DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Kyle Larson says his previous interactions with new teammate Kurt Busch had been limited to isolated chit-chat, maybe an off-hand conversation when they qualified on the same row and shared a parade vehicle during pre-race ceremonies.

But based on conversations with others, Larson says he’s prepped for some solid chemistry building.

“Everybody I’ve talked to that’s been a teammate with him in the past has always said that as crazy as he is, he’s a great teammate,” Larson says, referring to Busch’s sometimes brash persona. “He’s been good to work with so far and he’s got a ton of knowledge and experience. I’ve enjoyed it and looking forward to getting to other race tracks outside of Daytona so we can learn more off of each other.”

RELATED: Full Daytona 500 coverage

Larson, 26, is entering his sixth full season driving Chip Ganassi’s No. 42 Chevrolet. It will be his first campaign paired with Busch, the 2004 premier series champion who replaces Jamie McMurray in the No. 1 Chevrolet.

On the surface, Larson’s laid-back personality might seem to be on an opposite spectrum with the bolder Busch, who has mellowed over time after bursting onto the NASCAR scene with a gung-ho approach. But Larson says he’s less concerned about how they’ll mesh, focusing instead on soaking in the wealth of knowledge that comes with Busch’s experience and success.

“I think personality-wise, I think I’ll stay the same. I think work-ethic-wise, I think he can push you to be a little bit better, so I’m excited just in that aspect of thing,” Larson said. “… We’re around a lot of different people all the time and I feel like I do a good job of staying grounded and being who I am. I don’t think I’m going to have any episodes like he’s had in the past now that he’s my teammate, but like I said, it’s not often you get to work with a past champion as closely as I’m going to get to this year. I’m very excited about that opportunity.”

MORE: What’s new in NASCAR this year?

Editor’s note: This week in advance of the Daytona 500, NASCAR.com will look back at some memorable race victories and detail the odds the winning driver had, and which driver in the 2019 field most correlates.

Previously: Kurt Busch | Trevor Bayne

Twenty years after Dale Earnhardt’s memorable 1998 Daytona victory — which we ranked first in our all-time race rankings — Austin Dillon lurked in the No. 3 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet on a late restart.

With one career Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series win to his credit, Dillon entered the 60th running of the Daytona 500 last year with 40-1 odds to win the “Great American Race.”

RELATED: Daytona 500 odds

He trailed leader Aric Almirola when the white flag dropped, but got an incredible run on the outside on the final lap. When Almirola moved to block, Dillon didn’t lift, sending Almirola into the wall and pushing his No. 3 into the lead — and soon thereafter, Victory Lane.

Following the prerequisite victory slide and celebration in the Daytona infield, of course.

The most comparable driver in this year’s field is …

William Byron, No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet

Chad Knaus smiles with William Byron
Sean Gardner | Getty Images

Yes, entering Daytona Speedweeks, Hendrick Motorsports driver William Byron was pegged at the same 40-1 odds as Dillon was last year. His makeup is the same, too.

Hendrick Motorsports has an unrivaled plate program, especially in qualifying — that much is evidenced by Byron winning the organization’s fifth consecutive Daytona 500 pole.

Hendrick drivers will start 1-2-3-4 in this year’s Daytona 500 (2:30 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), so the Monster Energy Series sophomore will have plenty of help around him — at least in the early going.

NEW SMYRNA, Fla. — Two of short-track racing’s top talents took the checkered flag on Monday night at New Smyrna Speedway.

Five-time NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour champion Doug Coby and established Super Late Model star Bubba Pollard picked up victories in their respective divisions on the fourth night of racing as part of the 53rd annual World Series of Asphalt Stock Car Racing at New Smyrna Speedway.

Coby, who hadn’t seen New Smyrna except once, back in 2014, dominated the 50-lap Tour Type Modified feature. He qualified second, and with an invert of zero, Coby lined up to the outside of the front row for the drop of the green flag. The Milford, Connecticut, driver took the advantage from polesitter Patrick Emerling in the first turn of the race and never looked back.

The veteran proved to be a quick study of the Florida half-mile. He is hoping to use the five nights of Modified racing to get a step up on some of his Whelen Modified Tour competitors in hopes to return to championship form.

“We have tried a lot that we wouldn’t have been able to try if we hadn’t come here. That’s flat-out why we came,” Coby said. “The wins are nice, but really, this is still a test session. The car is in one piece, we can go celebrate, but, we have to come back tomorrow.”

