Which channels have NASCAR programming this week? We answer that and give the weekly NASCAR television listings here in the NASCAR TV schedule.

Note: All times are ET.

MORE: How to find NBCSN | Get TrackPass for free | Get the NBC Sports App | How to find FS1 | Get FOX Sports App

Monday, April 27
1 a.m., NASCAR Greatest Races: 2009 Aaron’s 499 (re-air), FS1/FOX Sports App
6 a.m., Wednesday Night iRacing: Week 4 (re-air), FS1/FOX Sports App
7 a.m., eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series at virtual Talladega Superspeedway (re-air), FS1/FOX Sports App
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1/FOX Sports App
7 p.m., Unrivaled: Earnhardt vs. Gordon (re-air), FS1/FOX Sports App
8 p.m., Wednesday Night iRacing: Week 4 (re-air), FS2/FOX Sports App
9 p.m., eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series at virtual Talladega Superspeedway (re-air), FS2/FOX Sports App
10:30 p.m., NASCAR Greatest Races: 2009 Aaron’s 499 (re-air), FS2/FOX Sports App

Tuesday, April 28
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1/FOX Sports App

On MRN
7 p.m., NASCAR Live

Wednesday, April 29
4 p.m., The Dale Jr. Download, NBCSN/NBC Sports App
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1/FOX Sports App
7 p.m., Wednesday Night iRacing: Week 5, FS1/FOX Sports App
11 p.m., Wednesday Night iRacing: Week 5 (re-air), FS1/FOX Sports App

Thursday, April 30
4:30 a.m., eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series at virtual Talladega Superspeedway (re-air), FS1/FOX Sports App
Noon., eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series at virtual Talladega Superspeedway (re-air), FS2/FOX Sports App
1:30 p.m., Wednesday Night iRacing: Week 5 (re-air), FS2/FOX Sports App
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1/FOX Sports App
7 p.m., NASCAR Race Classic: 1987 Winston 500 (re-air), FS1/FOX Sports App

Saturday, May 2
7:30 a.m., NASCAR Race Classic: 1987 Winston 500 (re-air), FS1/FOX Sports App
9 a.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series Racing: 1999 Daytona (re-air), FS1/FOX Sports App
Noon, NASCAR Race Classic: 1994 Brickyard 400 (re-air), FOX/FOX Sports App

Sunday, May 3
6 a.m., Wednesday Night iRacing: Week 5 (re-air), FS1/FOX Sports App
10 a.m., NASCAR Race Classic: 1994 Brickyard 400 (re-air), FS1/FOX Sports App
1 p.m., eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series at virtual Dover International Speedway, FOX* (check local listings)/FS1/FOX Sports App
2:30 p.m., NASCAR Race Classic: 1988 Daytona 500 (re-air), FOX/FOX Sports App
2:30 p.m., Wednesday Night iRacing: Week 5 (re-air), FS2/FOX Sports App
5 p.m., eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series at virtual Dover International Speedway (re-air), FS1/FOX Sports App
7 p.m., eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series at virtual Dover International Speedway (re-air), FS2/FOX Sports App
8:30 p.m., NASCAR Race Classic: 1994 Brickyard 400 (re-air), FS2/FOX Sports App
11:30 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series Racing: 1999 Daytona International Speedway (re-air), FS2/FOX Sports App

On MRN
1 p.m., 2016 AAA Drive for Autism 400 at Dover

Most last-place finishes come with a story, something to explain the reason behind the unraveling. Sunday’s tale from Denny Hamlin is a new one.

The three-time Daytona 500 winner’s hopes for an eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series victory at virtual Talladega Superspeedway were foiled Sunday when his 7-year-old daughter, Taylor, accidentally powered off his monitor during the GEICO 70. Hamlin was later disconnected from the server and his No. 11 Toyota was scored 39th in the 39-car rundown.

Hamlin explained the unusual DNF in a post-race video on social media. The tail end of the video shows the moment of truth, with Taylor saying “uh, oh” as she scurried off with the fateful remote control.

Hamlin’s foray into virtual racing hasn’t been all bad. The Joe Gibbs Racing driver won the first race in the iRacing Pro Invitational, edging out Dale Earnhardt Jr. on the final lap at virtual Homestead-Miami Speedway.

