The annual preseason Daytona 500 Media Day kicks off Wednesday morning at 8 a.m. ET, and NASCAR will live stream the entire day’s worth of activity.

Hosts Kim Coon and Alex Weaver will kick off coverage bright and early in the morning, and NASCAR Digital will live stream interviews until late in the afternoon, talking to NASCAR Cup Series drivers about “The Great American Race” and other key story lines for the upcoming season.

RELATED: Daytona 500 betting odds

Bookmark this link now, or you can also watch from NASCAR’s YouTube channel or Twitter platform.

Feel free to dip in and out throughout the show. Personally, we recommend you put it on your second screen for easy listening all day.

The list of NASCAR drivers who have three or more wins in the Daytona 500 is incredibly exclusive. Each of the five names on that list is a Hall of Famer: Richard Petty, Cale Yarborough, Bobby Allison, Dale Jarrett and Jeff Gordon. Every name on that list is a NASCAR Cup Series Champion. In February of 2005, Gordon added his name to that exclusive club.

Lost in the recent memory of Denny Hamlin’s 2016 photo finish with Martin Truex Jr. and Austin Dillon’s battle with Aric Almirola in 2018, the finish to the 2005 Daytona 500 is one of the best in the race’s history.

RELATED: 2005 Daytona 500 results | See every Daytona 500 winner

Names like Tony Stewart, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Jimmie Johnson and Kurt Busch lined up along with Gordon with six laps to go, and the following laps put all fans on the edge of their seats. Four laps later, the caution would fly yet again setting up a green-white-checkered finish.

In the end, it would be Jeff Gordon holding off Kurt Busch and Dale Earnhardt Jr. to make history as the fifth driver ever with the title of three-time Daytona 500 champion.

Relive the 2005 Daytona 500 on NASCAR’s YouTube page in this classic full race replay.

With two laps to go at virtual Daytona International Speedway, Dale Earnhardt Jr. was prepared to pit from the lead, knowing he couldn’t survive with .3 gallons of fuel left in his tank. Before he could veer off, though, a wreck broke out behind him. It drew the only caution of the night, and because the green-white-checkered flag policy had yet to be implemented, the race finished under yellow with Earnhardt sputtering across the start/finish line still in first.

That’s right. On Feb. 9, 2010, Earnhardt became the first-ever NASCAR iRacing World Championship race winner, a milestone that continues to carry weight.

“I will say, he won it on fuel mileage only,” said Brad Davies, who finished outside the top 10 in that season opener but runner-up in the 2010 final rankings. “We just want to get that straightened out. … However, it was really cool to have him involved in the series that year. I think that helped the series gain a lot of traction to kick-start it off.”

RELATED: Complete eNASCAR coverage

A decade later, Earnhardt now owns an iRacing team through JR Motorsports. Davies is one of his drivers. Michael Conti then completes the two-car stable.

Conti, 22, was the 2014 series champion and has won nine races since he joined in 2012. Davies, 35, is one of four competitors left from the league’s inaugural season and has won six races since then.

“You have to be really well-rounded to be in this series,” Conti said. “You can’t just be a racer. You can’t just be a setup builder. You can’t have absolutely no knowledge of social media. You have to know a little bit about everything to succeed.”

NASCAR.com’s Terrin Waack spent time with Davies and Conti to learn the ins and outs of the present-day eNASCAR Coca-Cola iRacing Series and how the two prepared for the first race of the new season tonight at Daytona (9 ET on Facebook, Twitch, YouTube and eNASCAR.com).

Usedaytona Pack Iracing 2020

Climbing the ladder

Literally anyone can join iRacing. All it takes is an online subscription of $13 per month — and right now, iRacing is offering 40% off new memberships.

Sounds like a free-for-all once in, and it kind of is considering there are more than 100,000 users with access to at least 80 different cars and tracks.

Don’t be fooled. Making the eNASCAR Coca-Cola iRacing Series is no easy feat. There’s a thorough ladder system in place to vet the drivers on this career path.

