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Mark Aumann's Final Four has a combined 20 championships.

A 64-driver bracket quite a battle among sport's best

By Mark Aumann, NASCAR.COM
April 2, 2009
03:05 PM EDT
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Sometimes you find the coolest stuff dealing with NASCAR's history on the Internet. In this case, it's a tournament featuring the 64 greatest drivers in NASCAR's history, with brackets similar to those of the NCAA basketball tournament.

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64-driver bracket

How does Jeff Gordon stack up among the other greatest drivers in an NCAA-style bracket? You decide.

It's the brainchild of Charlie Turner and Steve Wronkowicz, hosts of the syndicated radio show On Pit Row. They also have member profile pages in NASCAR.COM's Communityexternal link section.

According to their site, they took NASCAR's list of the 50 greatest drivers and added 14 current stars to the mix, then instead of seeding the tournament, they randomly sorted the names and came up with the brackets. And surprisingly, with only a few exceptions, it seemed to work very well.

I wound up printing out the brackets and filled in my choices, just to see who would wind up in my Final Four. And to be honest, I could go back tomorrow and revisit the list and probably come up with a completely different set of winners.

One of the regionals was stacked with Lee Petty, Bill Elliott, Junior Johnson, Dale Earnhardt and Ned Jarrett. But the most difficult one might have been the one that included Terry Labonte, Curtis Turner, Mark Martin, Tony Stewart, Bobby Allison, Rusty Wallace, Richard Petty, Cale Yarborough and Dale Jarrett.

There were four intriguing first-round matchups, the most interesting perhaps being a battle between Kyle Busch and Darrell Waltrip. Talk about your mirror images. Ol' DW's a fan favorite now, but when he first started out, the boos were long and loud for the fellow from Owensboro, Ky.

Wallace, who very easily could have made it deep into the bracket, had the misfortune of being put against Richard Petty right off the bat. The same could be said for modified superstar Richie Evans, who drew Pearson on the same side of the tournament. And Dale Earnhardt Jr. wound up against Yarborough in the first round, not a favorable draw for fans of the No. 88. (Continued)

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