Hendrick Motorsports earned its third straight eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series victory Sunday when driver Alex Bowman nipped Corey LaJoie and Ryan Preece in a three-wide finish in the GEICO 70 at virtual Talladega Superspeedway.

The final frantic laps in an overtime restart were every bit the dramatic close-quarter conclusion that race fans expect at the 2.66-mile superspeedway — virtual or real-life. Bowman’s margin of victory was a scant .037 seconds over runner-up LaJoie and .038 seconds over third-place finisher Ryan Preece. Garrett Smithley and Landon Cassill rounded out the top five.

William Byron, Bowman’s Hendrick Motorsports teammate and a two-race winner in the eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series, finished sixth. Brennan Poole, brothers Kyle and Kurt Busch and Daniel Suarez finished inside the top 10.

RELATED: How to get started with iRacing

“I guess just right place, right time, kind of the normal speedway racing deal,” Bowman said afterward, noting “I’ve really got to thank Preece for pushing me because that’s what made the difference at that point.”

His Hendrick Motorsports crew chief Greg Ives congratulated Bowman noting Sunday’s virtual victory was technically Bowman’s second trophy on the 2020 season because Bowman won at California’s Auto Club Speedway in March — before the schedule was put on a safety hold as the world deals with the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Two wins on the season — one virtual and one real,” Ives said on Twitter. “As far as momentum, we’ll take it any way we can.”

There were 14 leaders and 27 lead changes in Sunday’s 74-lap overtime race featuring a full field of 39 cars that included NASCAR Hall of Famer Jeff Gordon’s virtual debut. The six-time Talladega NASCAR Cup Series winner was running among the top five early in the event, impressively making his way up through the field after a 29th-place starting spot.

But an accident among the frontrunners, involving then leader Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and Ty Dillon caused the first of Talladega’s well-known multi-car accidents or the “Big Ones” — as they are affectionately dubbed. The damage done to Gordon’s famed No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet required a “reset” going forward, giving Gordon a new car but put him in the back of the field. He was caught up again in a late race multi-car accident, ultimately finishing 38th but remained all smiles on the FOX Sports broadcast where he traditionally handles the color commentary duties.

“It’s incredibly realistic,” Gordon said of his debut, adding “I loved being a part of it, it was great being back in there in the action and competition on the track. I had a blast.”

As the statistics indicate this was absolutely anyone’s race — a deviation from the last few weeks where one driver — Byron — really dominated.

MORE: Huffman takes Thunder preliminary

Team Penske’s Brad Keselowski and NASCAR Cup Series rookie John Hunter Nemechek led the most laps on the day — 11 each. Keselowski, who earned his first NASCAR Cup Series victory at Talladega back in 2009 and has five wins there, finished 19th after being collected in a late-race pileup. Nemechek finished 25th in his No. 38 Front Row Motorsports Ford.

Dale Earnhardt Jr, whose six Talladega wins tie Gordon for most in Sunday’s iRacing field, ran among the front pack at various times — even leading two laps — but he also was collected in one of the multi-car melees and finished 30th.

Pit strategy certainly worked in Bowman’s favor — the fortunate timing of the cautions something he acknowledged after the race. He, LaJoie, Preece, Smithley, Cassill, Dillon and Byron provided all the dramatic feels fans are accustomed to in a wild, take-what-you-can-get finish — complete with wild wrecks back in the field.

Bowman conceded that he isn’t as experienced at iRacing as so many of the others he competes against in this series and admitted the whole overall strategy change — no team orders — was also a new dynamic.

“That part of it’s definitely different,” Bowman said. “I feel like if we keep doing this long enough, we’ll have teammates and manufacture orders in it, but it was definitely different to just focus on your deal and do your deal all day.

“It was kind of a weird race for us just with how we didn’t get fuel under that first caution and then had to pit earlier under green and was kind of going to put us in a really bad spot, and the cautions kind of saved us.”

It all worked out.

“Just glad to be able to get a win,” Bowman said. “You know, it’s good for everybody with Chevy Goods on the car and it’s good to have some momentum. You know, obviously the season was going really well for us in real life, and then as we got into this virtual deal, had some ups and downs, but to get a win is really cool.”

The next eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series race is set for Sunday, May 3 at virtual Dover International Speedway.