“Most people, it takes two to three years to get to this point — at least,” Conti said. “Some, it takes much longer. Took me two, which is pretty short.”

Looking at the oval path alone, there are five classes out of which a driver must advance to reach professional status. Each class provides a different type of car. iRacing purposefully does this so drivers learn and grow as they progress rather than just mastering one form of racing.

So, in the simplest terms, everyone starts out in the Rookie Class with basic entry-level vehicles, such as Legend cars and Street Stocks. There’s then the D Class with Late Models. Classes C, B and A follow and match the NASCAR national series in order: Gander Trucks, Xfinity Series and Cup Series cars.

“You cannot skip anything,” Conti said. “You have to do all of it, and you have to be good — one of the best — to get through.”

Iracing Inset Bristol Main

It doesn’t end there either.

Those who make it out of the A Class move into the Road to Pro Series, which has its own season that overlaps with the Coca-Cola iRacing Series season. Once both seasons have concluded, the top 20 Road to Pro drivers and the bottom 20 eNASCAR drivers then make up the Pro Series in the offseason (the top 20 drivers in the Coca-Cola iRacing Series automatically qualify for that series next year). The top 20 drivers in the Pro Series from that field determines who qualifies for the next Coca-Cola iRacing Series season and completes the final 40-driver field.

Among these series, drivers can move up and down. Use Davies as an example: Twice he has finished outside the top 20 in the eNASCAR Series, got demoted to the Pro Series and earned his spot back in the eNASCAR Series.

“I don’t know if that’s surprising, but it kind of blows my mind at how well that system works,” Davies said. “It keeps the people that don’t need to be racing in Pro out of Pro. The people that should be in Pro — because they’re talented and they’re good at what they do — they can make it there.”

Building the series

NASCAR and iRacing debuted their eNASCAR Series back in 2010. Formal teams weren’t introduced until 2019 when 12 of them, including JR Motorsports, took part in a two-round driver draft. Four more teams joined later in the year, as the rest of the field raced independently.

Things have truly taken off since then, as many NASCAR names have gotten involved in the eNASCAR world. Joe Gibbs Racing, JTG Daugherty Racing, Roush Fenway Racing, Stewart-Haas Racing and Wood Brothers Racing all field individual teams. Clint Bowyer, Kyle Larson, Denny Hamlin and William Byron have each formed their own teams, too.

Driver contracts weren’t required last year but are this year after a free-agency period placed everyone on one of the 20 teams.

“It’s a little weird,” Davies said. “I’ve never had to sign a contract for sim racing before. But it just goes to show you how quickly this has blown up and how much this is growing. I’m just looking forward to living up to my end of the deal here.”

JR Motorsports already has sponsors onboard after a successful trial run last season when Conti sported a FilterTime paint scheme. The intention of that collaboration was to see what kind of return on investment a company can get while sponsoring an eNASCAR car. Earnhardt himself is a FilterTime partner, enlisted by founder Blake Koch before the deal was made.

Iracing Data Inset

This season, Conti’s No. 8 Chevrolet will be sponsored by WR1 Sim Chassis, a company that sells custom-built simulator rigs. Davies, meanwhile, will have TrueTimber Camo on his No. 88 Chevy for 2020.

Every case will be different, but with contracts and sponsorship deals comes money from the team.

There’s also the league’s new entitlement sponsor, Coca-Cola, that significantly boosts the end-of-season prize pool. The 2020 total now tops $300,000. That’s triple 2019 and exponentially better than $10,000 in 2018.

Last season’s champion, Zack Novak, walked away with $40,000. Whoever is crowned this season will take home $100,000.

“That’s mind-boggling,” Davies said. “Obviously that’s the goal this year: to be first.”

Pushing the limits

Probably the biggest differences between NASCAR and eNASCAR is the fear factor. It’s absent from simulator racing. No matter the severity of a wreck, no one gets hurt.

