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Tesla was caught withholding evidence in a lawsuit that resulted from the deadly crash of one of its cars. The plaintiffs in ...
Norris trailed Oscar Piastri through the race, having been edged to pole by just 0.012s, but he was forced out with seven ...
Here's what else happened in Sunday’s IndyCar finale: ...
Alex Laughlin compared the surge of adrenaline to “outrunning a bear” after dodging Justin Schriefer’s runaway Funny Car in ...
Porsche calls the 918 "a technical masterpiece." It was the first production car to break seven minutes at the Nürburgring, Porsche points out. It gets 874 hp from its 4.6-liter plug-in hybrid V8, ...
Don’t panic, because Salon Privé Blenheim Palace over in England just picked the most traditionally proportioned and classically provenanced winner possibly ever: the 1936 Mercedes-Benz 500K Spezial ...
From Josh Berry’s opening-lap crash to Alex Bowman’s pit road nightmare, the Southern 500 turned into a survival race for some of NASCAR’s Playoff field.
Ferrari had a pretty desultory day at Formula 1’s Dutch Grand Prix, with Lewis Hamilton crashing out by himself, before Charles Leclerc was unceremoniously punted into the barriers by Kimi Antonelli.
For Chase Briscoe, perfection was the theme of the night—while much of the Playoff field battled errors and heartbreak.
Funny Car points leader Austin Prock wins the Funny Car All-Star Callout as Brittany Force, Jack Beckman, Greg Anderson, and Gaige Herrera all qualify No. 1.
Chase Briscoe may have won the Southern 500, but it was non-playoff drivers Jones and Nemechek who nearly stole the show for Legacy Motor Club.
IndyCar’s season finale at Nashville Superspeedway took a grim turn on Sunday when David Malukas left the track not in his Chevrolet, but in a medical helicopter.