Talladega Days: Behind the Scenes at NASCAR's Most Hated Track

A look inside the nation's most notorious speedway.

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Complex Original

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Loved by fans. Hated by drivers. The pride of Alabama, and the bane of an entire class of sportsmen. Oh yes: This is Talladega.

Since 1969, Talladega's 2.66-mile, four lane track has produced fast, often contentious races (read: "wreckfests"). The competitive spirit runs high, the margin for error, low. This past weekend, Tony Stewart triggered a 25-car crash on the final lap. The pile-up enraged drivers, or as Dale Ernhardt Jr. succinctly put it: "It's not safe." 

That said, it is Talladega. The fans revel in the danger of the tight, 33-degree banks. Crashes are part and parcel of the entertainment, having ended races with frightening regularity.

Race days at the Superspeedway are a juxtaposition between calm and chaos. Before the engines start, crews busily ready cars and pits, drivers attend mandatory meetings, and NASCAR does what does best—engage fans. Complex.com got a driver's seat-look behind the scenes at America's most notorious speedway on raceday, as it prepared and cheered on both the fred's 250 Powered by Coca-Cola NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Race and the Good Sam Roadside Assistance 500.

Related: The 50 Craziest (Non-Fatal) NASCAR Crashes

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