NASCAR Finish Line, a free-to-play gaming app from Penn National Gaming, is back with the resumption of the 2020 NASCAR Cup Series season. Each week, there will be six groups of five drivers for the upcoming race. Users will predict which driver will finish first among each of the six groups and then the overall race winner and second-place finisher for a chance to win $25,000 if all eight scenarios are correctly selected. Last weekend’s two races at Michigan International Speedway produced a jackpot winner in each race.

RELATED: Download NASCAR Finish Line

The second of six groups for this Sunday’s race at the Daytona International Speedway Road Course (3 p.m. ET on NBC/NBC Sports App, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) consists of Ryan Blaney, Joey Logano, Brad Keselowski, Kurt Busch and Clint Bowyer. The third of six groups consists of Aric Almirola, William Byron, Alex Bowman, Jimmie Johnson and Matt DiBenedetto.

This will be the first Cup race on the 14-turn, 3.61-mile course, so we don’t have past races here to fall back on. Instead, for a stats look at each driver, NASCAR.com has compiled the career percentage of top 10s in road-course starts, the 2019 average finish on road courses, the average finish at the Charlotte Motor Speedway Roval — the closest comparison run so far — and the average finish in the last five races of 2020 to get a sense of who has been good of late this season.

A point system has been assigned, starting with one point for the best finisher and counting up to five points for the worst finisher. Those numbers were then added up. The lowest total signifies the strongest driver (green), and the highest total represents the weakest driver (red).

GROUP 2

Driver Percentage of top 10s in road course starts 2019 avg. finish on road courses Avg. finish at Charlotte Roval Avg. finish in last five 2020 races Total
Ryan Blaney 60 percent (6 in 10) (1) Avg. finish: 5.3 (1) Avg. finish: 4.5 (2) Avg. finish: 17.8 (5) 9
Joey Logano 46 percent (11 in 24) (4) Avg. finish: 18.7 (5) Avg. finish: 10.0 (3) Avg. finish: 11.0 (3) 15
Brad Keselowski 41 percent (9 in 22) (5) Avg. finish: 10.7 (2) Avg. finish: 18.0 (5) Avg. finish: 10.6 (1) 13
Kurt Busch 53 percent (21 in 40) (3) Avg. finish: 14.3 (4) Avg. finish: 12.5 (4) Avg. finish: 10.8 (2) 13
Clint Bowyer 57 percent (17 in 30) (2) Avg. finish: 11.7 (3) Avg. finish: 3.5 (1) Avg. finish: 15.2 (4) 10

GROUP 3

Driver Percentage of top 10s in road course starts 2019 avg. finish on road courses Avg. finish at Charlotte Roval Avg. finish in last five 2020 races Total
Aric Almirola 11 percent (2 in 19) (5) Avg. finish: 11.7 (3) Avg. finish: 16.5 (4) Avg. finish: 9.0 (1) 13
William Byron 33 percent (2 in 6) (2) Avg. finish: 15.3 (5) Avg. finish: 20.0 (5) Avg. finish: 16.8 (3) 15
Alex Bowman 30 percent (3 in 10) (3) Avg. finish: 10.0 (2) Avg. finish: 3.0 (1) Avg. finish: 22.0 (5) 11
Jimmie Johnson 50 percent (19 in 38) (1) Avg. finish: 13.3 (4) Avg. finish: 8.5 (2) Avg. finish: 18.6 (4) 11
Matt DiBenedetto 17 percent (2 in 12) (4) Avg. finish: 7.0 (1) Avg. finish: 12.0 (3) Avg. finish: 16.2 (2) 10

The stats say the Group 2 pick comes down to Blaney or Bowyer. Bowyer has been wildly inconsistent this year, but road courses have been a strength for him in his career. On the other hand, Blaney won the first race at the Charlotte Roval. In Group 3, it’s a tight battle among DiBenedetto, Johnson and Bowman. The numbers slightly favor DiBenedetto — he was the best in the group in 2019 on road courses and he has finished better of late than the Hendrick Motorsports duo.

