NASCAR Finish Line, a free-to-play gaming app from Penn National Gaming, has launched for the 2020 NASCAR Cup Series season. Each week, there will be six groups of six drivers for the race ahead. Users will predict which driver will finish first among each group, and then also the overall race winner for a chance to win $50,000 each week if all seven scenarios are correctly selected.

RELATED: Download NASCAR Finish Line

The second of six groups for the Pennzoil 400 presented by Jiffy Lube at Las Vegas Motor Speedway (Sunday, 3:30 p.m. ET on FOX, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) features Denny Hamlin, Chase Elliott, Kyle Larson, Alex Bowman, William Byron and Christopher Bell. The rookie Bell is at a disadvantage in our analysis because he just made his first NASCAR Cup Series start, but he does have three top fives in four Xfinity Series starts at the track and has proven to be a quick study at previous stops on the NASCAR national series ladder.

Another interesting factoid amid an offseason that saw a number of crew chief changes: All six drivers have the same crew chiefs as last year and none have won at Las Vegas in the sport’s top series.

For a stats look, NASCAR.com has compiled the finishes of each driver at both Las Vegas races in 2019, their 1.5-mile results in 2019 and their last five races at Las Vegas. Why a heavy emphasis on 2019 stats? That’s because the 1.5-mile rules package is pretty much the same as last year. For Bell, we have taken the results from 2019 for the car he is driving in this year — the No. 95 Leavine Family Racing Toyota.

From those results, we’ve created a ranking in each category of 1 (best) to 6 (worst) and then tallied up the totals to see who is the best option. The results of the highest-finishing driver in each category is bolded in green.

*Note: The numbers associated with Bell here are from the No. 95 car (driven by Matt DiBenedetto) in 2019 and over the No. 95 car’s last five races at Las Vegas. Average finish numbers for Bowman and Byron are based on four Las Vegas starts.

Driver Las Vegas-1 (’19) Las Vegas-2 (’19) 1.5-mile results (’19) Las Vegas last 5 Total
Denny Hamlin 2 (finished 10th) 5 (finished 15th) 3 (avg. finish: 11.8) 3 (avg. finish: 16.0) 13
Chase Elliott 1 (finished 9th) 1 (finished 4th) 2 (avg. finish 10.9) 4 (avg. finish: 17.2) 8
Kyle Larson 4 (finished 12th) 4 (finished 8th) 5 (avg. finish: 17.2) 1 (avg. finish: 5.4) 14
Alex Bowman 3 (finished 11th) 2 (finished 6th) 1 (avg. finish: 8.7) 2 (avg. finish: 13.0) 8
William Byron 5 (finished 16th) 3 (finished 7th) 4 (avg. finish: 14.5) 6 (avg. finish: 21.8) 18
Christopher Bell* 6 (finished 21st) 6 (finished 21st) 6 (avg. finish: 23.5) 5 (avg. finish: 18.2) 23

Based on the chart, Elliott or Bowman are the clear-cut picks. I’d lean toward the recency bias of Elliott finishing better in both Las Vegas races last year as my tiebreaker. But given Elliott’s popularity and the odds that he will be a favored choice, you could make a pick against the field and go against the grain and take Bowman.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Standing on pit road, with cars lined up and drivers posted nearby, everybody faces in the same direction toward the national-anthem singer and the start-finish line. There are a number of poses and a variety of people. Some have one hand placed on their heart, while others hold both in front or behind their back. Parents grasp onto children. Men and women hold removed baseball and sun hats.

Almost in sync, heads tilt upward and turn to the left. Shielded eyes track down the six-jet squadron and follow its Delta formation across the sky. Only the U.S. Air Force Thunderbirds fly from south to north at Daytona International Speedway, passing over the middle of the superstretch, infield and frontstretch in order.

By the time the jets clear the grandstands and tower, the final note of the national anthem is falling to a close.

“It’s unbelievable what it does for the fans,” said Brandon Igdalsky, NASCAR’s managing director of event marketing and promotion. “No matter how many times you sit through them – and granted, you know it’s coming – the hair on the back of your neck still stands up and you get a little bit of goosebumps. It’s just badass.”

RELATED: At-track photos from the Daytona 500

Unlike other sports, flyovers are not a rarity when it comes to NASCAR. Almost all – if not all – Cup Series events feature one during pre-race festivities.