FULL RESULTS

Fin Str Car Driver Mfr Led Status
1 22 88 Alex Bowman Chevrolet 8 Running
2 1 32 Corey LaJoie Ford 7 Running
3 31 37 Ryan Preece Chevrolet 1 Running
4 11 51 Garrett Smithley Chevrolet 3 Running
5 2 89 Landon Cassill Chevrolet 0 Running
6 32 24 William Byron Chevrolet 9 Running
7 7 15 Brennan Poole Chevrolet 4 Running
8 19 18 Kyle Busch Toyota 0 Running
9 13 1 Kurt Busch Chevrolet 0 Running
10 10 96 Daniel Suarez Toyota 0 Running
11 33 66 Timmy Hill Toyota 0 Running
12 24 4 Kevin Harvick Ford 0 Running
13 34 95 Christopher Bell Toyota 0 Running
14 15 47 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Chevrolet 0 Running
15 20 52 JJ Yeley Ford 0 Running
16 35 77 Parker Kligerman Toyota 5 Running
17 39 12 Ryan Blaney Ford 0 Running
18 21 10 Aric Almirola Ford 0 Running
19 12 2 Brad Keselowski Ford 11 Running
20 28 53 Joey Gase Chevrolet 0 Running
21 18 49 Chad Finchum Toyota 0 Running
22 38 31 Tyler Reddick Chevrolet 0 Running
23 6 13 Ty Dillon Chevrolet 8 Running
24 5 3 Austin Dillon Chevrolet 0 Running
25 8 38 John H. Nemechek Ford 11 Running
26 23 41 Cole Custer Ford 0 Running
27 14 17 Chris Buescher Ford 3 Running
28 37 9 Chase Elliott Chevrolet 0 Running
29 3 6 Ross Chastain Ford 0 Running
30 4 8 Dale Earnhardt Jr. Chevrolet 2 Running
31 27 19 Bobby Labonte Toyota 0 Running
32 25 48 Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet 0 Running
33 17 14 Clint Bowyer Ford 1 Running
34 16 34 Michael McDowell Ford 0 Running
35 9 21 Matt DiBenedetto Ford 0 Running
36 30 22 Joey Logano Ford 0 Disconnected
37 26 20 Erik Jones Toyota 0 Disconnected
38 29 024 Jeff Gordon Chevrolet 0 Running
39 36 11 Denny Hamlin Toyota 1 Disconnected

Roush Fenway Racing driver Ryan Newman, who was briefly hospitalized after a last-lap wreck in the Daytona 500 in February, said Sunday he plans to return to the seat of his No. 6 Ford when NASCAR racing resumes.

Newman’s comments came during the broadcast of the eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series simulation race at Talladega Superspeedway, the fifth iRacing event since real-world NASCAR racing was put on pause due to the COVID-19 pandemic. He offered his gratitude for the support and people who gave him “this multitude of miracles” to return to competition.

“That’s the absolute plan, for sure,” Newman told FOX Sports. “I’m healthy. I’ve been blessed with another layer of this situation giving me more time to heal and look forward to being back in the seat, for sure.”

For drivers to receive clearance to return to racing after an injury, NASCAR relies on medical experts to decide when a driver may resume activity without restrictions — and while the sanctioning body does not comment on a driver’s specific path to medical clearance, NASCAR shared the following statement.

“We share Ryan’s enthusiasm in his return to the track. We look forward to Ryan returning to racing as soon as he is medically cleared to race.”

Newman was starting his 19th full-time season in NASCAR’s top division at the time of his crash as he battled Ryan Blaney and Denny Hamlin for the victory in the season-opener. He spent less than two days in the hospital before his release, walking out of Halifax Health Medical Center in Daytona Beach, Florida, with his daughters by his side.

RELATED: Ryan Newman walks out of hospital with daughters

Newman missed the next three NASCAR Cup Series races before the sport’s postponement.

In an interview on NBC’s TODAY Show in March, Newman said he was diagnosed with a bruised brain and was unconscious in his car for a period after the wreck.

RELATED: Ryan Newman appears on TODAY Show in March

Newman is in his second year with Roush Fenway Racing. Last season, Newman drove the No. 6 Ford into the NASCAR Playoffs on the strength of solid, consistent finishes. The veteran known as “Rocket Man” has 18 wins and 51 Busch Pole Awards since his part-time debut in 2000.