Make sure to get your picks for all the groups as well as the first- and second-place finishers in the NASCAR Finish Line app before the race at the Daytona Road Course.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (Aug. 13) – Today, NASCAR and Verizon, one of NASCAR’s newest Official Partners, paid tribute to frontline healthcare workers at AdventHealth Daytona Beach with a hauler parade and lunch before heading to the Daytona International Speedway for this weekend’s historic events at the DAYTONA Road Course where, for the first time, NASCAR’s top-tier series will compete.

Led by Daytona International Speedway President Chip Wile in the Speedway’s Official Pace Car, the “NASCAR Hauler Salute to Healthcare Heroes Powered by Verizon” featured more than 10 NASCAR industry haulers. These haulers travel to each racetrack across the country, providing the needed supplies and resources that make this sport possible on a weekly basis.

Nascar Hauler Inset

Just ahead of the hauler salute, NASCAR, along with Verizon Business, provided a catered lunch from 4 Rivers Smokehouse Daytona and Jersey Mike’s for more than 750 AdventHealth Daytona Beach employees in the hospital’s Healing Garden.

AdventHealth Daytona Beach is part of AdventHealth, one of the nation’s largest faith-based healthcare systems and the Official Healthcare Partner of Daytona International Speedway.

“This global pandemic has been such a stressful and emotionally difficult time for us all, but today’s parade has been a welcomed moment of joy and cheer,” said Ed Noseworthy, AdventHealth Daytona Beach CEO. “We are so thankful for our friends at NASCAR and the Daytona International Speedway for showing our teams some love and encouragement with this parade, and for Verizon Business for organizing today’s event and generously providing lunch to our entire team. We were thrilled to come together – albeit with masks and at a safe social distance – to celebrate the return to racing!”

“Throughout this pandemic, AdventHealth’s response and heroic efforts have been nothing short of amazing,” said Wile. “With our partners at Verizon, we’re proud to recognize those efforts and salute the heroes who go above and beyond caring for the wellness of our community.”

The schedule for the NASCAR weekend at “The World Center of Racing” will consist of the following:

Fri., Aug. 14 (5 p.m., MAVTV): ARCA Menards Series General Tire 100, at The DAYTONA Road Course

Sat., Aug. 15 (3 p.m., NBCSN): NASCAR Xfinity Series UNOH 188, at The DAYTONA Road Course

Sun., Aug. 16 (12 p.m., FS1): NASCAR Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series Sunoco 159, at The DAYTONA Road Course

Sun., Aug. 16 (3 p.m., NBC): NASCAR Cup Series Go Bowling 235, at The DAYTONA Road Course

A limited number of fans will get the opportunity to see the Go Bowling 235 At The DAYTONA Road Course, along with the Sunoco 159 NASCAR Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series race, on Sunday, Aug. 16. Fans can get tickets, which start at $49 (both races included) for adults and $10 for kids 12 years old and younger, by visiting www.daytonainternationalspeedway.com or calling 1-800-PIT-SHOP.

Bubba Wallace announced Friday that delivery service DoorDash would join him as a primary sponsor, appearing for seven races this season as a primary sponsor of the No. 43 Richard Petty Motorsports Chevrolet.

RELATED: Wallace adds Columbia sponsorship | Silly Season’s key figures

Wallace termed the partnership as a multiyear deal. He broke the news during an appearance on NBC’s Today show.

Bubba Wallace Doordash Scheme

DoorDash will make its debut at NASCAR’s inaugural weekend on the 14-turn, 3.61-mile Daytona International Speedway Road Course, with Wallace driving the No. 43 DoorDash Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 1LE on Aug. 16 (3 p.m. ET on NBC/NBC Sports App, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). It will be the first of seven NASCAR Cup Series events where DoorDash serves as the team’s primary partner.

DoorDash’s iconic red and white colors will adorn the No. 43 DoorDash Chevrolet at Dover International Speedway, Richmond Raceway, Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Texas Motor Speedway, Martinsville Speedway and Phoenix Raceway.

