DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (Dec. 5, 2019) – In a historic shift for the sport, beginning in 2020 NASCAR’s premier series will be known as the NASCAR Cup Series and will feature four cornerstone brands as Premier Partners; Busch Beer, Coca-Cola®, GEICO and Xfinity.

In addition to the establishment of the Premier Partner positions, this significant shift will provide many strategic benefits to the industry, including greater activation opportunities for brands across the sport. NASCAR’s inaugural grouping of Premier Partners will play a key role in consumer marketing and fan development initiatives moving forward.

“This has been a monumental year for our sport, one highlighted by significant changes in our business model to ensure long-term viability and growth,” said Steve Phelps, NASCAR President. “As we begin this new chapter, we are joined by four incredible brands with deep-rooted histories across all levels of our sport. We are honored to have this elite group represent our NASCAR Cup Series for years to come.”

The new model includes premium assets for each Premier Partner to engage the most brand-loyal fans in sports throughout the entire season. Premier Partners will collectively own a presence connected to the NASCAR Cup Series Championship Race and NASCAR All-Star Race. Additionally, all four partners will be prominently featured in multiple platforms across the sport, including integrations in broadcast, NASCAR digital and social channels, event entitlements, in-market promotions and at-track activations.

“This new model will provide our Premier Partners with a heightened level of integration and visibility across all aspects of our sport,” said Daryl Wolfe, NASCAR executive vice president and chief sales and operations officer. “Each of these partners have demonstrated their commitment to our brand-loyal fan base and we are excited about how these brands will elevate the NASCAR Cup Series.”

Busch Beer
Busch Beer returned as a NASCAR Official Partner in 2018. The deal provided the beer brand exclusive sponsorship of the Busch Pole Award, a position it will continue to maintain throughout its Premier Partnership. Additionally, Busch Beer will sponsor a NASCAR Cup Series event in 2020.

“We are continuing to evolve our presence in NASCAR because we have a significant connection to its fans and believe in the future of the sport,” said Nick Kelly, vice president partnerships, beer category and community, Anheuser-Busch. “The Premier Partner position strengthens our deep-rooted history in the sport and will provide fans with even more opportunities to enjoy a crisp, cold Busch Beer on race day.”

Anheuser-Busch’s history in NASCAR dates back decades to 1978, when it sponsored the Busch Pole Award. Additionally, Busch Beer was the “Official Beer of NASCAR” from 1988 through 1997. Beginning in 1998, Anheuser-Busch sponsored the Bud Pole Award through its Budweiser brand, which also became the “Official Beer of NASCAR” through 2007.

Coca-Cola
Coca-Cola has been involved with stock car racing for 50 years and became a NASCAR Official Partner in 1998. As a Premier Partner, Coca-Cola will continue its sponsorship of both NASCAR Troops to the Track and NASCAR Salutes, the portion of the season focused on highlighting industry-wide appreciation of the U.S. Armed Forces. Coca-Cola will also continue to own race entitlements at Charlotte Motor Speedway and Daytona International Speedway. Additionally, Coca-Cola becomes the presenting sponsor of the NASCAR Cup Series regular season championship trophy.

“Coca-Cola has a long history of successful collaboration with NASCAR and elevating our position to Premier Partner provides even more opportunity to connect fans to unforgettable experiences,” said John Mount, vice president, sports marketing, Coca-Cola North America. “Further integrating our two brands affords Coca-Cola the opportunity to build on our winning formula and contribute to the growth of the sport in the years ahead.”

The agreement further enhances Coca-Cola’s position as the “Official Soft Drink of NASCAR.” A signature part of the brand’s marketing strategy is the Coca-Cola Racing Family – an exclusive group of top drivers representing Coca-Cola who are featured across company advertising, promotions and packaging.

GEICO
GEICO’s involvement in NASCAR spans more than a decade and the company became the “Official Insurance Provider of NASCAR” earlier this year. As one of the most fully integrated brands in the sport, GEICO will enhance its existing assets through its Premier Partnership and become the presenting partner of a season phase.

“Our affiliation with NASCAR has been successful over the past decade and expanding our role to Premier Partner was the next logical step,” said Bill Brower, assistant vice president of marketing for GEICO. “Our expanded presence will allow us to further engage the most brand-loyal fans in sports, bolster our effective marketing platform and play a prominent role in the sport in the years ahead.”