Ross Chastain has driven the No. 6 in Newman’s absence at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Auto Club Speedway and Phoenix Raceway. He logged a best finish of 17th at Auto Club. Chastain posted the following reaction to Newman’s FOX interview on social media:

It may be faster to list what Andre Castro cannot do.

The 21-year-old Columbian-American majors in Business-Economics at the University of Chicago. He balances academics with a budding acting career.

And he’s also a full-time driver in the NASCAR Whelen Euro Series.

“My goal is to get better and better at whatever discipline I’m devoted to,” Castro said.

And he’s also translated that success on the asphalt to the virtual racing world.

Castro drove to a third-place finish in last Monday night’s inaugural NASCAR Roots iRacing Series event, piloting a NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour car to a podium finish at the virtual New Smyrna Speedway. He followed up with the win in the opening roung of the EuroNASCAR iRacing event at the Daytona road course Tuesday afternoon.

“I’ve put about eight years into iRacing,” says Castro. “It has been one of my many hobbies growing up. The past month or so I have obviously been more active but it’s been fun to help pass time.”

The NASCAR Roots iRacing Series will return to the track this Monday at Southern National Raceway Park, a .4-mile banked oval located just outside of Kenly, North Carolina. The racing will be streamed live on NASCAR Roots’ Twitter and Facebook, beginning with the heat races at 7 p.m. ET.

While sim racing isn’t a complete substitute for being on the race track, it did prove a simpler commuting decision for Castro than balancing books with his rookie season in NASCAR’s European stock car series.

“I did take a semester off to race in the NASCAR Whelen Euro Series last year and it was definitely the right option,” Castro said. “Traveling between Chicago and Europe for several weeks would’ve been too much!”

Follow Andre Castro on: Twitter | Facebook| Instagram| YouTube

Castro was born and raised in New York City, and his Colombian parents consistently kept racing on the television rooting for fellow countryman Juan Pablo Montoya throughout his career.

“Watching him race was my introduction to motorsports,” said Castro. “I began karting around the same time as he moved to NASCAR.”

He began karting at the age of 7 and it quickly turned into a passion, by age 13 he was competing against the best in the United States and winning enough to garner bigger opportunities.

The opportunity was the prestigious Skip Barber Driving School. The school has hosted motorsports legends before their stardom and Castro hoped to follow in those big footsteps. He excelled at the school and earned a chance to compete in various open wheel series in 2017 and 2018.

In 2019, Castro was selected to compete in the NASCAR Euro Series through the series’ recruitment program that placed him in a car for the full season. He earned five top fives competing against like likes of EuroNASCAR 2 champion Lasse Sorensen and American Myatt Snider.

He won the pole position for the opening round at Brand Hatch Circuit in England last June.

RELATED: AndreCastroRacing.com | Andre Castro Career Stats on Racing-Reference

More importantly, he earned a return ticket in the offseason to race in the NASCAR Whelen Euro Series this year.

“My ultimate goal is to become a professional paid racing driver,” says Castro. “Wherever that may be, but I’m excited to begin climbing the NASCAR ladder, starting with the Whelen Euro Series, and I’m very much hoping to get an opportunity to race in one of the NASCAR series in the United States.”

The Action Network specializes in providing sports betting insights/analytics and is a content partner with NASCAR. Check out more NASCAR betting analysis here.

As a fan, I’m very much looking forward to Sunday’s eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series race at Talladega. As a bettor, I don’t know what to think.

Superspeedways, like Talladega, produce pack racing, which, in turn, makes it much more unpredictable than most other racetracks. Will this translate to similar racing at virtual Talladega? I honestly don’t know.

However, from a handicapping perspective, I’m going to treat it similarly and look further down the odds board for double-digit values instead of hammering favorites, like I have so far during the iRacing Pro Invitational Series.

With this in mind, here are two drivers I’m betting to win Sunday’s Geico 70 (1 p.m. ET on FOX, FS1 and FOX Sports app) at Talladega.

NASCAR iRacing at Talladega Odds, Betting Picks

Parker Kligerman (+1400) to Win Geico 70

Kligerman is an avid sim racer and it has shown through four eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series races.

Only Timmy Hill (2.3) and Garrett Smithley (8.5) have a better average finish than Kligerman (8.8) through four races. In fact, Kligerman has gotten better every race with finishes of 13th, 12th, seventh and third.

Additionally, Kligerman finished second in Tuesday’s Replacement Series iRacing event at Talladega, so he’s getting plenty of practice for Sunday’s race.