“Biggest deal, one of the things I’ve been praying for for a really long time,” Wallace told NBC’s Today. “So these last couple weeks, we’ve announced a lot of new partnerships coming in — DoorDash, Columbia, Beats. I’m just a walking ambassador right now, but I love it. Very thankful for all these companies and organizations to want to be a part of this journey.

“DoorDash has been great to work with so far. We’ve had really good conversations, and they stand up for the same values that I share about unity, openness and wanting to be a part of the communities that are in need in these dying times right now in our nation, to make it a better place for everybody. We’re excited to brainstorm and get some things rolling in those communities and just to make real change.”

It’s the second sponsorship announcement for Wallace and the No. 43 team this week. On Wednesday, Columbia Sportswear signed the 26-year-old driver as a brand ambassador and added sponsorship of the RPM entry at Dover International Speedway next weekend.

Last month, Cash App also came on board as a primary sponsor for five events in the 2020 season.

“This partnership enables us to engage with the racing community through one of the most exciting and forward-thinking athletes in the sport,” said Tony Xu, DoorDash chief executive officer and co-founder. “We’re proud to support an ambassador like Bubba with on-track excellence and off-track commitments and values that are so well aligned with ours.”

Perhaps the biggest wild card in its Daytona International Speedway Road Course debut may well be the NASCAR Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series field in Sunday afternoon’s Sunoco 159 (Aug. 16 at 12 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

With the exception of road course “ringer” Alex Tagliani, the vast make-up of the 39-car field of drivers has no experience on the 3.61-mile, 14-turn Daytona Road Course that incorporates the famous track’s vast superspeedway turns as well as a tight and challenging infield road course.

RELATED: Daytona Road Course schedule | Starting lineup | What is the Triple Truck Challenge? 

And if the new stop didn’t make this weekend interesting enough, the Gander Trucks race includes the first of a three-part Triple Truck Challenge incentive. The winner of Sunday’s race earns a $50,000 bonus as part of the program. The next two races part of the program are at Dover International Speedway next weekend and then Aug. 30 at World Wide Technology Raceway in Gateway. Should a driver win two of these races, he earns a $150,000 paycheck. Should he win all three, he would earn a $500,000 bonus

Certainly the Daytona Road Course portion of the incentive creates a wide-open field of favorites. Among NASCAR’s three premier series, the trucks annually race the least on road courses so this weekend’s challenge at a first-ever venue will surely be a wild card as the series has five races remaining to set its 10-driver 2020 Playoff field.

Brett Moffitt, the 2018 series champion, won last year’s truck series road course at Canadian Tire Motorsports Park leading a dominating 44 of the 64 laps. None of the other former Bowmanville winners are entered this week.

Young talent Zane Smith became the most recent full-time series driver to earn a victory, hoisting his first trophy last week in Michigan – an achievement that has guaranteed the 21-year old Californian playoff eligibility. Championship points leader Austin Hill, Smith, Sheldon Creed and Matt Crafton all have wins assuring their place in the playoff field as well. Grant Enfinger has two victories.

That leaves five playoff positions currently decided by points – unless a new driver wins in the next five races. Among those on the playoff bubble, ninth place Derek Kraus holds a 1-point edge on 10th place Todd Gilliland. Tyler Ankrum, ranked 11th, is only 29 points behind Gilliland.

A pair of typical championship contenders – 2016 series champion Johnny Sauter and last year’s Championship 4 contender Stewart Friesen – sit farther outside the cutoff in what has been an uncharacteristic season for them. Sauter is 13th in the standings, 72 behind 10th place Gilliland. Friesen is ranked 15th, 103 points behind the Playoff cutoff.

“I’m excited to run the road course,” said Austin Hill, whose No. 16 Hattori Racing Enterprises Toyota will feature a paint scheme honoring P.J. Jones’ famous No. 98 IMSA GTP car that won the Rolex 24 in 1993. “I know a lot of people might be nervous about it, but I’m really looking forward to it. I’ve always enjoyed road course racing. 

“It’ll be a big challenge to take the green flag with no practice and to learn your marks during the race. We need to stay out of trouble, inch up to it and be smart in the first stage and make sure we’re around in the final stage.

