With a gaggle of trucks wrecking behind him as the field approached the finish line, Ben Rhodes shot past Cory Roper in the tri-oval at Daytona International Speedway to win Friday night’s NextEra Energy 250, the 2021 season opener for the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series.

With a decisive push from ThorSport Racing teammate Matt Crafton on the final lap of an overtime shootout, Rhodes had more than enough momentum to charge past Roper in the final 400 yards. Likewise, Jordan Anderson blew past Roper into second place, .036 seconds behind the winner, as Roper held third for a career-best result.

“This is so special — the biggest win of my career,” Rhodes exulted after climbing from his truck. “I can’t even believe this. As a driver, you’re always asked about what your biggest accomplishment is… This is it. This is hands-down it. This is the place to be. I can’t even believe it.”

RELATED: Official race results | Speedweeks schedule

The win was the first for ThorSport after an offseason switch from Ford to Toyota.

“We came back to Toyota and we won in our first race with them at ThorSport,” Rhodes said. “I can’t thank (owners) Duke and Rhonda Thorson enough for this opportunity. This is special. I’m going to soak it up for as long as I can. I’m going to enjoy this night. Best night of my life right here.”

Without Crafton’s help, Rhodes said, he couldn’t have claimed his first win at Daytona and the fourth of his career.

“Thanks goodness I had my teammate, Matt Crafton, behind me, because he’s a stud,” Rhodes said. “He’s been around a long time, and he knows what he’s doing.”

Anderson was a close runner-up for the second straight year, matching his career-best finish.

“I’m almost speechless,” said an elated Anderson, who was anything but tongue-tied. “So much energy, so much emotion…”

RELATED: Jordan Anderson reacts to runner-up result

A multi-truck wreck on Lap 95 of the scheduled 100 ended the winning chances of a handful of contenders. Chandler Smith spun into the infield, and behind him, a vicious crash ended the race for Tyler Ankrum and heavily damaged the trucks of Timothy Peters, Austin Hill and three-time Daytona winner Johnny Sauter.

The trucks of Sunoco Rookie of the Year contenders Carson Hocevar and John Hunter Nemechek also were victims of the crash, but they recovered to finish fifth and seventh, respectively. Ryan Truex ran fourth, followed by Hocevar, defending series champion Sheldon Creed, Nemechek, Codie Rohrbaugh, Smith and Drew Dollar.

Crafton, a three-time series champion, was collected in the overtime wreck and finished 15th. Twenty-eight laps earlier, he was part of a wreck that eliminated a pair of strong entries. With trucks running in a perilous four-wide array on Lap 72, Crafton nosed up the track after a slight tap from Nemechek and bumped the left rear quarter of Todd Gilliland’s Ford. Gilliland spun and collected the trucks of Stewart Friesen and Tate Fogleman behind him, and in the process, Brett Moffitt’s Chevrolet was pinched into the outside wall. The trucks of Gilliland and Friesen were wrecked too severely to continue.

RELATED: Todd Gilliland, Friesen bit by four-wide action

Racing for the second time in six years, 2012 series champion James Buescher was out of the event before he reached the start-finish line to begin the race. With his No. 44 Niece Motorsports Chevrolet destroyed in a four-truck wreck right after the initial start, Buescher exited without completing a lap.

Joining him on the sidelines were Tanner Gray, who spun during the early incident, and Gus Dean, whose truck was damaged too badly to continue. Derek Kraus recovered from a spin in that early crash in what was to become an adventuresome night for the driver of the No. 19 Toyota.

Kraus caused two more cautions with spins and collided with the truck of rookie Kris Wright on pit road before taking his truck to the garage in 33rd place.

The Camping World Truck Series’ next race is scheduled next Friday, Feb. 19 (7:30 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM) back at Daytona, but on the 3.61-mile oval and road course layout.

Note: The No. 99 ThorSport Racing Toyota passed post-race technical inspection Friday night after winning the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series’ NextEra Energy 250  at the Daytona International Speedway. There were no other issues.

Contributing: Staff reports

NASCAR President Steve Phelps touched on a variety of subjects Friday afternoon at Daytona International Speedway, including the sport’s response to COVID-19, social justice and navigating the future in a new era of stock-car racing and entertainment.

As the world continues to battle the year-long pandemic and work together to put an end to this period in history, Phelps discussed what NASCAR learned from a brief midseason hiatus, the protocols put into place once racing resumed and how those takeaways translated into plans for the 2021 season.