That means sim racers can find the limit — cross it during practice, toe it during races — of how hard is too hard when it comes to pushing their car.

Practices are fair game. There’s a reset button any time damage is sustained. Races do require repairs to be made on pit road.

“Most of us — maybe not all but most of us — understand that we are not driving real cars,” Conti said. “We are not putting ourselves in the same situations as real drivers. We’re not putting our lives on the line. We get that. But we are doing a lot of the same things.”

Like tinkering with the vehicle’s setup.

iRacing provides all drivers with a base model. Drivers are allowed to alter it any way they please — nose weight, steering ratio, ride height, spring rate, bump stiffness, etc. — as long as it passes inspection before hitting the track.

WATCH: ‘Big One’ strikes during Clash

Setups are secret and usually shared with teammates only. Some drivers, including Conti and Davies, do have outside alliances with whom they exchange intel from telemetry data or seek guidance on what to adjust.

“There are thousands of combinations you can come up with in the garage to try to make the car faster or handle better,” Davies said. “Whatever it is, 99% of that is just trying to find one or two combinations that’ll work to give you an advantage over your opponent.”

Iracing Inset Bristol Main

Winning is always the goal, of course, but the higher a driver finishes in a Coca-Cola iRacing Series race, the more points he or she acquires. Points determine standings, and the top eight make the playoffs at the end of the regular season. The win-and-in guarantee is only valid during the postseason for the finale.

Knowing points like that are on the line should be enough to keep drivers from driving recklessly. If not, there’s also a penalty system in place. Competitors have to drive clean or risk suspension.

“You can bump people, knock them out and stuff,” Conti said. “But you can’t pull a Denny Hamlin and Chase Elliott at Martinsville (Speedway) a couple years ago and just completely turn someone around.”

It all goes back to that lack of fear. Without the points or penalty leverage, drivers could wreck each other without any repercussions.

“The mental focus for sim racing is through the roof compared to anything else,” Davies said. “Sweat is pouring off me by the end of the race, and I’m just sitting in an air-conditioned condominium.”

Envisioning the future

Conti dedicates an entire room to stock-car racing, where NASCAR memorabilia mixes with iRacing accolades. His championship trophy and novelty check sit prominently on a shelf. Diecasts cover an entire wall in front of his three-screen simulator.

Davies’ rig isn’t as expansive, though he also has three monitors. His space purposefully doubles as an office. A standard desk and chair do the trick.

Either preference is perfectly fine as long as they have a reliable computer, a pedal set and a steering wheel.

Iracing Main Driving

“The amount of effort and time we put into this isn’t something that can be discounted,” Conti said. “We have real jobs just like you guys do, right? This is not our main source of income. It’s not even close to that.”

RELATED: Full 2020 schedule

Conti lives in Concord, North Carolina, and works as a service advisor at Hendrick BMW in Charlotte. Davies lives in Charlotte and works as the IT administrator at JR Motorsports in Mooresville. Each have a 30-minute commute — at the very least — when there’s no traffic.

These are their full-time jobs.

Both had dreams of being a professional race car driver growing up, though neither had the means to make it work. Simulator racing was much more realistic — and affordable.

“I’ll still do iRacing even if I can’t compete at this level anymore,” Davies said. “I see myself doing this as long as it’s in existence basically. It just scratches that itch to race and be competitive.”

There are now 20 (up from 18) biweekly races in iRacing’s top series — 16 regular-season races, four postseason races. Conti spends anywhere between 12 and 20 hours practicing in those two weeks. Davies ideally tests at least an hour per day between events.

Races, which start after a 10-minute qualifying session and a 20- to 30-minute practice period, last around two hours. They’re on Tuesdays at 9 p.m. ET. The last six will air live on NBCSN.

Then, drivers are back to work in the morning. Some are still in school.

“With as much effort as we’ve put into this and as much as I believe in this season, I would love nothing more than to say one day, you know what, I’m done with my day job,” Conti said. “I’m just going to be a sim racer, and that’s all I’m going to do. …

“Do I think we’re going to get there this year? No. Next year? Probably not. It’s going to take some time, but if we continue at the rate we’re going, we’re going to get there.”

