43 drivers are in one Nascar Sprint Cup Series race.
1 nationwide in 2010 and one sprint cup in 2012
Two points: Nextel cup is now Nascar Sprint cup, and the Daytona 500 is one of the races in the Nascar Sprint cup Series.
Sprint Cup Series - 36 points races (there are also 3 non-points races, which include the Budweiser Shootout, Sprint Showdown and the Sprint All-Star race)Nationwide Series - 33 points racesCamping World Truck Series - 22 points races
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Difference Between NASCAR SeriesTo be technical, there are many differences in the Sprint Cup cars and the Nationwide cars. First, the wheelbase is longer in a Cup car at 115 inches. Second, the Cup cars have more horsepower, mainly due to a bigger CFM carb. Third, the Nationwide cars weigh 3400 pounds compared to the Sprint Cup cars at 3500 pounds. And the Cup teams race the COT car, and as of now, the Nationwide teams don't yet. In 2009 the Nationwide cars will have their own version of the COT car. Also, the races are shorter for the Nationwide Series. Nationwide drivers/teams don't get paid near as much as their Cup counterparts.
There have been 30 Formula One drivers from Brazil including three world champions.
Since it's inception in 1950, the FIA Formula One World Championship for Drivers has had no Indian champions.
Currently, the #77 car was driven one time in the Sprint Cup Series in 2011. That was by Steve Wallace in the Daytona 500.
There was no #22 in NASCAR during the 2009 Sprint Cup season. The last driver to drive the #22 was Dave Blaney in 2008. In 2012, A.J. Allmendinger drove the #22 for the first 17 races. After Allmendinger's suspension, Sam Hornish Jr. became the driver of the #22 car.
In 2012, Elliott Sadler drove one race in the Sprint Cup Series. He is a full-time driver in the Nascar Nationwide Series.
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