MORE: Full Speedweeks schedule | Full Daytona 500 lineup

“I thought (last season’s protocols) worked very well,” said Phelps, NASCAR’s President since 2018. “Nothing’s perfect. We did have some cases, a couple high-profile drivers as well. But all in all, I think if you look at our protocols relative to other sports, I think it worked really well. I think our competitors felt safe and I think our drivers, for the most part, they’re very pleased.

” … I think for us, just to kind of pivot away from that a second, for 2021 it’s going to be largely the same. We’ve done a little tweaking here and there, but for the most part it’s the same. If it didn’t work, we’d do something different. But I believe it worked, so we’re going to stay with the protocols that we had.”

With operations and preparations largely remaining the same as last year’s successful restart and completion of the season, Phelps indicated that focus would then turn to community outreach and the nationwide effort on vaccinations.

What’s one kind of place that’s big enough to hold lots of people in a spaced-out manner with built-in traffic patterns in convenient locations?

Race tracks.

“One thing I would say that is tangential to this, all of our facilities have worked with local, state governments and health officials to open up their facilities for vaccines to be distributed at all of our NASCAR Cup Series tracks. Not just NASCAR-owned, but SMI, the independents. They’re all open and want to be distributing the vaccine,” he said. “There are some that are doing it right now: Texas, Charlotte, Bristol, Atlanta, Auto Club, Richmond. All of them are ready to do it. They are in short supply in some places so we can’t do it. We had a conversation with the White House earlier this week, and the White House is thrilled that we will be doing this.”

RELATED: Phelps named to Board of Directors

While helping to facilitate the rollout of vaccinations is certainly crucial from a public health and safety standpoint, there’s a positive byproduct for the sport, as well.

As more citizens are vaccinated, more fans will be able to return to the track and witness racing as it’s intended: live and loud, with their own eyes and ears.

“With respect to the vaccinations, to me it can’t come too soon,” Phelps said. “It’s not the reason why we’re using our facilities to vaccinate people, but when we get to a place where we have herd immunity, that is something we welcome the time when we can have our media partners in the garage, in the media center, and our race fans.

“NASCAR is about access. Right now we don’t have access with our race fans. We want to give them that access because it’s a unique point of difference in our sport relative to our stick-and-ball brothers.”

Despite the pandemic lingering, there’s more optimism surrounding this season than any other prevailing feeling, as the sport welcomes new teams, new race tracks and new fans.

Phelps feels the momentum is tangible — “more wind at our back than we’ve had in decades,” he said — and it all starts with Sunday’s season-opening Daytona 500 (2:30 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

“I think that if you look at our partner FOX, their promotion right now, they’re calling it the best season ever,” said Phelps.

“I’m hopeful that’s exactly what is going to happen.”


Phelps touched on several key topics surrounding the sport in the 40-minute press conference. Here are some other notable bits.

On NASCAR’s increased involvement in social justice initiatives 

“One of the most important things that happened last year was our stance on social justice. We had talked about being a sport of action. We were at that time. We continue to be. I’m happy to talk about that moving forward. It’s important for us. I think if you look back to what happened in early June to mid-June, probably those moments, that two and a half weeks, was the seminal moment for our sport. It opened up an aperture to a brand-new fan base. Our fans are so welcoming. You’ve all been to the race track, you see what it’s like when an avid fan that has a new fan that comes with them.

“There was a question at the time: Did NASCAR go too far to ban the Confederate flag? Social justice, is that something a sport should do, NASCAR should do? Do we have permission to do it? The answer is yes. The question was: How is that going to affect our core fan, our avid fan?

“For us, I think it was a moment in time for us back in June that seemed for us it was the right time to act. I think it was the right time for our country. I think it was the right time for our sport. The response to that was fantastic. What we do in the areas of social justice and diversity equity inclusion is going to be authentic to who we are.”

On driver star power and celebrity influences

“There’s no question, our drivers are obviously the stars of the show. They’re the ones with the personalities. They’re the ones that fans care about. So any time we can use them as brand ambassadors, we’re going to do that. I think you’ve seen that repeatedly, whether it’s drivers being in Super Bowl ads, drivers that are going to short tracks, or drivers who want to become owners. Every opportunity for us to connect with a fan where they are with our drivers and showcase things, I think it’s important.

