Sugarlands Shine’s friend Cole Swindell will perform a virtual pre-race concert this Sunday before the second eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series race, it was announced Saturday afternoon. The country singer will be joined by NASCAR Cup Series driver Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and NASCAR.com digital host Alex Weaver.

RELATED: eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series’ Texas entry list

Swindell, a platinum-selling artist and award-winning singer/songwriter, will perform a couple of his hit songs and chat about the upcoming O’Reilly Auto Parts 125 at the virtual Texas Motor Speedway. The race, which is set to air at 1 p.m. ET on FOX/FS1 (subject to change) and the FOX Sports App, will feature NASCAR’s biggest names, including Kyle Busch, Denny Hamlin, Chase Elliott, Ryan Blaney and more.

Fans can catch the virtual pre-race concert Sunday at 12:30 pm ET on NASCAR’s YouTube, Facebook and Twitter.

 

KANNAPOLIS, N.C. – “When the winds of change blow, some people build walls and others build windmills.”

This is an ancient Chinese proverb, and it’s particularly apt when it comes to NASCAR and its embrace of iRacing.

With the entire sports world shuttered to combat the spread of the coronavirus, NASCAR – the 72-year-old purveyor of ground-pounding speed – has found its windmill in iRacing, specifically with the eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series.

RELATED: Entry list for virtual Texas | Qualifying to stream live | FOX Sports to televise season

The eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series is an exhibition esports series featuring a collection of actual race-car drivers from the NASCAR Cup Series, NASCAR Xfinity Series and NASCAR Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series. It kicked off last Sunday at the virtual Homestead-Miami Speedway and is a multi-week series emulating the original 2020 NASCAR Cup Series schedule.

It has been an unabashed success, with the series’ second race taking place this Sunday at 1 p.m. ET at the virtual Texas Motor Speedway with live coverage on FOX/FS1 (subject to change) and the FOX Sports App.

Last Sunday’s eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series race at Homestead was the single most-watched esports event in U.S. history. The race drew 903,000 viewers on FS1, besting the previous high of 770,000 viewers when Mortal Kombat aired on The CW in 2016. The race was the highest-rated broadcast on FS1 since mass postponements of sporting events began March 15. During the race, #ProInvitationalSeries was the No. 1 trending topic on Twitter in the U.S.

But while the drivers have been hands-on in this endeavor, what do their crew chiefs think? In the real world, they’re always hands-on — literally — with an assortment of tools occupying their hands regularly. But in the sim world, they’re bystanders.

“The iRacing event that took place at Homestead last weekend was quite revolutionary, not only for our sport but for all sports in general,” said Mike Bugarewicz, crew chief for NASCAR Cup Series driver Aric Almirola and the No. 10 Smithfield team of Stewart-Haas Racing. “It gave us something to do and something to watch on Sunday, and it gave the drivers some seat time. While it’s not perfect to what the real world is, it still forces them to make a call from a crew chief’s perspective. Not every call is so easy.”

SHR’s Johnny Klausmeier, crew chief for Clint Bowyer and the No. 14 Rush Truck Centers/Mobil 1 team, provided an example.

“The most interesting thing to me was the tire strategy with the guys taking none, two or four tires,” he said. “It seemed very realistic, especially at Homestead-Miami Speedway, where you have a lot of tire fall off. Guys could get their track position, but after 10 laps, the tires were wearing out and they were shuffling around, moving and jockeying.

“As a crew chief, I wanted to put my hands on things and work on the car. So, it was different for the drivers to be able to just instantly change things and make the car different on the computer. It was neat and a great show for the fans.”

While the race car is obviously important, the track is the other key element. Rodney Childers, crew chief for Kevin Harvick and SHR’s No. 4 Busch Light team, was impressed with how real a track’s idiosyncrasies were detailed in iRacing.

“The racetracks are really accurate, with the bumps and the features and all of that stuff,” Childers said. “From a visual side of things, it’s probably very beneficial for the drivers.”