The season-opening Daytona 500 had the Thunderbirds last weekend for the 10th consecutive year and 11th time overall. This Sunday’s Pennzoil 400 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway (3:30 p.m. ET, FOX/FOX Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) will have four aircrafts fly over from the Nellis Air Force Base, which is three miles from the track.

DAYTONA BEACH, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 16: The United States Air Force Thunderbirds perform a flyover during the NASCAR Cup Series 62nd Annual Daytona 500 at Daytona International Speedway on February 16, 2020 in Daytona Beach, Florida. (Photo by Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Mike Ehrmann | Getty Images

“Flyovers just really put a period on how patriotic our sport is,” DIS president Chip Wile said. “To have a military flyover at the end of the national anthem is something every race track is really proud of, and it’s really hard to do because of all the things that have to line up.”

Timing is everything.

The perfect flyover crosses the track at “brave,” the last word in the national anthem, and there are three parties involved in making sure that is timed correctly. There is the singer, the on-ground contacts and the pilots themselves. Everyone has to be on the same page at all times.

“Doing a flyover is really easy,” Thunderbird No. 1 Lt. Col. John Caldwell said. “Doing a flyover well is very difficult.”

In the Thunderbirds’ case, No. 7 Lt. Col. Kevin DiFalco and No. 8 Maj. Jason Markzon are on the ground with the national-anthem singer, whose sole job — as it relates to the flyover — is to be consistent. DiFalco already has the singer’s line-by-line timing from rehearsals and is following along to make sure everything matches up. Markzon then relays the updates to Caldwell up in the air since he leads the formation.

Those updates coincide with the TOT (time over target) since the jets start their run about 20 miles away at 500 mph.

“He’s got a little airspeed carrot, if you will,” Markzon said. “It’s just marking the airspeed he need to fly to hit the time that we pass to him. … If we get down to it and the singer is like three seconds ahead, for example, ‘Boss, new TOT, speed up.’ So, he gets that new time, he plugs that in, and it changes his airspeed carrot.”

Caldwell then shares that information with the other pilots. He’s also telling them when he’s going to make a turn or change his speed – anything and everything, so that there is no ripple effect and the jets stay in a clean formation.

DAYTONA BEACH, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 16: The Air Force Thunderbirds perform a flyover prior to the NASCAR Cup Series 62nd Annual Daytona 500 at Daytona International Speedway on February 16, 2020 in Daytona Beach, Florida. (Photo by Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

The Delta formation looks like a V with one aircraft – known as the slot – flying behind the leader. There are then the left and right wings, along with the lead and opposing solos.

“My job is, I say, super simple and complicated at the same time,” said No. 6 Capt. Kyle Oliver, whose first flyover as the Thunderbirds’ opposing solo was the Daytona 500. “It’s very simple in the fact of being in this exact spot, three feet from another airplane. That in and of itself, though, is a fairly difficult and demanding task.”

The flyover itself lasts maybe 10 seconds from a fan’s perspective, then it’s on to the command for the main event.

Unless it was obvious, a normal spectator wouldn’t be able to tell if the pilots even hit their mark. Daytona looked like it was perfect.

“Literally I’ve never been more nervous during a national anthem than during a flyover for a national anthem,” Markzon said. “It’s just I can see the jets and know what’s all going on. I don’t want to screw it up. I don’t want them to screw it up. I was us to look good, make sure the timing is good and get the crowd to go crazy. My heart races when that happens, as I see them approaching and am counting down the time. I’m watching them – is it going to work, is it not going to work – and they crush it every time.”

The Daytona 500 has added to its prestige by pairing with the Thunderbirds’ elite squad of flyers. Other tracks tend to have relationships with local flying communities to replicate the pageantry on a smaller scale. NASCAR heavily supports the military as a whole, too.

Flyovers are usually planned anywhere between 90 and 180 days out from the race. NASCAR uses a third-party sports marketing and entertainment company called CSM Production to help coordinate the logistics with the tracks. There’s not a specific budget set aside for flyovers, but they’re accounted for in each event’s overall cost.

All those involved in the pre-race ceremonies don’t truly relax until the green flag waves.