While I’m not sure how much (or how little) on-track racing at Talladega will translate to virtual ‘Dega, I do feel confident that the experienced sim racers will have a clear advantage in one key aspect: green flag pit spots.

There’s no guarantee Sunday’s race will require drivers to pit under green, but if they do, those with experience pulling out of a large draft, getting down to pit road speed, then back out onto the racetrack without speeding or spinning out will have a key advantage over those newer to sim racing.

Kligerman’s iRacing experience, plus the time he’s putting in this week to prepare, makes him one of the drivers who should be able maximize time getting on and off pit road.

That, as well as his performance in this series so far, make him a really nice option at 14-1 odds.

[Bet now at DraftKings. NJ and WV only.]

Garrett Smithley (+1400) to Win Geico 70

Basically, everything I said about Kligerman above applies to Smithley as well.

Garrett has a ton of iRacing experience, has the second-best average finish in the Pro Invitational Series (8.5) and ran Tuesday’s Replacement Series race, finishing third.

For all of those reasons, I’m grabbing Smithley at 14-1.

[Bet now at DraftKings. NJ and WV only.]

Landon Huffman took the Saturday Night Thunder iRacing win in a wild overtime finish at virtual Talladega Superspeedway.

Huffman came from the 29th position and was at the right place at the right time after avoiding many of the accidents. Huffman got by Logan Seavey, who soon after got turned, on the frontstretch and stayed out front to the checkered flag.

“To be able to race against all these guys in an event like this that iRacing puts on is pretty special,” Huffman said. “To be there at the end and have a shot at it, it was pretty bad ass, pretty cool.”

RELATED: Entry list for Sunday’s race

Huffman, who races Late Models and has made a handful of starts in the NASCAR Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series, only led one lap, the most important one. In the past year, Huffman started his own eSports business.

“It feels like this race win almost means more than a lot of my real life race wins because opportunities in the real world have been tough to come by,” Huffman said.

Josh Berry, who won last Saturday at Richmond, finished second after starting 37th.

“Overall it was a good run for us,” Berry said. “Got the pole and wrecked on the first lap of the Heat Race. I got stuck in the back and had to fight our way forward.”

Anthony Alfredo led six laps and was out front coming to the final lap, but was turned by Berry just as they crossed the start-finish line.

Joe Graf Jr., Tommy Joe Martins and Spencer Boyd rounded out the top five.

The race featured six cautions for 23 laps.

MORE: ‘Big One’ hits early at virtual Talladega

FULL RESULTS

Fin Str Car Driver Mfr Led Status
1 29 75 Landon Huffman Chevrolet 1 Running
2 37 88 Josh Berry Chevrolet 6 Running
3 32 80 Joe Graf Jr. Chevrolet 0 Running
4 19 44 Tommy Joe Martins Chevrolet 0 Running
5 20 02 Spencer Boyd Chevrolet 0 Running
6 28 23 Brett Moffitt Chevrolet 0 Running
7 16 22 Austin Cindric Ford 0 Running
8 8 63 Scott Stenzel Chevrolet 0 Running
9 39 39 CJ McLaughlin Chevrolet 0 Running
10 31 26 Tyler Ankrum Chevrolet 5 Running
11 30 40 Ryan Truex Chevrolet 0 Running
12 33 8 Jeb Burton Chevrolet 0 Running
13 23 68 Brandon Brown Chevrolet 0 Running
14 10 55 Will Rodgers Ford 0 Running
15 3 81 Christian Eckes Toyota 26 Running
16 6 51 Ryan Vargas Chevrolet 0 Running
17 36 38 Todd Gilliland Ford 0 Running
18 34 78 Ryan Ellis Ford 0 Running
19 15 36 Jesse Iwuji Chevrolet 0 Running
20 22 10 Justin Haley Chevrolet 0 Running
21 17 3 Drew Herring Toyota 0 Running
22 26 67 Logan Seavey Ford 6 Running
23 12 5 Matt Mills Chevrolet 0 Running
24 18 19 Derek Kraus Toyota 0 Running
25 13 99 Josh Bilicki Chevrolet 0 Running
26 38 93 Myatt Snider Chevrolet 0 Running
27 7 33 Anthony Alfredo Chevrolet 6 Running
28 5 74 Bayley Currey Chevrolet 1 Running
29 21 92 Josh Williams Chevrolet 0 Running
30 9 7 Justin Allgaier Chevrolet 0 Running
31 24 25 Stephen Leicht Toyota 0 Running
32 14 16 Drew Dollar Toyota 0 Disconnected
33 27 07 Donny Lia Toyota 0 Running
34 2 98 Chase Briscoe Ford 0 Disconnected
35 35 4 Chase Cabre Toyota 0 Disconnected
36 25 20 Harrison Burton Toyota 1 Running
37 1 54 Kyle Weatherman Ford 4 Disconnected
38 40 18 Ty Gibbs Toyota 0 Disconnected
39 4 90 Alex Labbe Chevrolet 6 Disconnected
40 11 9 Noah Gragson Chevrolet 0 Disconnected