“Maybe we can put this TRD throwback scheme back in Victory Lane like P.J. Jones did in 1993 at the 24 Hours.”

For the first time in NASCAR history, all three national series will compete on the Daytona International Speedway Road Course.

The Xfinity Series will go first Saturday (3 p.m. ET on NBCSN). Then, on Sunday, the Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series (noon ET on FS1) and Cup Series (3 p.m. ET on NBC) will hunker down.

Here’s all the tea for the 23rd race of the Cup Series season — the GoBowling 235. Just three regular-season events will remain after the weekend.

RELATED: How to follow the races | Daytona Road Course weekend schedule

TRACK DETAILS

Dis Road Course MapThe Daytona Road Course — originally called the International Horseshoe bend — has been around for 61 years now, with the annual Rolex 24 as a highlight event, but 2020 will mark NASCAR’s debut on winding track in Daytona Beach, Florida. It’s normally 3.56 miles long.A new chicane located off Turn 4 in the famed oval, though, was added and ultimately extended the course to 3.61 miles. NASCAR introduced the addition July 30.

“NASCAR and its OEMs ran several simulations to determine the course layout and engine/aero package for the inaugural NASCAR race on the Daytona International Speedway Road Course,” said John Probst, senior vice president of racing innovation. “Due to the predicted high speeds and loads on the braking system, NASCAR will add a chicane off oval Turn 4 at Daytona and move to a high downforce 750 hp aero/engine package for the NASCAR Cup Series race on Aug. 16. We believe this will combine vehicle performance and safety to provide the best possible road course race for our fans.”

The Daytona Road Course features 14 turns and includes part of the superspeedway’s high-banked turns and a tight, technical infield section. You can get a closer look at each turn here.

This will be NASCAR’s 147th Cup Series race at the Daytona venue overall, thanks to its history on the oval dating back to 1959. It’ll also mark the series’ 130th road-course race.

STAGE LENGTHS

Stage 1 is set to end at Lap 15, Stage 2 at Lap 30, with the final stage slated to conclude on Lap 65.

STARTING LINEUP

Fore the first time, the starting lineup and pit-stall selection was determined by a competition-based formula, eliminating the random-draw element from all three national series through the end of the 2020 season.

The formula uses three performance metrics, which will be weighted and averaged to determine the lineup and pit selection order:

  • Finishing position from the previous race (weighted 50%)
  • Ranking in team owner points standings (35%)
  • Fastest lap from the previous race (15%)

The competition-based formula also brings back the awarding of the Busch Pole Award in the NASCAR Cup Series. Kevin Harvick will lead Sunday’s Cup Series field to green.

RELATED: Official lineupPit stall selections

RULES PACKAGE

The developed rules package for the GoBowling 235 combines elements of both the 2020 rules packages currently in use. The high downforce aero package, which is also high in drag, will be combined with the 750 horsepower engine used at short tracks and road courses. This package is only scheduled to be used at the Daytona Road Course.

GOODYEAR TIRES

The Daytona Road Course is expected to be a fast course that incorporates much of the 2.5-mile superspeedway oval. Therefore, with speeds expected to be close to what cars run at Watkins Glen International – as compared to a slower, more technical course like Sonoma Raceway – the Watkins Glen tire was determined to be the best fit.

“Our history in other series at Daytona, plus our extensive experience with these cars on the oval, helped us come up with our decision,” Goodyear director of racing Greg Stucker said. “We are very familiar with the requirements of running the banking as a part of this road course, and that helped us with choosing a tire with the correct compounds. While we were not able to run a test with the Cup cars on the course, we did confirm our recommendation using the simulation data that NASCAR and the OEM’s generated. The Watkins Glen tire is a good choice for this high speed course from a technical standpoint, and it is also a known quantity for the teams.”

NASCAR’s three national series will all run the same tire. Goodyear will also bring its wet weather radials for use in the event that rain occurs during a race.

The Cup Series will be given seven tire sets. The Xfinity Series will receive six. And the Gander Truck Series will have five. All three will be allotted two sets of “wets.”

STATS TO KNOW

— Two drivers won six of the last seven road-course races. Chase Elliott and Martin Truex Jr. split the wins at three victories apiece.