Xfinity
Comcast’s Xfinity brand entered the sport with a landmark 10-year partner agreement in 2015, positioned as the title sponsor of the NASCAR Xfinity Series and the “Official Entertainment Partner of NASCAR.” As a Premier Partner, Xfinity will maintain its Xfinity Series sponsorship, central to its NASCAR strategy. Xfinity will also sponsor the Championship 4 elimination race of the 2020 NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs at Martinsville Speedway.

“The first five years of our partnership with NASCAR has exceeded our expectations and the season-long national platform has provided increased exposure for the Xfinity brand and allowed us to demonstrate how our products and services enhance the way race fans enjoy this great sport,” said Matt Lederer, vice president of brand partnerships, Comcast. “Given the overwhelming fan reaction and how the industry has embraced the Xfinity brand, we’re thrilled to expand upon that commitment by becoming a Premier Partner of the NASCAR Cup Series, while also continuing to showcase the young stars of the NASCAR Xfinity Series.”

Throughout the past five years, Xfinity has elevated the series “Where Names Are Made,” supporting the introduction of an elimination-style Playoffs, reenergizing the Dash 4 Cash program, reimagining how champions are celebrated at Xfinity Champion’s Day at Universal Orlando Resort and has honored charitable efforts within the industry through its prestigious Comcast Community Champion of the Year Award platform. Xfinity continues to change the way fans access the sport through its Xfinity Stream app, Xfinity X1 video and Xfinity xFi internet.

Fresh off a dominant performance in USAC Midget Racing, having swept three main events in California, Kyle Larson scoffed at the notion NASCAR Cup Series racing isn’t just as much fun to him.

“If it was work, I wouldn’t do it,” Larson said. “I tell people all the time, yeah, the money’s great, but if I wasn’t having fun, I wouldn’t be doing this. I would have gotten out of this a long time ago. I enjoy the travel. I enjoy the race cars. I enjoy the rules changes.

“I enjoy the competition — just the lifestyle. I enjoy everything about NASCAR. People probably think, because I go back and race dirt cars, that I do it because I don’t love NASCAR, and I need to get away and do something fun, but I have fun every single weekend.”

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Clearly at the top of the game on dirt, Larson hasn’t won in stock cars with the same frequency he has achieved in open-wheel cars.

But there’s a reason for that: more variables.

“I think it’s just more situational in NASCAR,” Larson said. “There are a lot of other factors that lead into how you finish. In dirt, when you’re out there, you’re not worried about a pit stop or a double-file restart or a 500-lap race. It’s just 30 laps, and there’s a lot less stuff that can happen to affect your race, because it is so much shorter.

“You can control your own destiny a little bit better. … I feel like I’ve got everything it takes to win in the Cup Series. We did it in 2017. Our race cars were really good then. Our pit crew was on it. So it’s just more situational, I guess.”

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — More than anything else—appropriately enough—Wednesday’s NASCAR Industry Awards Reception at Blake Shelton’s Ole Red was a celebration of the accomplishments of 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series champion Kyle Busch and his No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing team.

Busch won the Sunoco Diamond Performance Award as well as the coveted Goodyear Gold Car Award, presented annually to the champion of NASCAR’s top division.

Busch won his second title and joins seven-time champion Jimmie Johnson as the only other active multiple championship winner. 

“It was just a matter of time,” opined Stu Grant, Goodyear’s general manager of global racing.

Adam Stevens of the No. 18 team was honored with the Champion Crew Chief Award, also his second.

“The playoffs came, and we never took our eyes off the prize,” Stevens said.

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In addition, the No. 18 JGR pit crew was recognized with the Mechanix Wear Most Valuable Pit Crew Award, and Mars Inc. claimed the Champion Sponsor Award. 

Chris Gabehart, crew chief for JGR teammate Denny Hamlin, earned the MOOG Problem Solver of the Year Crew Chief Award.

“My rookie year has just been phenomenal, with Joe Gibbs Racing, Denny and (sponsor) Fed-Ex,” said Gabehart, who guided Hamlin to six victories and a Championship 4 appearance this season. 

Denis McGlynn, president and CEO of Dover Motorsports, received the prestigious Buddy Shuman Award, which recognizes individuals and organizations that have played vital roles in ensuring the continued growth and popularity of stock car racing.

Kevin Harvick, six times the top qualifier in 2019, took home the Busch Pole Award. His sponsor, Busch Beer, was honored with the Marketing Achievement Award.