Emerling finished second on the track, holding off a hard-charging defending World Series champion Matt Hirschman, who opened his week on the podium in his attempt to repeat. However, Emerling didn’t make it through post-race technical inspection, moving Hirschman to second.

RELATED: Coby Among Two Former Whelen Modified Tour Champions Back at New Smyrna

In the 35-lap Super Late Model battle, Bubba Pollard started from the top spot after winning the pole award, but it wasn’t long before he was trailing. The Georgia native found himself following behind Dan Fredrickson in the opening laps — in fact — all the way until the 29th circuit.

When Fredrickson slid out of the groove in turn three, Pollard took advantage and never looked back from that moment. In some ways, it was an emotional Victory Lane for the entire team, since the car Pollard drove to victory wasn’t his own.

Pollard is driving the No. 11 for David Rogers — a New Smyrna local driver who was unable to compete this week due to a medical procedure.

“I can’t believe it, I can’t believe I’m even driving it,” Pollard said. “It’s a legendary car. David Rogers and his group, they are great people. This is for him and all of the guys that work hard.”

Travis Eddy won the 35-lap Florida Modified feature while Augie Grill picked up the Pro Late Model win. Derek Kraus won the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East season-opener after rain pushed the event to Monday.

Pollard Nightfournsswin

Results: World Series of Asphalt Stock Car Racing Night 4:

Tour Type Modifieds: 1. Doug Coby; 2. Matt Hirschman; 3. Jimmy Blewett; 4. Anthony Nocella; 5. Chuck Hossfeld; 6. Timmy Solomito; 7. Mike Willis Jr.; 8. Jeremy Gerstner; 9. Jeff Goodale; 10. Calvin Carroll; 11. Amy Catalano; 12. Dillon Steuer; 13. Ryan Preece; 14. Jeff Gallup; 15. Nikki Carroll; 16. Jimmy Zacharias; 17. Andy Jankowiak; 18. Tommy Catalano; 19. Tyler Rypkema; 20. Dean Rypkema; 21. Al Amarino; 22. Chris Risdale; 23. Tom Tonn

Super Late Models: 1. Bubba Pollard; 2. Brad May; 3. Gabe Sommers; 4. Colin Garrett; 5. Sam Mayer; 6. Derek Kraus; 7. Logan Seavey; 8. Dan Fredrickson; 9. Anthony Sergi; 10. Harold Crooms; 11. Derek Griffith; 12. Travis Braden; 13. Spencer Davis; 14. Carson Kvapil; 15. Nolan Pope; 16. Alex Labbe; 17. Brent Strelka; 18. Clay Greenfield; 19. Jeff Holmgren Jr.; 20. Stephen Weaver Jr.; 21. Christian Rose; 22. Chuck Tuck; 23. Patrick Thomas; 24. Trey Bayne; 25. Gus Dean; 26. Ryan Moore; 27. Jett Noland; 28. Jared Irvan

Whether it’s behind the steering wheel or on foot, seven-time Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series champion Jimmie Johnson is always looking for a race to run — this time it’s the 2019 Boston Marathon.

After competing in the Daytona Half Marathon on Sunday morning prior to Daytona 500 Busch Pole Qualifying and his victory in the Advance Auto Parts Clash, Johnson announced he will compete in the 26.2-mile race on April 15.

The race takes place just two days after the Toyota Owners 400 at Richmond Raceway on April 13, which allows Johnson a full day of recovery following the Saturday night event.

An avid runner and fitness advocate, Johnson has become a significant influence on many others throughout the garage to pay more attention to their physical health. After competing in multiple half marathons, this new endeavor will be his first full marathon, one he’s had on his radar for quite some time after the 2013 bombing that prompted the “Boston Strong” movement.

“Watching the Boston Marathon the year of the bombing (in 2013), something clicked about me wanting to run that race, and once the bombing happened, I wanted to be part of ‘Boston Strong,’ ” Johnson told Dave Burns during the debut of the Splash and Go segment for NBCSports.com.

Johnson finished 14th place overall in the 13.1-mile race in Daytona and won his age group with a time of 1 hour and 33 minutes.

The trophy collection at Kyle Busch Motorsports is as varied as it is impressive. Winning nearly 200 NASCAR national series events, plus fielding a successful NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series team, tends to make a pack rat out of even the most clutter-averse people.

Winning has made Kyle Busch a gatherer — a hoarder even. But there’s organization to the whole caboodle. The shelves at the 77,000-square-foot team headquarters in Mooresville, N.C., are stacked with hardware, with most trophies grouped by track — providing visitors a virtual tour of the stock-car racing circuit with every venue represented. When you request a video shoot with the trophy case as a backdrop, Busch’s handlers can reply, “Which one?”