CONCORD, N.C. — NAPA AUTO PARTS has extended its relationship with 12-time NASCAR Cup Series champions Hendrick Motorsports with a new agreement that will continue its 26-race majority sponsorship of Chase Elliott and the No. 9 team through 2022.

On Sunday, Elliott will drive his No. 9 NAPA AUTO PARTS Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 1LE in the 62nd running of the DAYTONA 500 (2:30 p.m. ET on FOX) to kick off the 2020 NASCAR season.

RELATED: Chase Elliott driver stats | Hendrick Motorsports team page

“NAPA is proud to continue our partnership with Hendrick Motorsports and Chase Elliott, which serves as a key component of our marketing efforts,” said Gaylord Spencer, senior vice president, marketing, for NAPA AUTO PARTS. “Motorsports is a natural fit for NAPA, and we are fortunate to be associated with winners like Hendrick Motorsports and Chase Elliott. Our partnership remains strong, and we look forward to continued success in the years to come.”

Atlanta-based NAPA AUTO PARTS began its relationship with Elliott as primary sponsor during the driver’s historic 2014 Xfinity Series season when he became NASCAR’s youngest-ever national series champion while earning rookie of the year and most popular driver honors. The company’s support of Elliott continued through another full Xfinity Series schedule (2015), the driver’s five-race Cup Series debut (2015) and as majority sponsor of his first four years at the Cup level (2016-2019). NAPA expanded its number of primary races from 24 to 26 in 2018.

“NAPA constantly shows how committed they are to not only the success of their business but to the success of our team and Hendrick Motorsports as a whole,” Elliott said. “I’m so thankful for everything they’ve done for me since 2014. I get the chance to meet NAPA employees across the country throughout the NASCAR season, and to be able to represent all of them week in and week out is truly an honor. We look forward to having them on board for the years ahead.”

Elliott, 24, earned 2016 Cup Series rookie of the year honors and is coming off his fourth playoff appearance in as many full seasons at NASCAR’s top level. The Dawsonville, Georgia, native has posted six Cup-level race victories under crew chief Alan Gustafson and has been voted by fans as the series’ most popular driver for two consecutive years.

“We’ve had an incredible run with NAPA, and I know we’re just scratching the surface of what’s possible,” said Rick Hendrick, owner of Hendrick Motorsports. “Chase has immense talent, is extremely popular with fans and has proven that he can win races and challenge for championships. There’s no limit to what he, Alan and the No. 9 team can accomplish together. We couldn’t do it without NAPA and look forward to continuing the tremendous relationship with their whole group.”

CONCORD, N.C. — Axalta (NYSE: AXTA), a leading global supplier of liquid and powder coatings, and 12-time NASCAR Cup Series champions Hendrick Motorsports have agreed to a five-year contract extension that will take one of the most enduring sponsorships in auto racing through 2027.

As part of the new agreement, Axalta will be a primary sponsor of the No. 24 team with driver William Byron for 14 Cup Series races each year beginning in 2021. Byron is coming off a sophomore season that saw him produce personal bests in nearly every statistical category and earn his first Cup playoff berth.

RELATED: William Byron driver stats | Hendrick Motorsports team page

Driving the No. 24 Axalta Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 1LE, Byron will make his third career start in the DAYTONA 500 on Sunday (2:30 p.m. ET on FOX). His paint scheme will feature Axalta’s 2020 Global Automotive Color of the Year, Axalta Sea Glass.

“Our partnership with Hendrick Motorsports goes beyond signatures on paper. We consider the entire Hendrick organization part of our family and the foundation of our legacy in racing,” said Wade Robinson, managing director, global motorsports at Axalta. “Knowing that our companies will continue to collaborate well into the future is a remarkable feat. We’re proud of the work and accomplishments that our companies have achieved together.”