— Ford has only one win in the last seven road-course races. Ryan Blaney took the 2018 checkered flag at the Charlotte Motor Speedway Roval after the leaders wrecked on the final corner.

— Six of the last seven road-course winners started in the top 10 when the initial green flag dropped.

— Six (again) of the last seven-road course races were won by the driver who led the most laps.

— There has not been an overtime finish in the last 17 road-course races.

— The Stage 2 winner has gone on to win the race in the last three races of 2020, and Ford drivers have won Stage 2 in the last nine races.

Source: Racing Insights, NASCAR statistics

LIVE COVERAGE

Tune in to television coverage Sunday for the Cup Series on NBC or on the NBC Sports App at 3 p.m. ET. For full radio coverage from the Daytona Road Course, dial in to MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, Channel 90.

RELATED: Ways to follow the races

For a more interactive experience, steer over to NASCAR.com or the NASCAR app to check out an enhanced Race Center, live Lap-by-Lap coverage, the customizable live leaderboard with Scanner and the return of Drive (featuring in-car cameras).

Be sure to set your lineup in Fantasy Live and make your picks in the NASCAR Finish Line App.

ACTIVE DAYTONA ROAD COURSE WINNERS

None. Whoever wins Sunday will be the first.

Seven-time champion Jimmie Johnson will have a different look as he attempts to make a run at the playoffs in his final full-time season in the NASCAR Cup Series. The Hendrick Motorsports team is changing the paint scheme for the No. 48 Ally Chevrolet, tabbing it as their rAlly scheme.

RELATED: See Jimmie Johnson’s scheme from all angles

Johnson is 26 points below the playoff cutline entering this weekend’s GoBowling 235 at the Daytona Road Course (3 p.m. ET, NBC, NBC Sports App, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Perhaps the new look will give his team a spark to get over the playoff hump.

Check it out:

Being a successful mentor requires a special balance, one Kyle Busch seems to have mastered in 11 years as a team owner and is starting to learn in just five years as a father.

Busch has coached two drivers to NASCAR Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series championships: Erik Jones and Christopher Bell. Jones was 19 years old and Bell was 22 years old when they won their titles with Kyle Busch Motorsports in 2015 and 2017, respectively.

Now Busch is teaching his own son, Brexton, how to properly wheel a motorized vehicle.

RELATED: Brexton Busch beginning to race, following in dad’s footsteps

“He listens to what I say, it’s just that I’m not sure he believes in himself that he can do what I’m saying yet, which I totally understand and get,” Busch told NASCAR.com Wednesday. “He’s new. He’s very, very new, so that process of teaching someone who is 5 years old and just getting started and getting into it is way different than somebody that’s been racing cars for 10 or 15 years and understands a heck of a lot more about it. I definitely expect a lot more from the KBM guys than I probably do my son at this point.”

Understandably so.

Kyle Busch Motorsports boasts a record seven Gander Truck Series owner championships on top of the most career wins (79) and most wins in a single season (14 in 2014). The standards are high there, considering the team has won races in every season since its 2010 debut. Its drivers move up in the NASCAR world, too.

Jones and Bell currently race in the Cup Series, as do former full-time KBM pilots Bubba Wallace and William Byron. They’ve all had four or less years of experience at the top level, while Busch is on his 16th full-time season. Still relatively new in comparison to the two-time, reigning champion.

“If they come to me, certainly I give as much advice and as much help as I possibly can,” Busch said. “But there are some times I tell them flat out, ‘Look, I’m gonna hold back some information from you. I’m gonna give you 80% of the information. I’m going to get you heading down the right path. You gotta figure out the final 20% on your own.’ ”

Jones has actually been Busch’s teammate at Joe Gibbs Racing for the past three seasons, including the ongoing 2020 slate. Busch steers the No. 18 Toyota. Jones handles the No. 20 entry. Bell is a JGR affiliate in the No. 95  Toyota with Leavine Family Racing, which is in its final year.

Last week, JGR announced it’ll part ways with Jones at the end of the season. This week, Bell was named the replacement for next season.