RELATED: Busch on NASCAR’s debate: ‘There’s no greatest of all time’

Down the hallway are the mini Miles the Monster keepsakes from Dover, the triangle-mounted eagles from Pocono, the cowboy hats from Texas. Bristol Motor Speedway, where Busch can claim 21 victories in all three series, has its own special case and then some, decorated with gleaming, silver loving cups and ceremonial brooms from his pair of tripleheader sweeps there. So many wins are chronicled here, the trophies spill over into the gift shop.

In the main case, some recent reorganizing is evident. Square in the middle of a curated selection of Monster Energy Series memorabilia is a sizable gap, signifying what seems to be the only missing piece from the 33-year-old driver’s portfolio.

It’s a reserved parking spot for Harley J.

Kyle Busch's trophy case
This space is reserved for the Daytona 500 Harley J Earl trophy.

“What’s missing?” Busch says in the splashy promo reel that dropped last weekend, announcing his arrival at Daytona Speedweeks and his firm goals for his first win — and first Harley J. Earl trophy — in the Daytona 500 (Sunday, 2:30 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN). Busch is an agonizing 0-for-unlucky-13 in the Great American Race, a goal that started with childhood dreams and that has been blocked by a variety of hurdles.

“Overall, when I made my first start in the Daytona 500 in ’05, I was like, ‘Man, how cool would it be for a rookie to come out here — like, a true rookie — to be able to win this thing?’, ” Busch says. “I dreamed of winning that race, thinking I could win that race since I’ve been in it. It’s just never happened.”

If it does happen Sunday, that last trophy — the most prestigious in NASCAR — would pull the whole room together.

Daytona remembrances

Busch estimates it was late in his elementary school years when he first saw Daytona International Speedway. His mother took him and brother Kurt for the Daytona USA experience, which provided a trip through the infield and a tour of the rest of the facilities.

“You went all the way down to the grandstands for the road course in Turn 1,” Busch says, “and then you looked all the way back to Turns 3 and 4 and it was like, ‘Holy (expletive), this place in humongous.’ ”

His more frequent return trips to the 2.5-mile speed center have merited less of the wide-eyed fascination associated with youth, but with no less focus. Busch’s passion for the Daytona high banks grew as he watched Hendrick Motorsports — a team he would later drive for — go 1-2-3 in the 500 in 1997. The following year, he shared in the collective joy of watching Dale Earnhardt’s long-anticipated breakthrough in Daytona’s main event after 19 years of fruitless attempts.

Busch’s history with the 500 has its own share of close calls and heartbreak. In 2008, he led the most laps and was locked in a draft with then-teammate Tony Stewart when Ryan Newman whizzed by on the final lap, buoyed by a push from Kurt Busch, Newman’s Team Penske teammate.

Busch returned to lead the most laps the following year, but wound up 41st after a late-race stack-up. He wouldn’t come that close again for another seven years, but would encounter the largest trauma of his racing career in between, fatefully at Daytona.

Busch crashed during an Xfinity Series race on Feb. 21, 2015, his Toyota nosing into a frontstretch barrier and causing multiple, severe leg injuries. He missed the first 11 races of the season, the first of which was the next day’s Daytona 500, held just blocks away from the hospital where he recovered from surgery to repair a compound fracture. Truck Series veteran Matt Crafton drove Busch’s No. 18 to 18th place in the only Monster Energy Series start of his career.

Kyle Busch crashes in the Xfinity Series race at Daytona in 2015.
Brian Lawdermilk | Getty Images

Nine months later, Busch would become a premier series champion for the first time, farther south in Florida at Homestead-Miami Speedway. But the anguish of being outside the car for NASCAR’s most esteemed race still lingered.

“(Wife) Samantha and I, I cried at the start of the race because I wasn’t in it,” Busch says. “It was not a great experience or one that you’d wish on anybody. In the end, the way ’15 ended up, I’m kind of glad I went through it, in all retrospect. I think that life happens in funny ways for funny reasons. I don’t know.”

He returned to Daytona the following year as a champion, but again left with regrets, helplessly watching teammate Denny Hamlin inch by Martin Truex Jr. in front of him as he claimed third. Hamlin’s clinching maneuver came nearly a full lap from the checkers as he exited a Joe Gibbs Racing train formation to break Kevin Harvick’s momentum on the high side.