“Having Busch Beer, with everything they’ve done with our car and our program, is something you don’t see a lot of,” Harvick said. “It’s always fun to win your sponsor’s award, so it’s great to keep it in the family.”

RELATED: Busch Beer wins Marketing Achievement Award | Stars light up NASCAR Night at the Opry

“If you can get Kevin Harvick to drive a millennial car, eat avocado toast and wear plaid in the same year, you’ve got a pretty good marketing campaign,” added Jill Gregory, NASCAR executive vice president and chief marketing officer, in introducing the marketing award.

Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Sunoco Rookie of the Year Daniel Hemric described his season-long battle against Ryan Preece as “a grind—and it wasn’t flashy. Neither one of us could put four or five straight weeks together.”

JGR driver Martin Truex Jr., who finished second to Busch in the season finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway, claimed the American Ethanol Green Flag Restart Award.

“To be able to make passes and moves on restarts is critical, and fortunately, we were able to make some good ones this year,” Truex said.

Here’s a rundown of who took home awards:
Mechanix Wear Most Valuable Pit Crew: No. 18 crew at Joe Gibbs Racing
Moog Problem Solver of the Year Crew Chief Award: Chris Gabehart, No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing
Champion Parts Buddy Shuman Award: Denis McGlynn, President/CEO of Dover Motorsports, Inc.
American Ethanol Green Flag Restart Award: Martin Truex Jr., No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing
NASCAR Marketing Achievement Award: Busch Beer
Busch Pole Award: Kevin Harvick, No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing
Sunoco Rookie of the Year: Daniel Hemric, No. 8 Richard Childress Racing
Sunoco Diamond Performance Award: Kyle Busch, No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing
Goodyear Gold Car Award: Kyle Busch, No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing
Champion Sponsor Award: Mars Global
Champion Crew Chief Award: Adam Stevens, No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — The firesuit Kyle Busch donned once again Wednesday hadn’t yet been updated to reflect he was a NASCAR Cup Series champion “2X.” That will come in time, but at least he’ll hold this title for longer than an hour or so.

On the eve of Thursday’s Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Awards (8 p.m. ET, NBCSN/NBC Sports App), Busch reflected on his brief Monday reign as a WWE champion holding the 24/7 belt. That unusual chain of events — winning then quickly vacating the title — kicked off what has been a week of celebration and touring the Music City.

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“We were just going there for the show, just to watch,” Busch said about his appearance alongside Michael Waltrip at the taping of WWE Monday Night Raw. “They heard we were coming and then set us up and said, ‘Hey, you want to be a part of the show?’ And I was like, ‘Well, all right, sure. What’ve you got in mind?’ Then they brought this up and I’m like, ‘Oh hell. This is going to be fun.’ ”

Busch said it wasn’t his first appearance on a professional wrestling show, recalling a cameo with then-teammate Joey Logano several years ago. Busch said he’d fumbled through the many lines of script writers had given him. This year’s performance required no such verbal interaction.

“This time, they were like, ‘don’t talk, just do,'” Busch said. “So it worked out.”

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (Dec. 4, 2019) — Busch Beer, the “Official Beer of NASCAR®,” will be awarded the 2019 Marketing Achievement Award today at the NASCAR Industry Awards Reception during NASCAR Champion’s Week in Nashville.

Since returning as an Official Partner in 2018, the global brand has leveraged its Busch Pole Award platform, No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing partnership and track relationships to create distinctive content throughout the season to drive fan and media engagement around the Busch Beer brand.

“We take great pride in creating new and surprising ways to engage NASCAR fans throughout the year, so being honored with this award is a special achievement for our team,” said Nick Kelly, vice president partnerships, beer category and community, Anheuser-Busch. “Our partnership with NASCAR and the industry at-large has allowed us to do what we do best, deliver creative marketing that resonates with fans and drives consumption of crisp, refreshing Busch Beer.”

To celebrate 40 years of Busch Beer at the DAYTONA 500, Busch Beer developed the #Car2Can promotion for a chance to win one of 40 limited-edition Busch Beer cans created from Kevin Harvick’s No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford. Fans watching the iconic DAYTONA 500 on FOX were given the chance to “watch and win” via an on-screen social media trivia contest using the #Car2Can promotion hashtags. The social campaign generated more than 44 thousand mentions and 67 million impressions around the DAYTONA 500.

