NASCAR on Speed
| NASCAR on Speed | |
|---|---|
| Genre | Auto racing |
| Presented by | Speed Channel |
| Starring | See Personalities section below |
| Country of origin | United States |
| Original language(s) | English |
| No. of seasons | 12 |
| Production | |
| Running time | 2–5 hours |
| Release | |
| Original network | Speed |
| Original release | February 11, 2002 – August 17, 2013 |
| Chronology | |
| Related shows | |
| External links | |
| [{{#property:P856}} Website] | |
Search NASCAR on Speed on Amazon.
NASCAR on Speed was the brand name of Speed's coverage of NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice sessions, qualifying sessions and a limited number of races, as well as Camping World Truck Series races that began in 2002. It was produced by Fox Sports. Pre-race coverage was usually by NASCAR RaceDay while post-race coverage was on NASCAR Victory Lane. Other programs, such as Speed Center and Wind Tunnel with Dave Despain also provided limited coverage of NASCAR-related events. Starting in August 2013, Speed's coverage of NASCAR, including RaceDay, Victory Lane and NASCAR Live!, moved to Fox Sports 1.[1]
The channel's original iteration, Speedvision, previously carried several NASCAR Winston West Series races on a tape-delay basis.[2]
Personalities
- Rick Allen (2003–2013) (now with NASCAR on NBC)
- Adam Alexander (2008–2013)
- Allen Bestwick (2002–2006) with NBC/TNT
- Steve Byrnes (2001–2013) (died in 2015)
- Matt Clark (2012–2013)
- Dave Despain (2003–2013) (now with MAVTV)
- Bob Dillner (2001–2013) (now with MAVTV)
- Ray Dunlap (2003–2013)
- Mike Joy (2001–2013)
- Chad Knaus (2006–2012)
- Larry McReynolds (2001–2013)
- Phil Parsons (2003–2013)
- John Roberts (2006–2013) (retired in 2018)
- Elliott Sadler (2005–2011)
- Hermie Sadler (2005–2011)
- Dorsey Schroeder (2003)
- Jimmy Spencer (2006–2013) (retired)
- Wendy Venturini (2006–2013)
- Krista Voda (2007–2013) (later with NBC until 2020)
- Kenny Wallace (2005–2013) (retired in 2018)
- Darrell Waltrip (2001–2013) (retired in 2019)
- Michael Waltrip (2004–2013)
- Rutledge Wood (2005–2013) (now with NBC)
References
- ↑ Pockrass, Bob (2013-03-05). "Fox Sports 1 will carry Sprint Cup; Speed gone on Aug. 17". Sporting News. Archived from the original on 2013-07-11. Retrieved 2013-06-16.
- ↑ "WWS: Winston West Series set big TV schedule". Motorsport.com. March 18, 2000. Retrieved January 31, 2024.
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