One of those drivers is Chase Briscoe, pilot of the No. 98 HighPoint.com/Ford Performance Racing School Ford Mustang for SHR in the NASCAR Xfinity Series. Briscoe’s crew chief, Richard Boswell, thinks the time his driver spends on iRacing makes him better in general.

“Laps are laps, regardless of what car it is or what type of simulator it’s on,” Boswell said. “The repetition of seeing the markers at certain tracks and feeling the bumps is a great way to stay sharp. Of course, there’s the added advantage of Chase having a motion rig where he can get a more realistic feel for each track, not just in the steering wheel but in his seat.

“I sure am glad my driver is spending this time wisely. I know when we finally get back to racing, he will be as ready as anyone. So will his team.”

Boswell, like everyone in NASCAR, is eagerly awaiting the resumption of real racing, but he has embraced the eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series and the newfound time at home.

“This is a great way to keep fans connected to our sport considering the difficult times our country is facing,” he said. “I applaud FOX, NASCAR, iRacing, the sponsors and all of the folks who have participated in bringing this event to our homes. Even my little girls were excited to see some sort of racing on TV. The only difference was they could root for their favorite driver, Chase Briscoe, with daddy instead of without him.”

Qualifying for the second NASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series race at the virtual Texas Motor Speedway will be live streamed Sunday on eNASCAR.com/live, it was announced Saturday morning.

The eNASCAR Pro Invitational Qualifier will take place Sunday at 10:55 a.m. ET and feature 34 drivers from the NASCAR Xfinity Series, Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series and regional series. There are currently four transfer spots available in the 35-car field.

RELATED: Entry list | FOX Sports to televise eNASCAR races

As of Saturday morning, 31 NASCAR Cup Series drivers are locked in and confirmed for Sunday’s main event. Should any Cup drivers add or drop late, the number of transfer spots will be adjusted accordingly.

Sunday’s O’Reilly Auto Parts 125 will be 125 laps. It’ll air live on FOX/FS1 (subject to change) and the FOX Sports App at 1 p.m. ET.

If you didn’t know better, NASCAR drivers were preparing for a race at Texas Motor Speedway this weekend as they would any other season. And even with a pause on the national sports scene because of the COVID-19 pandemic, NASCAR is still going to be racing at Texas – only this week it will do so with a popular twist.

Sunday’s O’Reilly Auto Parts 125 (1 p.m. ET available on FOX – where available and subject to change, FS1 and the FOX Sports App) is the second race of the eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series that has captivated NASCAR’s best racers and, equally as importantly, thrilled NASCAR’s large and loyal fanbase, which can count itself fortunate to still have the ability to watch so many of its favorites compete – albeit virtually.

RELATED: FOX Sports to air eNASCAR racesiRacing scratches drivers’ competitive itch

“What a wonderful opportunity for the sport, for racing in general,” said Stewart-Haas Racing driver Clint Bowyer, who last week served as an in-race commentator for the FS1 television broadcast and finished 16th out 35 in the opening race. “iRacing has been around a long time and it’s just something that keeps evolving and they’ve perfected. Here we all are, just longing for some sports action, some competitive action that we can broadcast and show a fan, and then – boom – here it is in our lap.”

Certainly there was a bit of a learning curve for some of these NASCAR regulars in last week’s opener at the virtual Homestead-Miami Speedway. Denny Hamlin edged Dale Earnhardt Jr. in a dramatic bump-and-run on the last lap. iRacing regular Timothy Hill finished third, followed by Chase Briscoe and pole winner Garrett Smithley.

Hill and Smithley, who compete for smaller teams in the NASCAR Cup Series, may not be race favorites on the real track yet, but they are strong and experienced iRacers who turned some heads with their performances last week. And they competed with a comparatively modest set-up – steering wheels attached to their desks at home with a single computer screen. Hamlin, for example, sat in a rig with roll-bars and three computer screens – a set-up he estimated probably cost upward of $40,000.

Both Hill and Smithley said this week’s virtual race on the notoriously tough 1.5-mile Texas high banks will be an entirely new test for the field because its new repave has only recently been updated in the iRacing format.