RELATED: Leavine Family Racing sold | Jones out of No. 20 in 2021 | Bell set for No. 20 in 2021

“I brought Erik Jones in,” Busch said. “Look, I’m one of the first guys that will tell you I absolutely hate hearing it, hate seeing that he’s not going to be with us next year.”

But Busch also acknowledges Jones has yet to win this year and Jones’ one-year contact is nearing its expiration date. Jones had one win each year in both 2018 and 2019.

“It’s just a performance-based business,” Busch said. “That’s what it boils down to.”

Bell, meanwhile, is just a rookie. His full potential is still unknown.

These are all off-track lessons Brexton will also eventually learn from his father. One day. Down the road. When the time is right.

Right now, the focus is getting Brexton comfortable in the driver’s seat.

“You try to be gentle enough with him that he likes it, that it can still be fun for him,” Busch said. “But you try to be forceful enough, tell him like, ‘Hey, we gotta go faster, we gotta get better, we gotta do this and we gotta do that’ in order for him to have that competitive nature, too. There’s a balance, and we’re trying to figure all that out – him and me.”

Members of the National Motorsports Appeals Panel overturned penalties Wednesday against DGM Racing, team owner Mario Gosselin and NASCAR Xfinity Series driver Alex Labbe for violation of testing policy.

Gosselin initially was fined $50,000 and docked 75 owner points while Labbe took a 75-point hit in driver points for violating Section 5.1.a. and d. in the 2020 NASCAR Xfinity Series Rule Book, which strictly prohibits private vehicle testing. The rescinded penalty moves Labbe to 16th in driver points while the No. 36 entry moves to 23rd in owner points.

Social media posts pictured Labbe driving a No. 91 Chevrolet for the Sports Car Club of America’s (SCCA) GT-1 class two weekends ago at the Daytona International Speedway Road Course.

Wednesday’s appeal was heard by Chuck Deery, Jay Signore and Kevin Whitaker. Their ruling is final.

The Xfinity Series is set to debut on the layout Saturday.

Dis Road Course MapAll three NASCAR national series plus the ARCA Menards Series are set for their inaugural voyage on the Daytona International Speedway Road Course.

The ARCA Menards Series kicks off the historic race weekend on Friday, Aug. 14, at 5 p.m. ET. The NASCAR Xfinity Series follows on Saturday at 3 p.m. ET (on NBCSN), with the NASCAR Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series (12 p.m. ET on FS1) and NASCAR Cup Series (3 p.m. ET on NBC) combining for a doubleheader on Sunday.

It will be a unique test for all drivers with no practice or qualifying ahead of each event. Ahead of a quartet of races, here is a turn-by-turn detail of the 14-turn, 3.61-mile course.

RELATED: Daytona Road Course schedule

TURN 1

Daytona Turn 1

Drivers will take the green flag at the tri-oval before a heavy braking zone, downshifting to first gear entering the first turn. This is a flat, sweeping left-hander that takes drivers into the infield of the course.

TURN 2

Daytona Turn 2

The second turn is a quick right- and left-hand chicane that is also flat, working up to second gear while gaining a little bit of speed through it.

TURN 3

Daytona Turn 3

The third turn, also known as the International Horseshoe, is a flat, sweeping right-hand corner where drivers are shifting back down to first gear entering it.

TURN 4

 

Daytona Turn 4

This turn is a quick, flat left-hander while drivers are working their way up to third gear exiting the third corner. Directly after exiting this turn, it’s heavy on the brakes to set up for Turn 5.

TURN 5

Daytona Turn 5

Drivers are back down to first gear entering this slow, flat right-hand corner. Heading into Turn 6, drivers will gain a little speed, grabbing second gear.

TURN 6

Daytona Turn 6

It’s back down to first gear entering another flat left-hand corner, which shoots drivers out of the infield section of the course and onto the high banks of the oval.

TURNS 7 & 8

Daytona Turns 7 8

These two corners should look familiar to you. After exiting Turn 6, the drivers race onto the 31 degrees of banking that originally serve as Turns 1 and 2 of the oval layout. Drivers will work their way up to fourth gear as they head onto the backstretch and off into the chicane.