“And I thought,” Busch says, snapping his fingers to mimic the split-second nature of his decision process, “just the corner before he went by me, I needed to get out of line and do that move and didn’t. It ended up being the move that won the race. I kick myself every time that I didn’t do that.”

An elusive prize

Prominent drivers with NASCAR Hall of Fame jackets never wore the Daytona 500 crown — Terry Labonte, Mark Martin and Rusty Wallace among them. Still others waited the bulk of their careers to finally taste a 500 victory.

Busch isn’t quite to Dale Earnhardt’s “20 years of trying, 20 years of frustration” refrain just yet, but his pathway has been similarly tortuous. And when asked to pinpoint the reason, Busch says no single explanation jumps out.

“I’d say it’s multiple things, but in all reality, I’d say it’s bad luck,” Busch says. “Two years in a row, these last two years we’ve had flat tires that have just taken us out of the running. Nothing that we’ve done, I don’t think, so that’s been a bit demoralizing overall. But at some of the other events, we’ve run OK and been in contention.”

Hamlin, his teammate, had his own waiting time outside of Daytona’s Victory Lane, but finally claimed his lone 500 win with a numerologist’s dream sequence in 2016. He drove car No. 11 from the 11th starting position in his 11th Daytona 500 try.

Like Busch, Hamlin cites the factors of luck against fate. But he also suggests that Busch’s repeat performances in contention at the historic track should eventually equal kismet.

Denny Hamlin, Matt Kenseth and Martin Truex Jr. battle for victory in the 2016 Daytona 500.
Sean Gardner | Getty Images

“You’d like to think that it’s a matter of time,” Hamlin says. “Look how long it took Dale Earnhardt to do it, and he dominated. He was way better than either one of us at that race track — by a mile. It’s just a hard race to win because of so many things that can go wrong. You have to have everything happen perfectly, you have to miss the wrecks, you need a little bit of luck in there, but you just try to put yourself in those ideal situation. And sometimes Kyle was just not in the right, ideal situation, but a lot of the times, it was just bad luck.

“Looking back, I can think of a couple years, maybe, where he got in a crash that wasn’t his doing or maybe had a tire go in one of the years. But certainly, I think at his age, it’s probably a matter of time. He’s got a long time ahead of him. I think that he’s won those Shootouts before and all those races. He’s kind of had the same resume that I had before I’d won the Daytona 500. So certainly, he’s got everything in his favor to go out there and get it done, but sometimes he just hasn’t had that little bit of luck factor that you need to finish the deal off.”

That finicky nature of competing at the World Center of Racing has led to some love-hate sentiment for Busch, who enters Sunday’s 500 as a contender in a field flush with would-be winners. He’s prevailed in almost everything else here, winning qualifying races and the preliminary Clash, scoring a victory in the July 400-miler and claiming Daytona triumphs in the other two national series.

If a Daytona 500 win truly is a matter of time, Busch should have a special reverence for the event’s history and its ability to wash away years of heartache.

He’ll also have no guesswork when figuring out the proper place for the trophy.

“Really, I’ve loved the place,” Busch says. “For what that race track means in the history of our sport and what Daytona Beach means for the history of our sport, back from 1949, it’s what our sport was built on.”

RELATED: Kyle Busch through the yearsAll of Busch’s Monster Energy Series victories

Kyle Busch sits at an impressive 194 NASCAR national-series victories entering the 2019 season. That’s within driving distance of another historic all-time wins milestone, the amazing 200 set nearly 35 years ago by Richard Petty.

Though close in proximity to Petty’s mark — which was established entirely in NASCAR’s top series — Busch’s numbers are divided among three different stock-car circuits. And that’s a fact that has also divided many history-minded NASCAR observers trying to draw comparisons between the two accomplishments.

For his part, Busch isn’t trying to make his own correlations. He’s simply enjoying the discussion.

“That was just a number I threw out there, even though it was the same number. It was just out of thin air,” Busch said, referencing a casual first mention of the 200-win goal after notching the 50th of his career back in 2009. “But what’s crazy is I’m getting close to it. I didn’t think I’d get close to it, especially this early. I mean, I might have a chance to do it this year.

RELATED: Kyle Busch through the yearsAll of Busch’s Monster Energy Series victories

“I don’t try to equalize or compare apples to apples on myself and Richard. That’s not what this debate is about. I think it’s cool that there’s a debate. I think it’s cool that there’s a dinner-table-type talk around this.”