“Busch Beer continues to successfully drive consumer engagement by creatively integrating its assets from across all levels of its NASCAR sponsorship,” said Jill Gregory, executive vice president and chief marketing and content officer, NASCAR. “Hats off to our partners for galvanizing our brand-loyal fans across the season, and cheers to all they have in store for 2020.”

Fortunately for the fans, Kevin Harvick not winning the 2018 Championship meant Busch Beer would design a “millennial-inspired” paint scheme for the Monster Energy NASCAR All-Star Race. Busch Beer crowdsourced millennial phrases on Twitter to create the one-of-kind paint scheme. Fans voted for words playing on millennial culture like “yeet,” “turnt left” and “#squadgoals” to adorn the pink race car. To unveil the car’s design, Busch created digital shorts starring Harvick as he learned the meaning of the phrases featured. The full campaign garnered a total of nearly 100 million digital and social impressions.

At Talladega Superspeedway, the beer company brought back its successful Busch Flannel Ford Mustang, donning the No. 4 car with an outdoor-inspired flannel look. Harvick and the No. 4 team embraced the campaign with Harvick’s firesuit, crew members’ shirts, fan display and paint scheme all adorned in flannel. The Busch Guy, also fashioned in flannel, was present over the course of the weekend and fans were able to shop a wide variety of flannel merchandise.

As the NASCAR Playoffs heated up, Busch Beer created a slapstick campaign around Kyle Busch getting “free” advertising through its Stewart-Haas Racing sponsorship. The company went all-in on Harvick, replacing the brand “Busch” within its traditional logo with “Harvick.” Busch Beer capitalized with a strong social media campaign along with broadcast integration, fan merchandise featuring “Harvick” instead of “Busch” as well as special edition “Harvick” beers cans that were sold in concession stands.

In addition to its sponsored Busch Pole Awards, which saw 14 different pole winners this season, Busch Beer incorporated tune-in messaging throughout all its programs. The beer company also included its “Official Beer of NASCAR” designation on all its national point of sale.

This is the first time Anheuser-Busch has been awarded the NASCAR Marketing Achievement Award. Previous winners include: Comcast; Coca-Cola; Fox Sports and NBC Sports; Mars, Incorporated; Mobil 1; and Toyota.

NASCAR’s Champion’s Week in Nashville will conclude with the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series™ Awards Thursday, Dec. 5 at 8 p.m. ET on NBCSN. For more information, please visit championsweek.nascar.com.

Ross Chastain, the breakout star of the NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series season, has claimed one final honor: 2019 NASCAR Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series Most Popular Driver. 

Chastain didn’t even plan to even be a full-time Gander Trucks driver in 2019, but he quickly became the busiest driver in NASCAR after his 2018 plans fell through, driving as many races as he could in all three NASCAR national series.

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The fans took notice as Chastain won the award for the first time, with the news coming on his 27th birthday.

In June, Niece Motorsports – which supplies the No. 45 Chevrolet for Chastain – announced Chastain would change his points declaration from the Xfinity Series to Gander Trucks, allowing the driver to compete for the series championship … and the Most Popular Driver in this series. 

While Chastain fell short of lifting the big trophy, he provided a summer stretch for the ages that saw him grow into one of NASCAR’s most successful drivers on any level, and introduced a new celebration in the process – smashing a watermelon to smithereens.

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Chastain won three Gander Trucks races this season (plus one for good measure in the Xfinity Series) while logging 10 top-five finishes and 19 top 10s in 23 starts. He advanced to the Championship 4, finishing second on the season to champion Matt Crafton.

The fans have spoken. Justin Allgaier has been named the NASCAR Xfinity Series Most Popular Driver for the first time.

Allgaier, 33, takes the mantle from former teammate Elliott Sadler, who had won the fan-voted honor for three consecutive years. Sadler retired from full-time racing following the conclusion of the 2018 season, paving the way for Allgaier’s ascension in the voting this year.

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The driver of the No. 7 JR Motorsports Chevrolet finished fourth in the final Xfinity Series standings after making it to the Championship 4 for the third time in four years. His victory in the penultimate race of the year at ISM Raceway in Phoenix clinched a spot in Miami, where he finished 14th.

Allgaier is known for his affable attitude and fan-friendly demeanor. He often is surrounded by wife Ashley and daughter Harper on pit road before strapping in.
The veteran finished the year with that one win in Phoenix, 16 top-five finishes and 24 top 10s in 33 races. He’s up to 11 wins all time in the Xfinity Series.