“It’s so neat with iRacing how they laser-scan these race tracks and it’s identical to real-life,” Hill explained. “So, Texas was repaved not too long ago and iRacing went down there and scanned the new re-pave and actually for iRacing. We’ve been running the old pavement up until this year. They’ve just recently come out with the new race track, so I’ve never even been on it yet.”

That new competitive element may well come into play. But regardless, many of NASCAR’s top drivers have spent the week upping their iRacing game with much more practice or even a new simulator.

Two-time and reigning NASCAR Cup Series champion Kyle Busch finished 29th Sunday, driving friend Ty Gibbs’ sim rig with very little practice on it. Busch said he went to great lengths to borrow a sim for his home this week. And to practice.

“So now, after we put Brexton (Busch, son) to bed, I can go down there and start working on getting better,” Busch explained. “Texas seems like it’s going to be a heck of a lot more simple than Homestead was as far as the driving aspect. You just have to hit your marks in Turns 1 and 2 and get back to the gas in Turns 3 and 4, which are going to be wide open.”

His Joe Gibbs Racing teammate, Erik Jones, who finished 10th last week at virtual Homestead, is equally enthusiastic about another chance in the competition. Jones conceded, however, he wasn’t able to put as much practice time in as he may have wanted this week because he is moving – the opposite scenario of what he’s expecting from the competition.

“I honestly did not know how I’d do in last week’s race at Homestead,” said Jones, who drives the No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota in the NASCAR Cup Series. “It had been forever since I last went iRacing, so it was like I was a rookie all over again. But things came to me fairly quickly, although I’m still nowhere near where I want to be.

“Performance aside, I think we all came away from that race impressed with how the entire industry rallied around it, and fans seemed to like it, too. Now we’re on big FOX this Sunday, so even more people will be watching. Obviously, that’s good, but it does kind of ramp up the pressure. You want to do well. Even though it’s a simulation, we’re all competitors and we want to win.”

Bowyer confirmed as much.

“It reminds me of a rookie coming into the Cup Series,” Bowyer said. “You’re up against guys who have been doing it for years, decades and you’re expected to jump right into the deep end and compete with them and run door-to-door with them and beat them.

“The pressure is on for all of us to gain that almighty seat time as much as we can. During the evenings and during the days, whenever you can jump on it, we’re all doing it.”

Bowyer, Busch, Jones, Hamlin, you name it. So many of the sport’s top names are certainly all onboard with this opportunity to simultaneously stay on their game and provide good racing for the fans. The chance to showcase the sport again nationally on the FOX network is a huge plus, and both competitors and fans seem to be enjoying this new normal.

“Everyone’s doing it – it’s the hot thing to do – and it was certainly fun to do last weekend to help everyone forget about everything that is happening in the real world,” Busch said. “Everyone seems to enjoy it. A lot of guys are getting a little more serious about it and everyone is spending more time on it, so I figured if I’m going to stop running 30th, I’m going to need to get some more laps.”

Virtual Texas Motor Speedway will host the O’Reilly Auto Parts 125 on Sunday at 1 p.m. ET (FOX/FS1, FOX Sports App) in the second race of the eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series.

RELATED: FOX Sports to televise eNASCAR races | Best iRacing tracks, ranked by Twitter

Below is the current entry list for the 35-car field, containing drivers locked into the field. Below that is the entry list of drivers who attempted to race their way into the big show on Sunday. Alex Labbe won the qualifying race to earn a spot and finishers two through four in that race — Anthony Alfredo, Ty Majeski and Ruben Garcia Jr. — also raced their way into the main field. (#–indicates the driver raced into the main field via the qualifying race)