“I think like the Denny Hamlin commercial for Domino’s with his PJs, that’s a fun ad that showcases NASCAR and Denny to a national audience. … You look at Pitbull and the thing he did yesterday, how he’s talking about NASCAR. …It’s exciting, right? It’s a new opportunity for us to connect with a new fan. Our drivers are the face of that, whether it’s Bubba Wallace or Danny Suarez, the people’s champ Chase Elliott, or it’s Kyle Busch or Kevin Harvick, any number of our drivers in all three of our national series.”

RELATED: NASCAR.com’s team previews

On increased business interest in NASCAR 

“Absolutely we are feeling it on the business side. We’re feeling it not just on the business side of fielding new calls and new relationships that are coming to the sport – those are happening, too – but it really also is around how our existing sponsors, team sponsors, sanctioning body sponsors, track sponsors, want to jump in with NASCAR.

“Some of them in the areas of social justice which we’ve seen a lot of conversation around, others just because the sport has more relevance and it’s growing.

“Obviously, that’s a place where we want to be. You could see it even with FOX, frankly, right? You look at the amount of promotion that they’re running, the number of spots that they’re doing, the fact they’re going to continue to pour gas on this sport long after the 500 has been run, is fantastic for us.

“What they’re doing with Bristol, what they’ll do with COTA, what they’re going to do with the throwbacks at Darlington, these are all important things for us as a sport. A lot of it has to do with schedule variation, but it’s more than that, right? It’s where this sport is and the importance for these new partners and these long-term partners as well.”

On what practice and qualifying will look like in the future

“The great news for us is (our TV partners) can’t get enough of our content. As far as the practice and qualifying, the reduction in P and Qs, we decided to have more iRacing Pro Invitationals. We decided to create new content with them or work with them to create new content, which that part isn’t ready to be announced but will be announced soon.

“We’re excited that our partners want more NASCAR. We had on NBCSN and on FS1, 60 of the top 100 programs for each of those networks. That’s important. The cable companies want to have programs that are going to drive ratings. That’s what we do. I think for 2022 we will go back, my feeling, back to more practice and qualifying.”

On the Next Gen car and potential for electrification down the line

“Next Gen sits by itself. There are many things that Next Gen will do for us as a sport when it rolls out in 2022. The styling is going to be amazing. I think the racing is going to be better based on the aerodynamics of the vehicle. The costs associated with the vehicle will be lower in terms of its absolute cost as well as the number of cars that will be necessary to run and run up front. Those are all wins for us.

“As it relates to electrification and new OEMs, I would be surprised if a new OEM came in without some type of electrification. I’m not talking about all-electric. I’m talking about a hybrid system. I think it probably is something, obviously something that we’re exploring now with our existing three OEMs. The question is, What is it? What’s the timing of it? I don’t have either of those answers at this point, although John Probst, Steve O’Donnell, that group, plus our OEMs, engine builders, are all working on that right now.

“I don’t foresee a time in the future where we would go, with all of our series, to an all-electric. I don’t see that. Could we have an exhibition series potentially? We could. That would be something that we might explore.”

RELATED: Development phase of Next Gen car is complete

On the revamped 2021 schedule

I’m thrilled with the schedule. As I said, it’s a bold schedule. This is something that we’ve been creating for a long time, to be able to put out a schedule that looks like this one.

“The fans had said they want more road courses. The OEMs said they want more road courses. Our broadcast partners said they wanted more road courses. As evidenced by what happened on Tuesday night (in the Busch Clash), I think having stock cars on road courses works well. They’re slipping and sliding, they get into each other. It puts on great racing.

“I think for us, as we think about ’22, will we continue to have schedule variation, additional changes? I think the answer to that is yes. What that looks like, I’m not sure at this particular time.

“We have a promise to our fans that we’ll continue to create new opportunities at new venues and new formats. That’s what we’re going to do for ’22.”

Over the past three weeks, NASCAR.com has previewed the Cup Series teams for the 2021 season. Find out what’s new with each team, plus get a team outlook and analysis on the drivers before this year’s Daytona 500 on Feb. 14 at 2:30 p.m. ET on FOX. See driver odds for the championship as well as fantasy rankings.