The award for Allgaier continues an eight-year run for JR Motorsports drivers. Other former JRM drivers to earn the honor during that time include Sadler (2016-18) Chase Elliott (2014-15), Regan Smith (2013) and Danica Patrick (2012).

Tuesday, Dec. 3, 2019 marked a significant day on the NASCAR calendar, one that demonstrated the true power and scope of the sport.

Amidst the excitement of the start of the holiday season, and the kickoff to our first-ever NASCAR Champion’s Week in Nashville, members of the NASCAR community across the country paused for a moment and celebrated the national Giving Tuesday observance by participating in The NASCAR Foundation’s third-annual Speedy Bear Brigade.

Volunteers from various areas came together to deliver The NASCAR Foundation’s Speedy Bears to local children’s hospitals and clinics in racing communities.

The initiative has grown from 14 participating locations in its first year to more than 30 locations coast-to-coast in 2019, surpassing a total of 2,500 Speedy Bears delivered to children spending the holiday season in the hospital.

This year, the effort even expanded as far as Alaska and into Canada. And it will take the national stage when 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Champion Kyle Busch makes a stop at a children’s hospital as part of Champion’s Week in Nashville.

Each Speedy Bear delivery takes on a life of its own — generating a multitude of stories demonstrating the impact this effort has not only on the children who receive the bears, but also on the volunteers who participate.

NASCAR driver Jennifer Jo Cobb joined Kansas Speedway to kick off the campaign by visiting the University of Kansas Health System.

In the Charlotte area, NASCAR drivers Austin Cindric, John Hunter Nemechek, Ryan Vargas, Chase Cabre, Gracie Trotter and  Nick Sanchez joined volunteers from the NASCAR offices in Charlotte and Concord, as well as Motor Racing Network and Racing Electronics to deliver bears to four hospital locations.

ISM Raceway enlisted the help of local up-and-coming drivers Sara Houston and brothers Jagger and Jace Jones to bring Speedy Bears to children at Banner Children’s Hospital in Glendale, Arizona.

Other participating locations include: Auto Club Speedway, Darlington Raceway, Martinsville Speedway, Michigan International Speedway, Richmond Raceway, Talladega Superspeedway, Watkins Glen International, Dover International Speedway, Pocono Raceway, NASCAR Headquarters in Daytona, NASCAR New York Office, Iowa Speedway, Road Atlanta, Sebring International Raceway, ARCA Headquarters, Alaska Raceway, Berlin Raceway, Edmonton International Raceway, Flatrock Speedway, New Smyrna Speedway, Seekonk Speedway, Thunderbird Speedway and Toledo Speedway.

Speedy Bear deliveries will continue to take place through the holiday season and into January. Help join The NASCAR Foundation’s efforts: https://foundation.nascar.com/public/nascar/?form_id=699

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Stewart-Haas Racing announced its crew chief lineup Wednesday for the 2020 NASCAR Cup Series, shaking up its pairings for all but one of its four teams.

SHR indicated that the Nos. 10 and 14 teams would swap crew chiefs, moving Mike Bugarewicz to work with Aric Almirora and the No. 10 Ford. Johnny Klausmeier will shift over to pair with Clint Bowyer and the Stewart-Haas No. 14.

Rookie Cole Custer will bring Mike Shiplett, his crew chief from the NASCAR Xfinity Series, up to the No. 41 Ford for his first full season in the Cup Series. The only SHR pairing that remains intact is Kevin Harvick and crew chief Rodney Childers, who have teamed up with the No. 4 entry since 2014.

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“It’s all in an effort to get better,” Bowyer said Wednesday during availabilities at the Music City Center, site of Thursday’s Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Awards. “It’s just not normal for me, even as long as I’ve been doing this, to think it’s not just those four tires, steering wheel and a throttle pedal. To find success, the success is in the people. It’s still hard to find that chemistry, and as long as I’ve been doing it, it’s all about chemistry and finding the right people and the right match to find the success on a consistent basis, and obviously all that’s in an effort to make that better. “

Three of Stewart-Haas Racing’s teams qualified for the NASCAR Playoffs last season, with Harvick driving all the way to his third straight Championship 4 appearance. Almirola made an exit in the Round of 16 and Bowyer was ousted from contention in the Round of 12. Daniel Suarez, Custer’s predecessor in the No. 41, did not qualify for postseason eligibility.

All four SHR entries made the playoffs and won races in 2018. This season, Harvick was the only Stewart-Haas driver to scratch the win column.