TURNS 9 & 10

Daytona Turns 9 10

Another heavy braking zone of the course is right here as drivers gain a ton of speed through Turns 7 and 8. It’s back down to second gear as they make a series of quick left- and right-hand turns that make up the backstretch chicane, also known as the Bus Stop.

TURNS 11 & 12

Daytona Turns 11 12

Known as Turns 3 and 4 on the oval course, drivers are shot back up onto the 31 degrees of banking following the backstretch chicane. Drivers will work their way up to fourth gear before another braking zone to set up for the frontstretch chicane.

TURNS 13 & 14

Daytona Turns 13 14

This is a new section of the course specifically for the NASCAR race weekend to slow the cars down before heading back to the 18-degree banked tri-oval. This will be a tricky place to enter because drivers will still be on the high banks while downshifting and braking, which increases the risk for wheel hop entering the corners. Once drivers are slowed down, they will make a slight left-hand turn, followed by a right-hander and a left-hander. If those curbs, or “turtles,” look familiar in this section, that’s because Daytona International Speedway borrowed them from the Charlotte Motor Speedway Roval.

The names read like a list of motorsports legends: Mario Andretti, A.J. Foyt, Al Unser, Hurley Haywood, Scott Pruett, Scott Dixon. All these storied racing champions have won trophies for their work driving the Daytona International Speedway Road Course.

And this weekend, for the first time in its 61-year history, Daytona International Speedway’s road course will host regular season points races in all three NASCAR national series.

MORE: Full weekend schedule

The iconic Daytona high-banked 2.5-mile superspeedway where NASCAR’s best traditionally race (including twice this season) will instead be replaced just this weekend by the facility’s 3.61-mile, 14-turn road course – a necessity as the sport schedules around COVID-19 hot spots.

And while the vast majority of the drivers competing don’t have much experience on the track’s famous road course alternative – that incorporates both the speedway’s high-banked turns and a tight, technical infield section – there is a lot of excitement about the competitive possibilities.

“It’s a fun track,” seven-time NASCAR Cup Series champion Jimmie Johnson said. “It might seem like a surprise to some, but in my mind, I felt like it would be a good option.

“It’s fun just doing different things, new things and this year has brought a lot of that. There’s silver lining moments we’re all experiencing with this pandemic. You look at the schedule and races moving around and Daytona being an example of that with the road course, it’s nice to have something a little different, especially where I sit with my career and looking for new experiences.”

Johnson, the driver of the No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet, is easily one of the most experienced on the Daytona Road Course among current NASCAR Cup Series regulars who will be competing in Sunday’s Go Bowling 235 (3 p.m. ET on NBC, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). He’s competed in seven Rolex 24 at Daytona IMSA WeatherTech Sportscar Championship races (2004, 2005, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011) on the Daytona Road Course finishing runner-up twice (2005 and 2008). The only other active Cup driver this weekend to make that many Rolex 24 starts (seven) is Front Row Motorsport’s Michael McDowell (2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2011, 2012); he scored his career-best finish in the event (third) in 2012.

Among the NASCAR Cup Series field, reigning champion Kyle Busch is the most recent to compete on the road course. He drove a GTD-class Toyota Lexus-RCF in the 2020 Rolex 24, finishing 26th overall, ninth in class.

RELATED: Six candidates to win at Daytona

Busch said he is curious how the heavier stock cars will do on the course compared to the sportscar he drove in January. And while he says those few with experience in the Rolex 24 sportscar race – such as his brother Kurt Busch (2005, 2008), championship leader Kevin Harvick (2002), Clint Bowyer (2013), Matt Kenseth (2005), Brendan Gaughan (2011), Timmy Hill (2012), McDowell, Johnson and himself – will have some edge on the field, he is not sure how that sportscar “feel” will carry over to NASCAR’s stock cars.

“I think anytime you’re able to go to a race track and gain some experience, run some laps obviously it helps with the visuals, how the corners transition and so on,” said Busch, driver of the No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota.

