New Nationwide cars don’t look like Mustang, Challenger; NASCAR still irrelevant
Filed under: Motorsports, Coupe, Dodge, Ford
Last fall, NASCAR, Ford and Dodge all made a lot of noise about the introduction of the Mustang and Challenger bodies into the Nationwide race series. This all came after the latest Sprint Cup “Car of Tomorrow” drew criticism because all four participating brands had identical body shells, none of which looked like the stock road cars that lend them their names. The initial renderings focused on the front ends of the new racers, which featured more upright noses like the real pony cars you’ll find in dealer showrooms.
Unfortunately, with this weekend’s race debut of the Mustang and Challenger at Daytona, NASCAR proves yet again that nothing has really changed. Despite the the upright front ends, these cars don’t look markedly different from each other, or even the Sprint Cup cars, for that matter. With the headlight and grille stickers blurred out, neither of the new Nationwide stockers looks like a pony car. Can you tell which is which? Check out the originals after the jump.
Continue reading New Nationwide cars don’t look like Mustang, Challenger; NASCAR still irrelevant
New Nationwide cars don’t look like Mustang, Challenger; NASCAR still irrelevant originally appeared on Autoblog on Sat, 03 Jul 2010 17:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Permalink | Email this | Comments
View full post on Autoblog
Related posts:
- Autoblog Podcast #169: Wagons and SuperDuty and NASCAR, Oh My!
- PSA: Ford Mustang to make NASCAR Nationwide debut Friday night
- Michael Waltrip Racing shows Autoblog how to bend the rules, NASCAR style
- Cars.com launches interactive map of Muscle Car areas
- 2011 Dodge Challenger priced on NADA site… big price increases on the way?