PHOTOS: See every 2019 race winner

“Everybody in management talked a lot about the changes, and talked about how do we make everybody in the organization better, and quite honestly to be transparent, how to make everybody kind of step up to the level of the 4 team inside our four walls,” Almirola said. “They felt like this would be a good move to shake things up between the 14 and the 10 team and create a new dynamic and see if that sparks some better performance.”

Said Harvick: “I think the expectations are to be competitive with all four cars like we were last year. Obviously, this year I don’t think everybody met those expectations and I think that that obviously sends a message. … That’s definitely an indication that we have to make those position changes matter and get things back to where we were the year before.”

RELATED: Final series standings 

SHR brass chose to leave the long-running grouping of Harvick with Childers untouched. That tandem has produced 26 victories, the 2014 championship and five Championship 4 appearances in their six seasons together, a level of performance that SHR hopes will translate to all four cars in 2020.

“You look at teams like Kevin and Rodney and the success they’ve had.” Bowyer said. “If you’re in meetings and things like that, it’s just, they click, you know what I mean. All the successful pairings are that way and obviously, this is an effort to find a little more of that fit factor. I’m looking forward to it. I think it’s going to be a good thing for all of us. It was the right move.”

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — An all-encompassing lineup representing all facets of the NASCAR industry arrives in Nashville, Tennessee, this week as the “Music City” hosts its first Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Awards and end-of-season activities. The sport’s top drivers, including recently crowned 2019 champion Kyle Busch, will be honored Thursday night in a fittingly “Grand Ole” style to wrap up a competitive racing season and celebrate a year of achievement for drivers, teams and the entire sport.

Grammy Award nominee and country music star Cassadee Pope will co-host the 2019 awards show alongside NASCAR on NBC’s Rutledge Wood on an evening that will feature an impressive list of special guest performers, such as country superstars Cole Swindell and Chris Janson. A full lineup of celebrities and star performers will be performing or presenting awards from Heisman Trophy winner and former NFL running back Eddie George, TV personality Kristin Cavallari and her husband, former NFL quarterback Jay Cutler, to music superstar and three-time Grammy winner Darius Rucker, who is currently touring with his popular band, Hootie & The Blowfish.

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The three-day NASCAR celebration shifts into high gear Tuesday night with a special performance crowned “NASCAR Night at the Opry” — at the famed Ryman Auditorium — where the world-renowned Grand Ole Opry will showcase a NASCAR tribute. Rascal Flatts, Henry Cho and Ashley McBride are among those scheduled to perform.

The “Burnouts on Broadway” will take place Wednesday — always one of the most popular events of the annual NASCAR Champion’s Week. At 7 p.m. ET, all 16 of the playoff drivers will hit the streets in their race cars — the sounds and action sure to be a thrilling must-see.

And throughout the three-day Champion’s Week celebration, the playoff drivers and cars will be making special appearances at various sites around the city with plenty of autograph and photo opportunities. The Fan Fest will take place at Riverfront Park from 1-9 p.m. ET on Tuesday and Wednesday and from noon-4 p.m. ET on Thursday.

The celebration culminates with Thursday’s Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Awards (8 p.m. ET on NBCSN and MRN). The popular formal red carpet walk and photo opportunity will take place at the Music City Center to start the evening at 5:45 p.m. ET.

Not only will Busch receive his second Cup Series championship trophy this week, but the winner of the National Motorsports Press Association’s Most Popular Driver Award will also be announced at the banquet. Fans still have time to vote for their favorite Cup Series driver at www.nascar.com/mostpopulardriver or by using the NASCAR Mobile app. Votes on Facebook or Twitter count as double. Voting closes noon ET Wednesday.

Chase Elliott, driver of the No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet, won the 2018 Most Popular Driver Award. His father, NASCAR Hall of Famer Bill Elliott, holds the record for wins at 16. Chase’s former Hendrick teammate, Dale Earnhardt Jr., took the honor for 15 years before retiring from full-time competition in 2017.

Adding to a long list of NASCAR’s A-list attendees for the formal program, Danielle Bradbery — winner of Season 4 of the “The Voice” and an Academy of Country Music New Female Artist of the Year nominee — will be a presenter. Joining her will be Roman Josi and Matt Duchene of the NHL’s Nashville Predators, country artists Frankie Ballard, Lee Brice and Clare Bowen, along with four-time WWE World Heavyweight Champion and 2019 “King of the Ring” Sheamus.