The new pact extends a multi-faceted partnership — now in its 28th full season — that began in November 1992 when Axalta first sponsored the No. 24 Chevrolet of driver Jeff Gordon, who went on to win four Cup Series titles and 93 points-paying races. Axalta also operates a 36,000-square-foot, state-of-the-art Customer Experience Center on the Hendrick Motorsports campus outside Charlotte, North Carolina, to enable customers to train and be part of a full racing experience.

“It’s difficult to put into words what Axalta has meant to our company,” said Rick Hendrick, owner of Hendrick Motorsports. “They took a chance on us nearly three decades ago, and it’s been an incredible relationship ever since. Axalta and the No. 24 team are synonymous, so it’s fitting to see that connection solidified for the next eight seasons. William is a tremendous talent who is going to do exciting things behind the wheel for a long, long time. We are truly fortunate to continue this great partnership far into the future.”

Byron, 22, was the 2018 NASCAR Cup Series rookie of the year. In 2019, he was paired with seven-time champion crew chief Chad Knaus, who led him to a playoff berth and personal bests in top-five finishes, top 10s, pole positions, laps led, average finish, stage wins, and final points position. The Charlotte, North Carolina, native earned the 2017 NASCAR Xfinity Series championship before moving to the Cup level.

“My relationship with Axalta has been unreal,” Byron said. “They mean so much to Hendrick Motorsports and to our sport — from producing the all-time coolest and most recognizable paint schemes to everything they do off the track to make our sponsorship so successful. I feel very lucky to have this opportunity and to help continue the winning tradition of Axalta, Hendrick Motorsports and the No. 24 team.”

In 2020, Axalta is a primary sponsor of Byron in 22 Cup Series races and teammate Alex Bowman in three events. Its most recent contract with Hendrick Motorsports was set to run through 2022.

You’ll need fast fingers if you’re going to win a new sports car that looks like former NASCAR Cup Series champion Kevin Harvick’s No. 4 Busch Ford. That’s because every time Harvick makes a pit stop in the 2020 Daytona 500, you will have the time it takes Harvick to complete that stop to tweet #Pit4Busch and #Sweepstakes for the chance to win a new Ford Mustang.

It will be tough to beat Harvick’s crew because this is a championship-caliber outfit. Harvick has made it to the Championship 4 in each of the past three seasons, and in five of the six years since NASCAR went to its elimination format. When that format began back in 2014, Harvick kicked it off in style by winning his first Cup Series title.

Don’t believe us on the urgency of this situation, then how about hearing from the driver himself?

“You can’t win in NASCAR without a fast, efficient pit crew, and my guys are the best,” Harvick said. “Fans are going to have to be just as quick this year if they want to take home a new car of their own.”

This sweepstakes is just the latest fun Busch Beer has devised to promote its brand and celebrate a driver who has 49 Cup wins. You may remember avocado toast last year when Harvick drove the pink millennial car in one of Busch’s signature promotions that led to it winning NASCAR’s 2019 Marketing Achievement Award.

“Just like when Busch turned my car into beer cans, made me race in a bright pink car at the All-Star Race and changed Busch to ‘Harvick’ at Dover last year, I’m always amazed at what they come up with,” Harvick said. “It’s a great way to start the season.”

With each pit stop serving as its own sweepstakes, fans will have multiple chances to win. Harvick will be fast, but his car will be easy to spot in a new #Pit4Busch paint scheme that’s pure fire.

“Both Busch and Harvick’s No. 4 car have some of the most loyal and engaged fans in the world,” says Daniel Blake, Senior Director of Marketing at Anheuser-Busch. “#Pit4Busch is a way to see just how engaged they are during the 500, and reward a few of them with a Busch-branded sports car of their own.

“Harvick wastes no time around the track, so this is the fans’ opportunity to show some of their skills, too. We can’t wait to see it all come together on race day.”

View the Official Rules of the sweepstakes, sponsored by Busch, here.