O’REILLY AUTO PARTS 125 ENTRY LIST

* Subject to change

No. Driver
1 Kurt Busch
3 Austin Dillon
6 Ross Chastain
8 Dale Earnhardt Jr.
9 Chase Elliott
11 Denny Hamlin
12 Ryan Blaney
13 Ty Dillon
14 Clint Bowyer
16 Greg Biffle
17 Chris Buescher
18 Kyle Busch
19 Bobby Labonte
20 Erik Jones
21 Matt DiBenedetto
24 William Byron
27 Ruben Garcia Jr.#
31 Tyler Reddick
33 Anthony Alfredo#
34 Michael McDowell
37 Ryan Preece
38 John Hunter Nemechek
42 Kyle Larson
43 Bubba Wallace
45 Ty Majeski#
47 Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
48 Jimmie Johnson
51 Garrett Smithley
66 Timmy Hill
77 Parker Kligerman
88 Alex Bowman
89 Landon Cassill
90 Alex Labbe#
95 Christopher Bell
96 Daniel Suarez

 

ATTEMPTING TO QUALIFY

* Subject to change

No. Driver
7 Justin Allgaier
15 Brennan Poole
16 Justin Haley
22 Austin Cindric
23 Sam Mayer
26 Tyler Ankrum
27 Ruben Garcia Jr.
29 Kaz Grala
29a Trevor Bayne
33 Anthony Alfredo
35 Todd Gilliland
36 Jesse Iwuji
40 Ryan Truex
45 Ty Majeski
46 Chandler Smith
50 Jeffrey Earnhardt
52 Stewart Friesen
53 Joey Gase
54 Kyle Weatherman
63 Scott Stenzel
68 Brandon Brown
74 Sheldon Creed
78 Ryan Ellis
80 Joe Graf Jr.
81 Christian Eckes
90 Alex Labbe
93 Myatt Snider
98 Chase Briscoe
99 Harrison Burton
02 Spencer Boyd
08 Jeb Burton
TBD Derek Kraus
TBD Drew Dollar
TBD JJ Yeley

The 2017 spring race was the first look at the reprofiled, repaved Texas Motor Speedway. Contested over 334 laps on the 1.5-mile oval, the O’Reilly Auto Parts 500 was the seventh race of the 2017 NASCAR Cup Series season.

Tbt 2017texas IgKevin Harvick started on the pole, but things quickly shifted and it looked like it was Ryan Blaney’s race to lose. Blaney, then driving for Wood Brothers Racing, swept the first two stages and led 148 laps on the day but drifted back in the final stage in part from missing his pit stall with 33 laps remaining en route to a 12th-place finish.

RELATED: Full race results | Catch up on more Classic Race Replays | A look at repaved Texas

The battle for the lead came down to the three cars up front for the remainder of the race – Joey Logano, Jimmie Johnson and Kyle Larson.

The race restarted with 30 to go after a late caution for debris in Turn 3 on Lap 301. Johnson, the reigning NASCAR Cup Series champion and a six-time winner at Texas entering this race, took the lead from Logano with 17 laps remaining. Johnson held on for his first win of the season and his seventh at the Lone Star State track. The seven-time champion would go on to win two more times in 2017 (at Bristol and at Dover in spring races at both tracks). Those 2017 victories are his most recent points-paying victories on the Cup circuit. This race also marked Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s last top-five finish in the NASCAR Cup Series.

Check out Jimmie Johnson earning his first win of 2017 and make a late pass for the win in this Classic Race Replay of the 2017 O’Reilly Auto Parts 500 at Texas Motor Speedway.

 

TrackPass on NBC Sports Gold, the streaming product representing NASCAR’s most significant undertaking in the direct-to-consumer space, is one of 10 sports passes on the NBC network of premium content that currently has free access for fans.

NBC Sports announced Thursday that it was making TrackPass, along with nine other services, free in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, giving fans a wide variety of premium content to consume.

Free access to TrackPass runs through May 1. Fans can learn more about the streaming service here.

Available content includes full-event replays of all races since TrackPass launched in December 2019 and nearly 50 long-form documentaries on NASCAR’s biggest stars, venues, and stories. Condensed replays of every American Flat Track, IMSA WeatherTech, K&N and Modified race from the 2019 season will also be made available shortly.