“There’s definitely, I hope anyway, there’s a little added advantage there, but the cars I drove in the spring that GTD class, they’re very technologically- advanced with the brakes, traction control so a lot of things you can really attack with those cars plus a lot of downforce, not a lot of power and they’re lighter.

“Our [NASCAR Cup Series] cars are going to be heavier, more power, less braking ability, everything is going to be opposite. It’s going to be like driving a 1960s Cadillac around the track. Certainly, though, if you can learn from what driving technique it took to drive that car and apply it to the Cup car, then you’ll get up to speed relatively quicker than some of the other guys probably.”

MORE: Elliott: Busch has a leg up at Daytona

For more than a decade NASCAR’s road courses featured a tight battle between the sport’s all-time road course aces – now-retired NASCAR Hall of Famers Jeff Gordon and Tony Stewart who have a combined 17 wins at the Sonoma (Calif.) and Watkins Glen (N.Y.) courses where the series has traditionally competed.

Among the current drivers, driver standings leader Kevin Harvick, 2017 NASCAR Cup Series champion Martin Truex Jr. and Busch are the only current drivers with victories at both Sonoma and The Glen. Truex’s four road course wins – three at Sonoma and one at Watkins Glen – are most among active drivers. Busch has three wins – two at Sonoma and one at The Glen.

Fan-favorite Brendan Gaughan is the only NASCAR Cup Series race entrant this weekend with a past victory at the Daytona Road Course, earning the GT3 class win in the 2011 Rolex 24.

In the NASCAR Xfinity Series race, championship contenders Austin Cindric and Chase Briscoe both competed in GT races at Daytona prior to the Rolex 24 this year. Cindric has three previous Rolex 24 race starts.

A.J. Allmendinger, who has provided the capital E in Excitement for the Xfinity Series road course events already this year – at both the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course last month and Road America last week – returns to drive the No. 16 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet. He’s a past overall winner in the Rolex 24 – earning the 2012 trophy. He was runner-up in 2006 and third in 2013. He finished runner-up to race winner Cindric last week at Road America. Allmendinger earned his first NASCAR Cup Series victory at Watkins Glen, N.Y. in 2014.

Sportscar champion Andy Lally, the 2011 NASCAR Cup Series Rookie of the Year and a four-time Rolex 24 at Daytona class champion, will be back behind the wheel of the No. 02 Chevrolet in Saturday’s Xfinity Series race at Daytona. Last week he raced from a 23rd-place start at Road America to earn an impressive fifth-place finish in that Xfinity Series road course event.

He is certainly optimistic about bettering that showing this week at Daytona considering the hours and miles he’s logged on the famed road course.

“I am extremely excited for the race and for the opportunity to drive a stock car on a track I have probably raced on more than any other race track on the planet after almost 20 years doing the Daytona 24-hour and a handful of years doing the Paul Revere [sports car race] on the same [Daytona] circuit,” Lally said. “It is very cool to go there with the stock cars and I think it’s going to produce some awesome racing.

“I think a lot of people are looking at it as sort of a simple layout but when you have asphalt that’s aged and sun-soaked, it’s definitely going to pose some unique set-up options and aspects to how the race will go, how tire wear will go. I think it’s going to be pretty challenging for everybody, including myself.”

Johnson, Busch and Lally conceded that the advantage to competing on this new venue without any qualifying or practice laps is the new-age reliance on simulators that most drivers have been using for weeks to prepare for this highly-anticipated Daytona schedule anomaly.

They are optimistic about the level of competition from the drop of the green flag.

“A hundred drivers maybe are going to be experiencing the [road course] track for the first time, but most of them will have hours on the sim,” Lally said. “For drivers of this caliber, though, in most scenarios, it just takes 10 laps or so to get really good. Three laps to get it right and 10 laps to get it really good and then spend another 20 years perfecting that.”

“For me, it’s huge because I have not sat in one of these cars in two years [other than Elkhart Lake race],” Lally added. “To go no practice, no qualifying straight into race means I’m gonna buckle into car, do a couple pace laps at slow speed then go race.

“That’s going to be something.”

And that’s exactly what NASCAR fans are expecting.