Team previews were rolled out with new teams first and then ranked in reverse order of best finish in last year’s owner standings. Here are all the team previews in one place:

Jan. 18: 23XI Racing
Jan. 19:
 Trackhouse Racing Team
Jan. 20:
 Live Fast Motorsports
Jan. 21:
 Spire Motorsports
Jan. 22:
 JTG Daugherty Racing
Jan. 25:
 Front Row Motorsports
Jan. 26:
 Richard Petty Motorsports
Jan. 27:
 Roush Fenway Racing
Jan. 28:
 Wood Brothers Racing
Jan. 29:
 Richard Childress Racing
Jan. 30:
 Non-chartered and teams outside the top 30
Feb. 1:
Chip Ganassi Racing
Feb. 2:
Stewart-Haas Racing
Feb. 3:
Joe Gibbs Racing
Feb. 4:
Team Penske
Feb. 5:
Hendrick Motorsports

The following article is brought to you by BetMGM.

Start your engines. It’s time to go racing at the legendary Daytona 500 at Daytona International Speedway once again.

It’s only been three months since Chase Elliott ended the 2020 NASCAR Cup Series with impressive back-to-back wins and his first championship, but as seems the norm these days, that feels like a lifetime ago. The short offseason gives way to NASCAR’s biggest and most exciting race of them all. And while every driver in the field will dream of lifting the Harley J. Earl Trophy, you can be winners too if you pay attention to our betting preview below.

RELATED: NASCAR Bet Center

Let’s get to it.

If you enjoy staying in the conservative right lane with established veteran drivers, this year’s top two are Denny Hamlin (19 top-fives in 60 races at Daytona and Talladega) and Brad Keselowski (six wins, 10 top-fives in 47 attempts). Both are solid choices to add to your betting slip.

In fact, this year, we like the favorite, Denny Hamlin, to win The Great American Race.

Denny Hamlin +800

2021 feels like it could be a massive year for Hamlin. He has one of the fastest cars on the track and a great team behind him. He also has happy memories of the Daytona 500, having won the race for two consecutive years and three times overall.

No modern driver has had more success at the Daytona 500 than the defending race champ. In 30 career races at Daytona, Hamlin has 10 top-five finishes and three victories to his name. Hamlin won last year’s race in NASCAR Overtime, and his dominance was illustrated by his field-leading 79 laps led, a full 49 more than Brad Keselowski, who was next-best at 30 laps.

Hamlin was among the favorites last year and delivered at +1000, and we like him again this year at +800 with BetMGM. Despite being the favorite, +800 represents value that can’t be overlooked.

Ricky Stenhouse Jr. +2000

Stenhouse Jr. is one of the most exciting and wild drivers in the sport, bringing Ricky Bobby’s famous line “if you ain’t first, you’re last” to life in an aggressive, thrill-a-minute driving style.

For bettors, Stenhouse’s approach can lead to some frustrating outings, like when he crashed on the first lap at Darlington in 2020, but his hit-and-miss nature bumps his odds skyward with the oddsmakers.

Stenhouse won at Daytona in 2017 (in the summer), and he’s been competitive seemingly every time he shows up at this race. Last year, Stenhouse won the Busch Pole Award and led the third-most laps of all drivers behind only eventual winner Hamlin and Brad Keselowski.

Though he’ll start 21st this year, and while there are safer bets, we don’t think there’s a better value than Ricky Stenhouse Jr. at +2000 with BetMGM.

Ryan Preece +8000

There are several reasons Ryan Preece is interesting. First, three of his five career top-10 finishes have come at Daytona (1) and Talladega (2). His lone career top-five finish was at Talladega, a superspeedway like Daytona. He also looked very strong during Thursday’s qualifying duel race, taking fifth ahead of two-time defending Daytona 500 champion Denny Hamlin and other talented veterans.

Preece actually clinched his spot in Sunday’s field when he qualified on speed Wednesday. He didn’t have to sweat through Thursday’s duels, wondering if there would be a token spot remaining. But he firmly locked up his place with Thursday’s showing. His car is fast, he raced well in his duel and he has a history of strength at superspeedway tracks. Keep an eye on Preece at 80-to-1.

NASCAR announced two more Daytona 500 entries will drop to the rear of the field for Sunday’s race after parts changes – and one of the teams, the No. 43 Richard Petty Motorsports Chevrolet squad of Erik Jones, will also start from the rear the following week at the Daytona Road Course.

Jones (engine change; qualified: 31st) and Martin Truex Jr., who drives the No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota (radiator/oil cooler change; qualified: 26th), join six additional cars moving to the rear.