RELATED: See free access to all nine channels

TrackPass on NBC Sports Gold builds off the foundation set by FansChoice.tv, and the NASCAR and NBC Sports collaborative product becomes the most robust live and on-demand motorsports content offering in the domestic digital marketplace. NASCAR President Steve Phelps and Sam Flood, executive producer and president, production, NBC and NBCSN, first announced the undertaking in late November.

Fans will get more exclusive live motorsports events and an extensive library of archived documentaries and films. The platform will offer exclusive live viewing of a multitude of motorsports, including American Flat Track, select ARCA Menards Series events (including ARCA Menards Series East and West races), NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour, and tentpole grassroots racing events, as well as NASCAR Cup Series and NASCAR Xfinity Series practice and qualifying sessions (NBC Sports’ half of the schedule only).

RELATED: FAQs on product

As the 2020 NASCAR season remains on hold with the nation continuing the ongoing fight against coronavirus, it gives drivers, crew chiefs and teams plenty of extra time to either prepare … or sit idly by as their competition puts in the work to get better. Now, NASCAR national series are the big time, but it’s inevitable some will put in longer hours than others and come out the other side of this more prepared for the season to resume.

And when will we find out who has the edge? When we get back to racing at the planned resumption of the season come May at Martinsville Speedway, that is.

RELATED: Latest schedule, timeline updates

NASCAR.com’s Pat DeCola and Alex Weaver make their selections for which driver will hit the ground running first when NASCAR gets back to on-track action.

DeCOLA: A driver hitting the ground running after a seemingly endless amount of time to prepare for the next moment we’re back on track, which just happens to tentatively be Martinsville Speedway? Buddy, you might as well hand Jimmie Johnson his 10th grandfather clock now.

On top of his foray into substitute teaching, you have to assume Johnson is undoubtedly using this rare downtime to binge-watch Tiger King on Netflix find ways to further his physical fitness, deepen his relationship and game plan over Zoom with crew chief Cliff Daniels and do whatever else are the things that have led to him becoming a seven-time champion.

The reason for Johnson’s success at NASCAR’s highest level over such a prolonged period stems directly from an unmatched internal drive — the exact kind of drive that gets people off the couch during a period like this and onto the pavement for a brisk 20-mile run. It’s that mental motor that will have Johnson poring over any and all data collected from the Cup Series’ first four races and finding the little things that can be exploited for any sort of edge; the wherewithal to recognize this as an opportunity to better himself and his team, albeit remotely, to come right out swinging whenever we get back to racing.

I don’t think it’s out of the question that when we return … Johnson is instantly elite again, and a title contender.

WEAVER: How could you question a driver who is winning on the virtual track, owns an iRacing team and rides his sim rig barefoot isn’t ready to get back to the real track? I have to go with Denny Hamlin.

With a win in the Daytona 500 for the 2020 season, Hamlin is poised for a repeat year of his success in 2019. By this point last season, he already had four top-11 finishes with two of those in the top five. This season, although not as strong of start, Hamlin is still carrying two top-six finishes with one of those being the crown-jewel win.

Hamlin is competitive. Whether it be in pick-up basketball on his home court, a game of golf with Kyle Larson and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. or now iRacing, Hamlin likes to win. He has over two decades of sim-racing experience and is now the owner of a team in the eNASCAR Coca-Cola iRacing Series. He has done nothing but drive during the off time.

We watched Hamlin and crew chief Chris Gabehart put together a Championship 4 year in 2019 and many of the NASCAR faithful have deemed him an early championship favorite again for 2020.

While repeating a winning feat is not always easy, Hamlin can already cross that one off of his list for 2020 with the Daytona 500. What’s a little downtime other than more time to prepare? Locked, loaded and ready to deliver — Phoenix Raceway, here comes the No. 11.

For anyone watching last Sunday’s inaugural eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series event at virtual Homestead-Miami Speedway, it was obvious which drivers in the talented A-list field of NASCAR competitors were already comfortable, eager and racey in the new-age version of competition.