“It’s the cool behind-the-scenes stuff in this sport that fans don’t really get a chance to witness and see – how much work actually goes into everything to pull off the day,” Igdalsky said. “It’s part of the addiction I have for this sport: seeing all that, putting it all together and working with all these great folks internally and externally to make this stuff happen.

“At the end of the day, when it all goes off seamlessly and you can look around and see those smiles on the fans and the excitement in their eyes, that’s when I know we’ve done our job and it’s time for the boys on track to do theirs.”

DAYTONA BEACH, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 16: The United States Air Force Thunderbirds perform a flyover during the NASCAR Cup Series 62nd Annual Daytona 500 at Daytona International Speedway on February 16, 2020 in Daytona Beach, Florida. (Photo by Brian Lawdermilk/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Brian Lawdermilk | Getty Images

Ross Chastain has been named the substitute driver of the No. 6 Roush Fenway Racing Ford this weekend at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, the team announced Wednesday.

Roush Fenway Racing driver Ryan Newman was hospitalized with non-life threatening injuries after a wreck at the finish of Monday’s Daytona 500. He was released from the hospital on Wednesday — the team’s official Twitter account posted a photo of Newman leaving with his two daughters.

Currently there is no timetable for Newman’s return. Additional updates will be provided as they become available.

“First and foremost, our focus remains with Ryan and his family as he continues to recover,” Roush Fenway president Steve Newmark said in a press release. “We also want to express our sincere gratitude to all of those who have offered support and taken the time to send their thoughts and prayers to Ryan, his family and everyone at Roush Fenway Racing.

“The NASCAR community has long prided itself on being a close-knit family. That is never more evident than during these types of moments, and we want to express our appreciation to everyone at Chip Ganassi Racing as well as Kaulig Racing for allowing Ross to fill in for Ryan in the No. 6 on such short notice.”

Chastain took to Twitter shortly after the news was announced to say he would do his best to make Newman and the team proud as the fill-in driver this weekend.

Chastain has 72 career starts in the NASCAR Cup Series with one top-10 finish. He has five total wins at the NASCAR national series level and was part of the Championship 4 field in the NASCAR Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series in 2019. His first career national series win came in 2018 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway in the NASCAR Xfinity Series. Chastain is the full-time driver of the No. 10 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet in the Xfinity Series for the 2020 season.

The Pennzoil 400 presented by Jiffy Lube (3:30 p.m. ET on FOX, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) is the second race of the 2020 NASCAR Cup Series season.

RELATED: More on Las Vegas

Roush Fenway Racing driver Ryan Newman has been treated and released from Halifax Medical Center, according to the team’s official Twitter account.

He had been hospitalized with non-life threatening injuries after a wreck at the finish of Monday’s Daytona 500.

Earlier Wednesday, the team announced that Newman “continued to show great improvement.” According to Roush Fenway, Newman was joking with staff members, friends and family while playing with his two daughters.

Hours later, he was officially released.

 

The NASCAR Cup Series heads out west for a pit stop at Las Vegas Motor Speedway and Sunday’s running of the Pennzoil 400 presented by Jiffy Lube (3:30 p.m. ET on FOX/FOX Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Before the green flag drops, here is all the information you need to know leading up to the first 1.5-mile race of the 2020 NASCAR season.

RELATED: Weekend race coverage | How to follow the races

TRACK DETAILS

Sunday’s Cup Series event marks the 25th race hosted by Las Vegas Motor Speedway in the series’ history after the track held a single race each year from 1998-2017 and two each since the 2018 season.

Source: Racing Insights

The 1.5-mile tri-oval located in Las Vegas Valley, Nevada, has an asphalt racing surface with 20 degrees of banking in each turn and nine degrees on the front and backstretch.

While the track first opened in 1996, the Cup Series held its inaugural race at the track in 1998 with NASCAR Hall of Fame inductee Mark Martin leading 82 of 267 laps and taking home the first-ever checkered flag in Sin City.

STAGE LENGTHS

Stage 1 ends at Lap 80, Stage 2 ends at Lap 160 and the Final Stage is slated to end at Lap 267.

RULES PACKAGE

Cup Series cars will feature the same 1.5-mile racing package used in 2019, with aero ducts and a tapered-spacer engine generating a targeted 550 horsepower.