The No. 43 team violated Rule 20.6.1.2.e (Single Engine Rule) of the NASCAR Rule Book, which states that if a team swaps engines in the primary car after the Duel races, the team is subject to moving to the rear of the field for both the Daytona 500 and the ensuing race. This rule is in place to prevent teams from having an engine only used for qualifying.

MORE: Full Daytona 500 starting lineup

The remaining six cars previously announced incurred damage in Thursday night’s Bluegreen Vacation Duel races and will switch to a backup entry.

Hendrick Motorsports driver Alex Bowman is on the Busch Pole. His teammate, William Byron, will officially be credited with a second-place starting position, although he’s among those who will drop to the back after the Thursday night wreck in Duel 2.

MORE: Duel 2 wreck crunches No. 24 of front-row starter Byron

  • Brad Keselowski, No. 2 Team Penske Ford (qualified: 24th)
  • Kaz Grala, No. 16 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet (qualified: 40th)
  • Bubba Wallace, No. 23 23XI Racing Toyota (qualified: 6th)
  • William Byron, No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet (qualified: 2nd)
  • Anthony Alfredo, No. 38 Front Row Motorsports Ford (qualified: 36th)
  • Cole Custer, No. 41 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford (qualified: 27th)
  • Ross Chastain, No. 42 Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet (qualified: 34th)

RELATED: 23XI Racing Toyota to start from rear

New season, new beginning, right? Nobody really knows what’s in store for 2021 — I mean, we certainly didn’t foresee the rollercoaster that was 2020 — but that doesn’t mean we can’t try to predict. Our generator will tell you what’s up with your driver in the coming racing season. You know, just to put it out there in the universe.

William Byron will make a bid for a history-making third straight Daytona 500 victory in Sunday’s running of the “Great American Race” (1:30 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, HBO Max). Thirteen drivers have won the crown-jewel race more than once, but only five drivers have gone to the 500’s Victory Lane in back-to-back years.

Three consecutive? It’s a club so exclusive, no one has joined it yet.

RELATED: 2026 Daytona Speedweeks schedule

Luck or not, the record books have smiled on a quartet of drivers — Richard Petty, Cale Yarborough, Sterling Marlin, Denny Hamlin and most recently Byron — for consecutive Daytona 500 wins. Here’s a look back at the race’s repeaters and what happened in their three-peat attempts.

Richard Petty

1973: Stock-car racing’s “King” scored the fourth of his seven Daytona 500 triumphs, benefiting from quick service that put his No. 43 Dodge out front after his last pit stop. Buddy Baker had dominated by leading 156 of the 200 laps and was gaining on Petty after his final stop, but the engine in his Nord Krauskopf-owned No. 71 entry failed with six laps remaining. That cleared the way for Petty to win by two laps over runner-up Bobby Isaac. “It’s just a thrill to win it one time,” Petty told reporters. “But to win it four times is really unbelievable.”

RacingOne
RacingOne | Getty Images

1974: Petty rallied after a blown tire with 50 miles remaining to post his fifth Daytona 500 triumph and the 155th Cup Series win of his career. The same tire fate fell on Donnie Allison, Petty’s prime challenger, but he was unable to recover as quickly and his No. 88 DiGard Racing Chevrolet wound up sixth, one lap down. The race was shortened by 20 laps because of the nation’s energy crisis. “Winning the first one was great. Winning the next three times was greater,” Petty said. “Five times is even greater.” Asked about what that left for the future, Petty quickly replied: “Coming back and winning the sixth one next year.”

1975: Petty led 51 of the 200 laps in his try at a triple play, but an overheating engine resulted in multiple pit stops and put him seventh at the finish, eight laps off the pace. That left the door open for Benny Parsons to drive from a 32nd starting position to his lone victory in the 500; he led the final three laps, pouncing after David Pearson’s spin from the lead. While Petty didn’t contend for the win, he played a role in the outcome. Parsons latched onto Petty’s car in an aerodynamic draft, allowing him to gain on Pearson in the closing laps. “Richard Petty was the answer to my prayers,” Parsons said.

Cale Yarborough

1983: Yarborough set a qualifying record (200.503 mph) in his first lap, but his No. 28 Chevrolet was totaled on Lap 2, forcing his Harry Ranier team to a reserve car. That back-up Pontiac proved to be a winner, as Yarborough zipped past Buddy Baker with a slingshot pass on the final lap, then held off Bill Elliott by five car lengths at the end. “That’s the way I had it planned,” said Yarborough, a three-time Cup Series champ. “This is just a game of checkers.”