Jeff Gordon’s debut Sunday in the eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series will come with a fresh — and historically meaningful — paint scheme and a familiar number on the side of the car.

Hendrick Motorsports revealed the new colors Friday night for the four-time NASCAR Cup Series champion’s debut in the simulation race at Talladega Superspeedway on Sunday (1 p.m. ET, FOX,FS1).

RELATED: Full series coverage

Jeff Gordon Iracing Paint

Jamie Squire | Getty Images
Jamie Squire | Getty Images

Look familiar? It’s a replica of Gordon’s 2004 paint scheme from his win at real-world Talladega. A caution on the final lap froze the field, with Gordon just barely ahead of Talladega’s favorite son Dale Earnhardt Jr. Junior had won four of the past five Talladega races, and Gordon’s win resulted in his car getting pelted with beer cans and the driver getting pelted with boos from the Earnhardt-heavy crowd.

Amy Earnhardt, Junior’s wife, couldn’t help but chime in either when the news was announced.

Amy Earnhardt Comment Ig

Gordon has been in the FOX booth as an analyst for the first four races in the Pro Invitational Series simulation league comprised of NASCAR Cup Series drivers as the real-world racing is on pause due to the COVID-19 pandemic. He’ll trade that spot Sunday for one in an iRacing rig.

“Man, I’m gonna give it a try,” Gordon said when he announced the news Wednesday night. “Coming out of retirement boys!”

William Byron has been piloting the No. 24 for both Hendrick Motorsports in the NASCAR Cup Series and in the iRacing Pro Invitational Series. He’ll also drive the No. 24 in Sunday’s race, when he goes for his third victory in five races.

MORE: Gordon’s eventful Talladega history | Gordon’s all-time top schemes

Gordon will be officially listed as the No. 024 on the entry list.

When Ernie Saxton was 13 years old he convinced his stepfather to drive him to Reading, Pennsylvania, to watch a race at the Reading Fairgrounds Speedway.

“During the races a guy named Freddie Adams, who became a friend of mine in later years, flipped as high as a light post,” Saxton said. “He did not get hurt, but I thought, ‘Man this is pretty exciting stuff. I like this.’ I’ve been going ever since.”

That night, more than 60 years ago, began a life-long love for Saxton, who this summer will begin his 53rd year working at Grandview Speedway, a NASCAR-sanctioned third-mile high-banked clay oval track in Bechtelsville, Pennsylvania.

Ernie Saxton

Saxton began working at the Grandview four years after it opened in 1963, and spent 45 years there announcing races. He gave up his announcing duties seven years ago, but stayed on to help with public relations and sponsor work.

“I guess I just got sort of tired of listening to my own voice,” Saxton said with a laugh. “I told them about leaving as announcer and they asked me to stick around until they find somebody else. That was seven years ago and apparently they haven’t found anyone yet so I’m still doing that.”

Saxton has never not been busy in his more than a half-century following racing. He started following his cousin, who worked for National Speed Sport News, and Saxton began writing for the publication himself when he was around 17 years old. From there he did PR work for various tracks, including Grandview, while working full-time in marketing for a book publishing company.

It was a chance night while covering a race at Atlantic City Speedway in New Jersey when Saxton added announcer to his résumé . The track’s regular announcer was unable to come to work that night, and officials asked Saxton if he would fill in given his knowledge of all the drivers.

“I said no,” he said. “When I was in school you couldn’t even get me to stand up and do a book report so there’s no way I’m going to announce in front of a couple thousand people.