Be sure to tune in on FOX at 2:30 p.m. ET on Feb. 16, to watch the 62nd running of the Daytona 500.

Get ready to see preparation for the Daytona 500 like never before. Starting today.

The “NASCAR All In: Battle for Daytona” docuseries, produced by MotorTrend Group in partnership with NASCAR, streams its first episode today on the MotorTrend App.

MORE: Download the app to watch

Fans will receive exclusive, inside access to NASCAR Cup Series drivers Austin Dillon, Tyler Reddick and Corey LaJoie preparing for the Daytona 500 from the vantage point of the athletes, their race teams and families. MotorTrend will go off the track in near real-time for an emotional, behind-the-scenes look at the highs and lows of real-life NASCAR racing.

New episodes will air every Monday as the sports documentary series chronicles the commitment, struggles and sacrifices in the chase for greatness at the biggest race of the 2020 NASCAR Cup Series season.

Dillon, of course, is a winner of the “Great American Race,” having conquered the event in 2018. Reddick, the rookie, is known for his daring moves and superspeedway prowess and LaJoie is the sentimental fan favorite who always seems to get the most out of his equipment — and who has his sights set on his future.

Download the app now so you don’t miss a single episode.

MORE: Download the app to watch

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Bubba Wallace and Richard Petty Motorsports savored some good news in the days before arriving at Daytona International Speedway this week, renewing their U.S. Air Force sponsorship and bringing back a familiar shark-toothed paint scheme for Speedweeks.

That design will carry more meaning for Sunday’s Daytona 500 with two solemn memorials on the No. 43 Chevrolet. A decal on the front roof pillar pays tribute to former Petty driver John Andretti, who died Jan. 30 after a long battle with cancer. Part of the rear decklid features a tribute to NBA star Kobe Bryant, his daughter and the seven other victims of the helicopter crash that claimed their lives Jan. 26.

Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

“It was a given with John Andretti driving the 43 years ago and being part of the RPM family,” Wallace said after posting the 32nd-fastest qualifying speed Sunday. “I wanted to do something special for Kobe and all the victims there. I was going to put his name where my name was on the door, but then we were like, we need to honor every single person there and I agreed with that. We decided to come up with a cool decal … and it came out really cool with the Lakers colors, which is pretty cool. It offsets from our Air Force scheme, but just a lot of people riding with us for the 500 on Sunday.”

RELATED: Daytona Speedweeks schedule

Sunday’s Great American Race represents a reunion for Wallace, who will pair with crew chief Jerry Baxter for the 2020 season. The veteran Baxter was atop the pit box for five of Wallace’s six career Gander Trucks victories during their time together with Kyle Busch Motorsports (2013-14).

Wallace’s best Cup Series finish to date remains his emotional runner-up outcome in his first Daytona 500 in 2018. So far this year, Wallace has topped the chart in second practice for the 500, but warned not to place too much emphasis on the early stat sheet.

“So practice is another thing,” Wallace said. “Everybody’s like, ‘hey, you’ve got a really good car.’ I’m like, we drafted and no one else did. So I don’t mean to be that guy, but just giving you realistic facts there. But I do get excited coming to the speedway stuff, just because our program’s been so solid. … It’s just coming to these races, I think for all the small teams, you get excited about these because anybody can win these races. We’re excited to get going. It’s the first race of the year, get the blood flowing again.”

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Finding a way to distinguish yourself in a crowded crop of NASCAR talent isn’t easy, even for a guy who started last year’s Daytona 500 with a close-up of his face superimposed on his car.

Carl Edwards handed out business cards before reaching elite driver status. Steve Letarte swept floors before becoming a winning crew chief. So in a world of all things digital and rapid-fire communication through text and e-mail, Corey LaJoie went analog to try to make an impression.

In cursive, no less.

LaJoie, starting his second full season for Go Fas Racing’s No. 32, revealed this weekend that he had reached out to team owner Rick Hendrick to openly express his interest in a ride. The story was first told to RacinBoys.com’s Lee Spencer.