RacingOne
RacingOne | Getty Images

1984: Yarborough’s Daytona 500 repeat had a strikingly similar chain of events. The No. 28 was competitive again, leading a race-high 89 laps after starting from the pole position, but he again sprang from second place on the final lap, converting a slingshot move on the backstretch for the second straight year. This time, Darrell Waltrip was Yarborough’s foil, leading at the white flag but fading to third at the finish. “Darrell couldn’t have done anything,” Yarborough said. “He was a sitting duck. I would have hated to be in his place.”

1985: Bill Elliott’s show of historic speed in his No. 9 Ford proved to be too much as the Georgian sped to his first Daytona 500 crown. Yarborough started second and led 32 laps, but his engine expired after just 60 laps, leaving him to finish 36th in the 40-car field. “Boy, what a disappointment … what a way to go,” Yarborough told reporters. “Fall out when you are running for the lead. I thought I really had a shot at winning that third in a row. It’ll have to wait, either for me or for someone else now.”

Sterling Marlin

RacingOne
RacingOne | Getty Images

1994: Marlin’s winless streak ended on NASCAR’s biggest stage, snapping a 278-race drought at the start of the season with a Daytona 500 victory. With a Runt Pittman-tuned engine under the hood of his No. 4 Morgan-McClure Chevrolet, Marlin led the final 21 laps and held off Ernie Irvan — the team’s former driver — by .19 seconds at the end. “It gives me a lot of satisfaction to win a race,” Marlin said. “I knew I could do it if I got with the right race team.”

1995: Marlin’s success with Morgan-McClure continued for another Daytona Speedweeks with a dominant day in the 500. The Tennessee driver led 105 of 200 laps and extended runner-up Dale Earnhardt’s dry spell in The Great American Race. “He’s won a lot of races, but he hasn’t won this one. He’s won seven championships, and I know he wants to win the Daytona 500. Maybe I’ll let him win one when I quit,” Marlin said with a grin.

1996: Marlin went from his best two Daytona 500 finishes to his worst, as engine failure abbreviated his Sunday outing to just 81 laps and left him 40th in the official rundown. Dale Jarrett drove his Robert Yates Racing No. 88 Ford to victory, but Marlin wasn’t around to contend for his third straight 500 triumph. “With this car, we either win, run second or we’d blow up somewhere,” Marlin said. “… That’s the same motor we won with here last year, but it didn’t quite make it this time.”

Denny Hamlin

Brian Lawdermilk | Getty Images
Brian Lawdermilk | Getty Images

2019: Hamlin headed a 1-2-3 finish for Joe Gibbs Racing to score his second Daytona 500 victory, fending off runner-up Kyle Busch and third-place teammate Erik Jones in an overtime finish. Hamlin dedicated the win to JGR’s J.D. Gibbs, who passed away earlier in the year. “It was just one of those days where I felt like it was meant to be,” said Hamlin, who led 30 of the 207 laps and ended his own 47-race drought in the Cup Series.

2020: The No. 11 Toyota emerged from a frantic overtime finish, edging Ryan Blaney at the checkered flag by less than a fender. Hamlin drove from third to first in the home stretch, capitalizing when Blaney tangled with leader Ryan Newman, who was seriously injured in the race-ending crash. “We’ve defied odds here in the last eight years or so in the Daytona 500, but just trust my instincts, and so far they’ve been good for me,” Hamlin said. “I can’t do it without the car.”

2021: Hamlin carried high hopes to claim a piece of history by landing on the winning end of the season opener yet again, leading a race-best 98 of 200 laps. But he was shuffled back after the last round of pit stops and unable to mount a victorious charge. Hamlin tiptoed through a final-lap crash that flared at the front of the pack, but a top-five result was the best he could muster. “We didn’t execute too good on pit road,” Hamlin lamented. “It was just like the (Duel qualifying race). We came out in front of everybody, and didn’t have any help to get up to speed. They all blew by us because they were single file, so it just took away the power that I got and that’s getting through traffic. The fact we came back to fifth there from 12th on the last couple of laps is pretty good. Dominant car.”