That debate has been spirited, with vocal arguments from each side. Advocates for Petty contend that 200 wins in NASCAR’s top division would trump Busch’s tally, which has roughly three-quarters of its win total from the Xfinity and Gander Outdoors Truck Series ranks. Busch backers retort that his wins came against arguably stiffer competition, with Petty racking up dozens of trophies against thin fields in 100-mile races before NASCAR’s modern era.

Dissecting stats across different eras leads to multiple conclusions and feeds an even larger discussion about who is the all-time No. 1 driver in NASCAR history. Busch doesn’t delve into the latter debate, which he says is impossible to solve.

“People want to figure out who’s the greatest of all time, and in my opinion — in any sport — there’s no greatest of all time,” Busch says. “I think you can have a top five, but it’s going to be really, really hard to decipher who’s the No. 1 of the top five in any sport. You look at Michael Jordan, LeBron James, Steph Curry — guys like that. Look, Michael’s my favorite just because he’s my favorite of the three, but I look at LeBron and what he’s been able to do and the different teams he’s been able to do it with and how he’s led them to championship games eight years in a row. You can’t beat that, you know what I mean? But he doesn’t have more championships than Michael Jordan, and Michael Jordan doesn’t have the most.

“That’s what I’m getting at. Like Tom Brady and (Peyton) Manning, Drew Brees, (Joe) Montana — that’s how I interpret all those things. That’s the comparison I’m trying to build. Do I want to be known as the greatest of all time? No. Do I want to be known as one of the top five? Sure.”

Those unending debates all fuel the weighing of Busch’s legacy in the sport, a legacy he’s still actively building as a 33-year-old driver in his prime. As a one-time champion with 51 (and counting) premier-series wins, his NASCAR Hall of Fame credentials are secure. But he’s still aiming to add a Daytona 500 victory to that portfolio, a goal that he’s redoubled this season.

Adding to that list of accomplishments is what still drives him, and it’s what prompts the question of when he might consider exiting the cockpit and enjoying life after competition. He cites the example of Jeff Gordon, who quit full-time driving on his own terms in 2015, going out by battling Busch for that season’s title.

“What’s left on the list? It’s like, well, I’ve about checked everything off. It’s just now about adding to it,” Busch said of his legacy. “A one-time champion is great, but two is better. A one-time Daytona 500 winner would be awesome. That would check off the rest of the boxes. It would complete the deal. But then winning more of them. People ask, what’s going to keep you going? Well, it’s winning more of them. I’ll be done when I feel like I’m not able to perform and be at the top of my game anymore.”

MOORESVILE, N.C. – Front Row Motorsports today announced an expanded partnership with CITGO® Petroleum Corporation and its CITGARD® brand that began last season with David Ragan and the No. 38 team.

The CITGARD brand is the primary sponsor on the No. 38 Ford Mustang throughout this season. Ragan will carry the CITGARD colors at the events at Las Vegas Motor Speedway in March, Michigan International Speedway in June and the Charlotte Motor Speedway Road Course in September. The brand will also be featured as an associate sponsor all season.

CITGARD began its partnership last season with FRM at Darlington Raceway, paying tribute to Dale Jarrett during the annual “Throwback Weekend” with a red and white scheme. The popular feedback from race fans and success of the program led to the increased commitment with FRM and Ragan this season.

“Everyone at the Front Row Motorsports organization and David Ragan worked hard to ensure that we had a wonderful experience and that our program was a success for us last year,” said Brian Paulson, CITGO General Manager Lubricants. “In return, our customers and fans were thrilled and now we’re proud to increase our partnership with David and the team this season.”

CITGARD heavy duty engine oils are next generation oils formulated with proprietary additive technology that protects engines from running at higher temperatures and fuel injection pressures, while meeting tighter wear limits and lower emission requirements. The Front Row Motorsports transporters rely on CITGARD throughout the season.

“It’s great to have CITGARD return to our program this season,” said Ragan. “As a team that travels thousands of miles from race to race, you need reliable, heavy-duty engine lubricants to ensure we get to the track and back home. I’m glad that we have the best. I want to thank everyone at CITGO for stepping up and helping us improve our race program.”

Fritz Sports & Event Enterprises will again oversee the partnership.

“I want to thank everyone at Front Row Motorsports and David Ragan for their support of CITGARD,” said CEO Doug Fritz. “This is a great partnership and we’re proud to have an increased presence of CITGARD on the track this season.”

Editor’s note: This week in advance of the Daytona 500, NASCAR.com will look back at some memorable race victories and detail the odds the winning driver had, and which driver in the 2019 field most correlates.