Each team will be allowed three sets of Goodyear Eagle Speedway Radials for practice, one set for qualifying and nine sets for the race (eight new race sets, plus one transferred from practice or qualifying).

Las Vegas’ smooth asphalt track does not naturally wear tires. However, with tire wear being such an important factor for cooling and optimum performance, Goodyear has modified the tire to have increased wear on the racing surface.

“The track surface at Las Vegas is one that generates minimal tire wear so we have to design our tread compounds to account for that,” said Greg Stucker, Goodyear’s director of racing.  “Excessive heat is the enemy of a race tire and tire performance. On track surfaces that don’t naturally promote wear, it’s important to design a tire that can wear quicker and dissipate that heat. This tire setup, specifically this right-side tire, utilizes a tread compound formulation which does that.”

KEY STATS

— Martin Truex Jr. has won 12 races on 1.5-mile tracks since 2016, almost twice as many as the next closest driver.

— The Stage 2 winner at Las Vegas has won all five races in the stage-racing era.

— Four drivers have won 24 of the 33 races on 1.5 mile tracks since 2017: Martin Truex Jr. (10), Kevin Harvick (six); Kyle Busch and Brad Keselowski (four each).

— The Las Vegas race in March of 2019 had an average green-flag stretch of 85 laps.

Source: Racing Insights

LIVE COVERAGE

Tune in to live coverage from Las Vegas on FS1 and the FOX Sports App starting at 2 p.m. ET on Sunday — then switch over the FOX for the remainder of pre-race and in-race action. For complete radio coverage, listen in to PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio on-air at 2:30 p.m.

For a more interactive experience, head over to NASCAR.com or the NASCAR Mobile 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!

2019 RACE WINNER

Joey Logano picked up the first Las Vegas win of his career in last year’s spring race, leading 86 laps — second only to Kevin Harvick’s 88 laps led. With this victory, Logano is the only driver under the age of 30 to win in the last 12 races at the track, including the 2019 fall race.

RELATED: Odds, lines for Las Vegas

ACTIVE LAS VEGAS WINNERS

Jimmie Johnson (four); Brad Keselowski (three); Kevin Harvick and Martin Truex Jr. (two each); Kyle Busch and Joey Logano (once each).

 

Ryan Newman continues to show great improvement after Monday night’s last-lap accident at Daytona International Speedway.

The veteran driver is fully alert and walking around Halifax Medical Center. True to his jovial nature, he has also been joking around with staff, friends and family while spending time playing with his two daughters.

For the first time in facility history, Phoenix Raceway will host NASCAR Championship Weekend for all three of the sport’s national series. And as of Tuesday, tickets are on sale to ensure you don’t miss the experience.

Title weekend is scheduled for Nov. 6-8 on the reconfigured, action-packed 1-mile track in Arizona. A bonus for those looking to see which NASCAR Cup Series driver lifts the Bill France Cup at the culmination of the weekend — there’s a fourth title to be decided with the ARCA Menards West Series concluding on Saturday, Nov. 7, in a doubleheader with the NASCAR Xfinity Series.

RELATED: Buy your tickets now!

That’s four championships in three days.

“It’s difficult to put into words the level of excitement we feel here at Phoenix Raceway and across the entire community for this NASCAR season and what is to come between now and November 8,” said Phoenix Raceway President Julie Giese. “I’m incredibly proud that our facility, and the State of Arizona, will be hosting this year’s NASCAR Championship Weekend.”

Fans attending will continue to benefit from Phoenix Raceway’s modernization project, which will continue to allow fans to get closer to the championship action than ever before. As part of NASCAR Championship Weekend , fans will have the opportunity to take in the midway experience, featuring merchandise haulers and interactive displays from sponsors and vendors. Fans will also have the opportunity to purchase the INfield Experience, providing unprecedented access to their favorite drivers and teams throughout the entire weekend.

A $178 million project designed to make the fan and race experience even better first launched in 2018. The most visible change from afar was the repositioning of the start/finish line in Turn 2 just before the dog leg, which makes those late-race restarts and passing opportunities all the more important.

Flat screen TVs are located throughout common areas, and WiFi is available throughout the facility — even in-seat.

Other structural changes included a new ticket and guest services building, a new garage experience, new fan zone bar and more.