William Byron

William Byron lays down a smoky burnout in the No. 24 Chevy after winning the Daytona 500 in 2025
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

2024: Byron prevailed in The Great American Race for the first time, kicking off a special anniversary season by winning 40 years to the day that Hendrick Motorsports made its first Cup Series start. “You couldn’t write the script any better, 24 in ’24,” said a jubilant team owner Rick Hendrick, who has fielded cars for six different Daytona 500 winners. Byron led just four of the 200 laps, but was ahead when it mattered, steering clear of a multi-car tangle as Austin Cindric and Ross Chastain collided as the white flag was unfurled. He led a 1-2 finish with Hendrick Motorsports teammate Alex Bowman taking the runner-up spot. “Just extremely blessed and thankful for all the opportunities, and we just want to keep it going.” Byron said.

2025: The No. 24 was left standing after an overtime stack-up on the final lap as he converted a daring escape to land his second straight Harley J. Earl Trophy. Byron was ninth as the field crossed under the white flag, and he said he “trusted his instincts” to avoid the bedlam in front of him, triggered by contact between Cole Custer and Denny Hamlin at the front. “I’m just super thankful for this group and everything that they do in the offseason to get prepared,” said Byron, who has scored three of his 16 career Cup Series victories at the 2.5-mile Daytona track.

2026: Stay tuned.

The 2021 Daytona 500 is scheduled for 2:30 p.m. ET Sunday on FOX, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio. Here is everything you need to know for watching the 63rd annual running of The Great American Race.

SCHEDULE

Pre-race coverage for the Daytona 500 will begin at 11 a.m. ET with NASCAR RaceDay on FS1. NASCAR RaceDay will move over to FOX at 1 p.m. ET, leading up to the race at 2:30 p.m. ET on FOX, FOX Deportes, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio and in Canada on TSN 1 and TSN 4.

Driver introductions for the Daytona 500 are set for 2:05 p.m. ET. Grand marshal Pitbull will give the command for drivers to start their engines at 2:53 p.m. ET. Then, the green flag for the Daytona 500 is expected to wave at 3:05 p.m. ET.

The race is scheduled for 200 laps. Stage 1 is set to end at Lap 65, Stage 2 at Lap 130 and the checkered flag at the conclusion of Lap 200. Speedweeks schedule

ODDS

Denny Hamlin, winner of the last two Daytona 500s and three overall, opened as the favorite to win this year’s race at 8-1, according to BetMGM.

Three drivers — defending NASCAR Cup Series champion Chase Elliott, Joey Logano and Ryan Blaney — are the next-best drivers at 10-1.

No driver has won three consecutive Daytona 500s. Besides Hamlin the only other drivers to get back-to-back wins are Richard Petty, Cale Yarborough and Sterling Marlin. See photos of all the back-to-back winners of the Daytona 500.

TICKETS

Tickets are sold out for the Daytona 500. There will be a limited crowd because of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. However, Daytona International Speedway is doing all it can to engage with fans who have to miss this year’s race in-person.

Race fans can virtually fill the 500 thanks to the Daytona 500 Fancam. Find out how you can add your personal cutout to the crowd.

WHO’S ON THE POLE FOR THE DAYTONA 500?

Alex Bowman won the Busch Pole Award in the No. 48 Chevrolet for Hendrick Motorsports. Teammate William Byron, in the No. 24 Chevrolet, will join him on the front row for the Daytona 500.

This is the second time Bowman has won the Daytona 500 pole, the other time coming in 2018. Bowman is the ninth straight Chevrolet driver to win the Daytona 500 pole, dating back to Danica Patrick in 2013. See all the Daytona 500 pole winners.

HOW DAYTONA 500 QUALIFYING WORKS

Wednesday’s pole qualifying set the front row for the Daytona 500. The results of Thursday night’s Bluegreen Vacations Duels at Daytona set most of the rest of the Daytona 500 lineup. Thirty-six teams with NASCAR Charters were guaranteed a spot in the 40-car field, with the four remaining spots going to Open teams. There were eight Open teams competing for those four spots. Ryan Preece and David Ragan guaranteed their Open teams a spot during Wednesday’s qualifying, and Austin Cindric and Kaz Grala raced their way in on Thursday. How qualifying works for Daytona 500.

DAYTONA 500 WINNERS IN THE FIELD

Denny Hamlin (3), Kurt Busch, Austin Dillon, Kevin Harvick, Ryan Newman, Jamie McMurray, Joey Logano.

