite 63 NASCAR Cup Series wins (ninth all-time) and two season championships, Busch has never won the Daytona 500 in 20 attempts. The competition and you: Sign up for USA TODAY's Sports newsletter.