“And they said, ‘Nobody will be paying attention to you. You’ll be standing way up in the tower, no one will know you’re there.’ So finally I said O.K., I’ll give it a try.”

His new career almost ended as quickly as it began, though.

“I’m up there and here they come out of the fourth turn, side by side, wheel to wheel, watching the action, and a bug crawled in my mouth,” Saxton said. “I almost choked to death. And all these couple of thousands of people turn around at this guy who is coughing and choking to death and all this stuff.

“So when it was all over I said, ‘Well I guess I could do some more of this.’ ”

That night in Atlantic City was the first of, Saxton estimates, more than 150 tracks across the country where he announced a race, including thousands of races at Grandview. At one time he was announcing races five nights a week while still working a full-time job. Grandview, Saxton said, was often holding races on Wednesday, Saturday, and Sunday nights.

“Now I look back at that and I say, ‘How the hell did I survive that?’” he said. “It’s a good thing I was young and energetic and all that.”

Grandview Speedway | Facebook | Twitter

About 30 years ago, Saxton said his wife saw all the work was starting to get to him, so she made him choose — either give up racing and commit to his marketing career, or quit his full-time job and go all-in with racing.

While he said he’s always been proud of becoming the director of marketing for a company without having a college degree, the pull towards the racetrack was too much for him to leave.

“So I took a swing at it and gave up the full-time job and I’ve done fairly well,” he said. “I haven’t starved to death since then.”

Saxton has continued writing about racing, producing weekly columns for different publications, and this year was his 52nd straight trip to cover the Daytona 500.

But no matter where he’s traveled, he’s always been drawn back to his home track in Pennsylvania. It’s a place where he said he and the track grew together, and he thanks Grandview’s founders, the Rogers family and the late Bruce Rogers, with giving him his first opportunity in the sport.

“I remember going to that speedway for the first time, walking up to the main gate and they were selling tickets off a kitchen table for $2 apiece and I thought, ‘What have I got myself into here?’” he said.

“I’ve been involved, helped them make some decisions, but the track, it’s a down-home atmosphere. Without the Rogers family giving me the opportunity that they did to be part of their track and their growth and everything to become, what I consider, one of the most successful weekly short track operations in the country, I don’t know if I would have gotten to the point where I am these days.”

Even seven years after he technically retired, Saxton still feels the love every time he steps in the gate.

“When you’re dealing with people like those that race at Grandview, they’re down to earth, most of them are easy to get along with, they appreciate the media coverage they get,” Saxton said. “Not just the people that are active in the sport. The fans in the stands. It’s a joy to walk in the track and have people walk up and say, ‘Hey Ernie, how are you doing? I read your column.’

“One of these days I’m probably just going to say, ‘Hey have you found that person to take my place yet? It’s been seven years’. … As people tell me, that’s a testament that they believe in what you do.”

Grandview Speedway has postponed all races through the month of April due to the coronavirus pandemic. The next scheduled race is on May 2, with Modifieds and Sportsmen at 7:30 p.m.

Country Music Hall of Fame singer Randy Owen of the American country and southern rock supergroup, ALABAMA, will perform a virtual pre-race concert Sunday before the fifth eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series race. Owen will join one of NASCAR’s preeminent car owners and a NASCAR Hall of Famer, Richard Childress, as well as NASCAR.com host Alex Weaver for the online event.

ALABAMA became country music’s first-ever superstar band. The group has had an astounding 43 No. 1 singles, 21 of them in a row, and sold more than 80 million records worldwide. Owen and the band have been inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame and boast stars on Hollywood’s Walk of Fame.

RELATED: Power Rankings for virtual Talladega

Owen will perform and chat about the upcoming GEICO 70 at the virtual Talladega Superspeedway. The race, which is set to air at 1 p.m. ET on FOX (where available), FS1 and the FOX Sports App, will feature some of NASCAR’s biggest names in action.

Owen joins the list of virtual pre-race acts since the Pro Invitational Series was conceived and developed in advance of the Dixie Vodka 150 on March 22 at virtual Homestead-Miami Speedway. Tim Dugger, Cole Swindell and Justin Moore have all played a virtual pre-race show for the iRacing events. Last week, Cody Cannon of the band Whiskey Myers took over the musical entertainment reins.

Fans can catch the virtual pre-race concert Sunday at 12:30 p.m. ET on NASCAR’s YouTube and Facebook channels.