RELATED: Daytona Speedweeks schedule

LaJoie’s method: A handwritten letter that he delivered in person at the NASCAR Hall of Fame’s Induction Night on Jan. 31. The note was designed not only to showcase his penmanship, but his desire for a top-tier seat in NASCAR’s Cup Series. The overture also coincides with a vacancy opening up on the No. 48 Chevrolet team upon Jimmie Johnson’s retirement from full-time racing at season’s end.

“I mean, I think you’ve kind of got to stand out,” LaJoie said before Sunday’s Daytona 500 qualifying, where he posted the 37th-fastest speed. “It’s hard to stand out on the race track, especially in the Cup Series, because they’re the best stock-car drivers in the world, driving the best-prepared cars by the best, most-qualified people. So it’s hard to take a 30th-place car and make yourself known. So I have to do some stuff off the race track and sometimes you’ve got to think outside the box a little bit.

“I have nice cursive handwriting, so I figured why don’t I just pen this guy a letter. I don’t think that I should be necessarily the leading candidate, but I would like to think I’d be on the list because just the experience and all the stuff I’ve gained by doing it the hard way. I think I can kind of fit in their mold pretty well.”

LaJoie, 28, posted his best finishes of his journeyman career last season with the Archie St. Hilaire-owned team, recording his first two top-10 results. He said he’s hopeful for improvement this year, with his Go Fas team benefiting from an influx of newer equipment handed down from Stewart-Haas Racing.

MORE: Daytona 500 qualifying speeds

But a potential opportunity with perennial contender Hendrick Motorsports would represent a major jump in stature. It’s what helped him work up the gumption to approach the NASCAR Hall of Fame team owner on one of the sport’s biggest gala evenings.

“I was nervous when I gave it to him, because that guy could change my life and my family’s life forever,” LaJoie said. “That’s why I spent extra time. I started writing it around Christmas and finally got it nailed down. I had a couple of rough drafts that my wife scratched up for me. It reminded me how English was my least favorite subject in school.”

His choice of old-school media found a fan close to Hendrick’s heart in Johnson, who caught wind of LaJoie’s plan before the Hall of Fame ceremonies. LaJoie said the seven-time champion vouched for him when he landed his first steady job for BK Racing in 2017. Johnson also endorsed the thoughtful act of putting pen to paper.

“I think it’s fantastic,” Johnson said. “Corey and I spoke a little bit and he was trying to figure out how to stand out and how to really connect with Rick, and when he brought up the idea of a handwritten note, I’m like, yeah. I mean, his phone’s ringing, text messages come in, people are always trying to get to him, and if you really think about the last time he’s had a handwritten note come across his desk, that’ll definitely leave a lasting impression.”

“I got a text from him after he delivered the letter. I know he was nervous about it, but I commend him for pouring his heart out and kind of being a little vulnerable in a sense, and doing something different.”

The competition to be Johnson’s successor in the No. 48 Chevy is expected to be stout. Though other names haven’t been explicitly linked to Hendrick Motorsports, LaJoie may have raised his hand first — all with a flourish, etched in ink.

“It was a letter to say, just keep your eye on me,” LaJoie said. “Obviously, there’s probably quote-unquote better candidates of what the media and the fans might think, but just no reason why I shouldn’t be considered is kind of what I learned.”

Joe Gibbs Racing driver Denny Hamlin couldn’t help but contribute to the Brad Keselowski-Joey Logano discussion on Sunday evening following the Busch Clash.

Keselowski, knocked out of the race early after Logano and Kyle Busch got tangled up battling for the lead, was pointedly critical of his Team Penske teammate Logano’s decision to throw multiple blocks. “It was just a dumb move,” Keselowski said, in part. “There was no reason to make that move. It’s never gonna work. And it didn’t.”

Hamlin, who pushed Erik Jones to victory, agreed with Keselowski and threw in a needling of his own.

Friendly reminder of what happened the last time Hamlin and Logano had an on-track disagreement.