RULES PACKAGE

NASCAR’s superspeedway rules package will be in effect for the Daytona 500. NASCAR made some changes to the package last year, including the elimination of aero ducts. There was also a reduction in the size of the throttle body and the addition of two roll bars.

GOODYEAR TIRES

Each team gets seven sets of Goodyear Eagle Superspeedway Radials for practice, qualifying and the Duels and then eight sets for the race (seven race sets plus one set transferred from qualifying). The minimum recommended inflation is 26 psi for left front and left rear, 50 psi for right front and 48 psi for right rear. The thread compounds Cup teams will use this week have remained unchanged since 2017, with tire constructions being updated to a more traditional speedway setup in 2019.

STATS TO KNOW

NASCAR is again partnering with Racing Insights, and it dropped this knowledge on us for the Daytona 500:

— Only eight races will have practice and qualifying in 2021: the Daytona 500, Bristol Motor Speedway dirt, Circuit of the America, Charlotte Motor Speedway’s Coca-Cola 600, Nashville Superspeedway, Road America, Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course and Phoenix Raceway.

— It’s the 25-year anniversary of Jeff Gordon getting his first of three Daytona 500 wins in a Hendrick Motorsports 1-2-3 finish in 1997.

— Martin Truex Jr. (2016), Ryan Blaney (2017, 2020), Bubba Wallace (2018) and Kyle Busch (2019) have all finished runner-up in the Daytona 500 but have yet to win.

— Tony Stewart has the most laps led in the Daytona 500 (299) without a win. Kyle Busch is second to Stewart with 296 laps led without a win.

FANTASY LIVE

NASCAR Fantasy Live is back this year and gives race fans an extra reason to tune in Sunday. Players will again get the chance to insert their garage (backup) driver in case one of the five drivers in their original starting lineup is having a bad day.

There will be a limit of 10 uses for each driver, so you can’t just set and forget with Kevin Harvick and Denny Hamlin every week. But there will be some new twists to this year’s game, particularly with bonus points where players can pick the top driver from each manufacturer – and more. Read the Fantasy Live FAQ to find out more.

ALSO ON NASCAR.COM

Get additional camera views by logging on to NASCAR Drive, where each week a select number of in-car cameras will be available – as well as a battle cam and an overhead look.

New for this season, NASCAR has partnered with LiveLike to add fan engagement in the NASCAR Mobile App. Log in to the mobile app during the race for polls, quizzes, the cheer meter and more – and see instant results from NASCAR fans like you.

A late crash in Thursday’s second Daytona 500 qualifying race knocked out one of the front-row starters for the Great American Race and shook up the contest for one of the final starting berths.

RELATED: Aric Almirola, Austin Dillon win duels | Open teams to advance into Daytona 500

Contact between the No. 13 Ford of Garrett Smithley and Brad Keselowski’s No. 2 Ford triggered a multi-car tangle with four laps left in regulation, pushing the second Bluegreen Vacations Duel at Daytona to overtime. The wreck also snared the Open cars of Smithley and Noah Gragson, helping Kaz Grala secure one of the final Daytona 500 berths.

Left in the wake was a mangled No. 24 Chevrolet for second-place qualifier William Byron and a damaged No. 42 of Ross Chastain. Byron placed 19th, seven laps shy from the finish.

Byron’s Hendrick Motorsports team began to unload a backup car post-race. The team elected to switch to it, announcing the decision on Friday morning.

That call will force Byron to drop to the rear for the start of Sunday’s Daytona 500 (2:30 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM). NASCAR officials said Friday that six other cars would join Byron at the back of the pack, including Brad Keselowski, Chase Briscoe, Kaz Grala, Anthony Alfredo, Cole Custer and Ross Chastain. A final list would be updated before Sunday’s start.

“It’s awful and we hope it doesn’t happen,” said Chad Knaus, Hendrick Motorsports vice president of competition. “That’s always you’re trying to weigh when you qualify on the front row, how aggressive do you get in the 150 — do you race hard; do you not race hard — and it’s a balance, but the only way for these guys to get legit practice is to race. I think the 24 showed a lot of speed. We’re all excited about that, so I think they made the right call.”

Byron teammate Alex Bowman is scheduled to start from the pole position, and his No. 48 Chevy found technical trouble in Duel 1.

MORE: Alex Bowman’s team in diagnosis mode