Denny Hamlin edged Dale Earnhardt Jr. for the win on the last lap — both of them top NASCAR competitors with decades of iRacing experience, too. Others such as NASCAR champions Kyle Busch and Jimmie Johnson were learning the virtual competition as they went. And some names – Timmy Hill and virtual Homestead pole-winner Garrett Smithley – who don’t normally challenge for NASCAR Cup Series wins proved what an extensive iRacing background can mean in this virtual competitive setting. They finished third and fifth, respectively.

RELATED: Denny Hamlin edges Dale Earnhardt Jr. | Timmy Hill, Garrett Smithley savor iRacing

All the storylines and intrigue have created a lot of buzz for this week’s O’Reilly Auto Parts 125 (1 p.m. ET, FOX, FS1, FOX Sports App) at virtual Texas Motor Speedway, where the competition level will be undoubtedly raised again.

For 22-year-old NASCAR Cup Series driver William Byron, iRacing isn’t just a familiar feel-good place. It was vital in advancing and shaping his real-world career. And the Hendrick Motorsports driver is one of the drivers whose talent and accomplished iRacing record has put a big virtual bullseye on his No. 24 car going forward. 

One of the first things Hamlin said after his victory on Sunday was how big it was for him to beat Byron and the others who are largely considered the best at this form of competition. More than once Byron’s name has been raised as setting the bar for excellence.

“I appreciate that,’’ Byron said this week. “I just enjoy it [iRacing]. It’s always been something I’ve been passionate about. It really is how I got started in racing.

“It’s really cool to see the iRacing community now come together and these races are going on as much as they are. I’m pretty excited for it because I think it’s a good chance to shine.

“It’s fun to kind of see the different names in there and kind of be surprised by who’s really good and who’s maybe not as good or not as experienced on it. I think that as the races and leagues go on, it’s just going to get tighter and tighter as far as the fields go in competition.

“I’m just really excited to see where things go in the next couple weeks with it. I think Sunday will be an awesome race and I think a lot more action the more weeks go by.’’

RELATED: FOX Sports to air complete eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series

It’s generally understood that these top drivers will practice more and be even better prepared with each eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series event. But for Byron, it’s not a crash course. He used iRacing as a sort of real-life homework opportunity to advance his motorsports career, ultimately earning chances to compete in the Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series full time in 2016, then earning the 2017 NASCAR Xfinity Series championship before landing the biggest opportunity of his career – his current job steering the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet in the Cup Series. 

With NASCAR’s competitive break as the country deals with the COVID-19 virus, Byron concedes he’s spending his days putting plenty of laps into his iRacing simulator. But he’d be doing that even if he weren’t participating in NASCAR’s popular new league.

“I’ve put in a lot of time,’’ Byron said. “For me, racing around people is the most important thing to learn. I think it’s important to make laps, but if you’re just making a bunch of laps by yourself it’s not really indicative of what the race is going to be like, so I think that’s what I try to do, really race every night and that’s how I try to learn.

“Typically, it works out pretty well, but there’s things you have to learn like the different intricacies of the set-up and stuff like that. With everyone having the same set-up it just comes down to how your race craft is and just learning the little tricks of qualifying and also pit road and all the little details just like you would in a real car.’’

MORE: Pre-Texas rankings | PHOTOS: William Byron through the years  

Interestingly, Byron says that the other racers in this particular Pro Invitational Series race the same way virtually as they do in their real-world cars.

“I think really similar characteristics in terms of how people race, the way they think is very similar on iRacing so I think that’s really unique and cool to see the different mindsets and just fun to race all those guys and kinda see how they operate and think,’’ he said.

Several of those who don’t necessarily consider themselves iRacing experts have been turning in the practice time this week.

“It’s gonna be bigger and better than it’s ever been, we learned a lot,’’ Clint Bowyer said of the upcoming Texas iRacing event.

Byron, who started on the front row and led laps, ultimately finished 34th out of 35 drivers last week after being collected in a late-race accident at virtual Homestead-Miami Speedway. He acknowledged there are a lot of variables and dynamics that go into the race and recognized that even the most experienced can have their hopes dashed in a split second. 