MORE: See all of the changes

Steeped in NASCAR history, Phoenix has plenty of incredible moments in its history. Alan Kulwicki turned a “Polish Victory Lane” after his first NASCAR Cup Series win in 1988 (which came at the track’s first Cup Series race), Kevin Harvick earned the facility’s first sweep in 2006 and Clint Bowyer attempted to chase down Jeff Gordon after a memorable on-track incident between the two in 2012.

More recently, in the playoff-elimination era, we’ve seen clutch walk-off wins by Harvick and Denny Hamlin and Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s final win in the NASCAR Cup Series in 2015.

Expect a new memorable moment to join that list.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – In the hours before his final Daytona 500 start as a full-time driver, seven-time NASCAR Cup Series champion Jimmie Johnson was riding bikes with his wife and two young daughters in the infield, enjoying the sunny Florida day and the good vibes before NASCAR’s highest profile green flag flew.

On the grid before the race, Johnson’s daughters took turns sitting in the driver’s seat of their dad’s famed No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet. And then moments later, their father rolled off and into the last Daytona 500 he’s scheduled to run before retiring at the end of the season.

PHOTOS: Top moments for Jimmie Johnson | WATCH: Jimmie Johnson’s first Daytona 500 win 

For most of the day Johnson kept the car up front and looked absolutely ready to contend for his third Daytona 500 trophy… only to be collected in a late-race wreck while running in the top five. Johnson was caught in a 19-car accident with 16 laps remaining in the 200-lap race – a race won for the second consecutive time by Joe Gibbs Racing’s Denny Hamlin.

The accident eliminated or hindered a handful of the afternoon’s lead cars – from Johnson, Brad Keselowski, Martin Truex Jr. and Kurt Busch who were running up front at the time to Aric Almirola, Bubba Wallace and Alex Bowman, who were actually able to make repairs and continue, albeit no longer as true race contenders.

Johnson drove his dinged-up famed No. 48 Chevrolet to the pits immediately after the accident, but the team opted to call it night after surveying the damage.

“It’s been really a cool race to be a part of,” said Johnson, who won the Daytona 500 pole position in his first try in 2002 and then won NASCAR’s most celebrated race in both 2006 and 2013.

RELATED: See every Daytona 500 race winner

“You only dream of racing in races like this as a kid.”

Encouraged by his strong showing – he earned points in both stages of the race and ran as high as third place and led three laps – Johnson was obviously frustrated not to have an outcome that matched his good work.

“That No. 22 car (Joey Logano) had been pretty aggressive all day long. I just felt like it was a matter of time before his pushes were a little much and it looks like that was the case there. Our Ally Chevy was really strong. I hate that we were tore up in it.

“I’m really excited about the races ahead of us. [Crew chief] Cliff Daniels did a great job leading this team, full support from Hendrick Motorsports, my family, my friends, my fans. I’m just very thankful for all of that.

“We didn’t get to Victory Lane today, but I’m ready to get to Vegas [for the next race on Sunday] and get to work out there.”

Johnson conceded, however, that the Daytona 500 has always held a special place in his heart. An off-road racer from California, Johnson has been candid and grateful for the opportunity NASCAR has presented him and what the opportunity to be a multi-time Daytona 500 champion has meant to his career.

“For me, it’s so far away from San Diego and one of the few races that was on television,’” Johnson said of the 500. “I remember watching this race with my father and grandfather. Really didn’t think I’d ever end up here, so when I came up as a teen wondering if I’d ever get the chance to race on this track, the intensity of it all just kicked in.

“Outside of the car [it was emotional]” he said, “Inside the car, that’s my space and I’m perfectly happy and content with the decision I made.”

Ryan Newman remains under the care of doctors at Halifax Medical Center in Daytona Beach, Florida. He is awake and speaking with family and doctors.

Ryan and his family have expressed their appreciation for the concern and heartfelt messages from across the country. They are grateful for the unwavering support of the NASCAR community and beyond.

We will continue to provide information as it becomes available.

Daytona Beach, Florida (February 16, 2020) — Ryan Newman is being treated at Halifax Medical Center. He is in serious condition, but doctors have indicated his injuries are not life threatening.

We appreciate your thoughts and prayers and ask that you respect the privacy of Ryan and his family during this time.

We appreciate your patience and cooperation and we will provide more information as it becomes available.