He feels that Hill and Smithley faring so well, however, is a nod to the opportunity that iRacing presents. While Byron and several others – including Hamlin and Earnhardt – have top-of-the-line simulators worth tens of thousands of dollars, Hill and Smithley competed at the same level with a more modest set-up. In their case, a steering wheel attached to a desk, pedals on the floor and a stick shift along with a single monitor to visually navigate the race.

“It’s definitely an equalizer,’’ Byron said. “Honestly, there really is no difference in the equipment you have to work with. Everyone, as long as you have a wheel and pedals and they are responsive and they work how they should and there’s no glitches, honestly you should be able to be competitive with anything. 

“That’s what’s really cool. The equipment doesn’t really matter and everyone’s kind of going into an equal playing field.’’

That’s exactly the kind of formula that has made the eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series a must-do for competitors and a must-see for fans, old and new alike. For Byron, it’s been a specific opportunity to shine as a highly-accomplished veteran of sorts.

“It’s great, honestly,’’ Byron said. “It’s just good to see all the passion around it and the support. I think it really shows where the sport is going that they could all pitch in and help during this time.

“It’s a tough time for the world in general and I think we can kind of bring a little bit of joy and passion to some race fans over this time and that’s a really cool thing. I think it’s really neat and I think it’s going to put on a great show again this Sunday.’’

Where there’s a will, there’s a way.

And, given the current national restrictions and precautions amid the COVID-19 outbreak, NASCAR has found its way. Competing on an iRacing simulator seems to have temporarily satisfied drivers’ competitive itch while the sport pauses all live on-track action. They’re still behind a wheel; it just happens to be of a virtual car.

“Racers are just different, man,” NASCAR Cup Series driver Clint Bowyer said Thursday on a teleconference. “Racers have always been. To stand the test of time, I can say this about a racer: They’ve always somehow someway been at the race track. When all odds are against them, racers figure it out.”

Now, even as the coronavirus continues to disrupt the 2020 NASCAR calendar, is no different.

RELATED: Timeline, schedule updates in response to coronavirus

The sanctioning body announced two weeks ago (March 16) that all races through May 3 are postponed. A day later (March 17), NASCAR and iRacing revealed the formation of the eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series, an exhibition series meant to feature current and some retired national series drivers. FOX Sports soon jumped onboard (March 19), saying it would air the opener on FS1.

It all came to fruition so quickly, as the makeshift season kicked off last Sunday (March 22) at the virtual Homestead-Miami Speedway.

“We’re all in this together,” Bowyer said. “We’re all quarantined. It’s almost as if the iRacing thing had been built and designed in the past for this very moment. I think it’s a perfect bridge to gap this situation we’re all in.

“It’s entertainment. Is it real? No, it’s not. It’s virtual, but it’s what we have. And I’m telling you right now, it provided entertainment that literally had you jumping up and down and on the edge of your seat at the end of that race.”

Current full-timer Denny Hamlin passed the retired Dale Earnhardt Jr. on the last lap to take the checkered flag. Earnhardt recovered from Hamlin’s slight bump to finish second.

According to Nielsen Media Research, the virtual race drew 903,000 viewers on FS1. On Tuesday, FOX Sports committed to covering the remainder of the season on one of its platforms, including the FOX broadcast network.

“Hell yes, it’s serious,” Bowyer said. “This is a big deal. Did you see the viewership? A million views. I want to win this thing big time for myself, for my partners, for everybody. You want to be the man in front of a million viewership. …

“Everybody is practicing big time. If you question that, all you got to do is get in iRacing and look: Each and every evening or during the day – doesn’t matter what time of day it is – you get on there, log on and there will be people on Texas (Motor Speedway) racing and practicing for this weekend. So, it would be an understatement to think that it’s not serious.”

Sunday’s O’Reilly Auto Parts 125 at virtual Texas will air live on FOX, FS1 and the FOX Sports App at 1 p.m. ET. Entry lists should be released before the weekend.

Some things never change.

“I can tell you, there’s not a racer in existence that ever meets the budget,” Bowyer said. “It’s always over budget. It’s whatever it takes to be competitive at the race track and win races at whatever cost.”