Previously: Kurt Busch

Trevor Bayne had one previous career Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series start entering the 2011 season. He had just turned 20 years old the day before the 2011 Daytona 500 went green.

Historic Wood Brothers Racing was stuck in a winless streak that stretched back to the 2001 season. The team had won four previous Daytona 500s, including the iconic 1976 version with driver David Pearson — and the long-standing No. 21 car had been retrofitted in 2011 to resemble Pearson’s ride.

RELATED: Full Daytona 500 odds

Something special happened on Feb. 20, 2011, though.

With Tony Stewart on his outside, and veterans Mark Martin and Kurt Busch looming, Bayne — the race leader — hammered the final restart in NASCAR Overtime and held off the entire field on the green-white-checkered finish for what many consider to be the biggest upset in Daytona 500 history.

Bayne, so green in his own right that he got lost on the drive to Victory Lane, delivered an iconic moment that makes the “Great American Race” so special. And at 80-1 odds, he joined a list of athletes — in NASCAR and beyond — to beat incredibly long odds to triumph at the sport’s highest level.

The most comparable driver in this year’s field is …

Ty Dillon, No. 13 Germain Racing Chevrolet

Ty Dillon smiles in the garage
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

There isn’t an 80-1 long shot in the field this year, but there is a 100-1 bet in Ty Dillon — who also is looking for his first career Monster Energy Series win, much like Bayne in 2011.

Dillon’s best finish in three Daytona 500 starts is 28th, and he has one career top-10 finish in 90 Monster Energy Series starts.

He fits the model of a true long shot at the odds book, but he also fits the Bayne profile of someone not to overlook. Germain Racing uses ECR Engines and moved its headquarters to Welcome, North Carolina, to more closely align with Richard Childress Racing. RCR has an excellent superspeedway program, highlighted by Austin Dillon’s Daytona 500 win last year, and Ty Dillon was raised in the Richard Childress Racing style.

NASCAR Heat-stradamus?

As it turns out, the NASCAR Heat 3 box art — and bear in mind, this is a game released last September — predicted the top four qualifiers of this year’s Daytona 500.

And, yes, even in the exact order, if you judge by running position in the artwork: William Byron, Alex Bowman, Jimmie Johnson, and Chase Elliott.

Maybe it’s because the NASCAR Heat logos appear on the cars this week. Yeah, that’s it.

*adjusting tinfoil hat*

Byron’s story on Nat Geo Channel

William Byron chronicled his journey to NASCAR’s premier level, from computer to Cup, on Nat Geo Channel’s “Explorer” program Monday.

PHOTOS: William Byron on Nat Geo’s ‘Explorer’

Kligerman and Byron practice for Duel on iRacing

Parker Kligerman and William Byron, who will compete in Thursday’s Gander RV Duel qualifying races, prepared for their races by drafting on iRacing’s virtual Daytona International Speedway.

Kligerman, unlike Byron, is not locked into the Great American Race, meaning any preparation could make the difference for racing his Gaunt Brothers Racing Toyota into Sunday’s Daytona 500.

Truck Series racers’ Daytona prep

Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series drivers weren’t the only drivers preparing for the Daytona race weekend. Gander Outdoors Truck Series competitors Harrison Burton, Todd Gilliland, and Christian Eckes invited fans on iRacing to race trucks in the Daytona draft.

Myatt Snider streamed some iRacing truck racing, too.

Hurst wins PEAK iRacing Series pre-season Dash

Ahead of Tuesday’s Daytona season opener, many eNASCAR PEAK Antifreeze iRacing Series drivers participated in a 50-lap exhibition test race.

Taylor Hurst, who went unclaimed in the January 30 draft, dominated the non-points event, leading 45 of 50 laps. Two multi-car crashes took out several race favorites early.

Peak iRacing Series season opener Tuesday

The eNASCAR PEAK Antifreeze iRacing Series officially begins its 2019 season Tuesday at 9 p.m. ET, streaming live on eNASCAR.com. Drivers will compete for more than $100,000 in prizes throughout the series’ 10th season.

RELATED: Power Rankings

Daytona’s season opener marks the first race where drivers represent their new teams.

eNASCAR Heat Pro League Showcase Races underway

The 100 eNASCAR Heat Pro League finalists have started competing in the Showcase Race series — the opportunity to prove their driving skills beyond raw numbers.

With high stakes, it’s easy for things to go wrong.

The draft, where real NASCAR teams select eSports participants to join their teams, takes place in March.

iRacing Paint Scheme of the Week

Corey LaJoie’s Daytona 500 car featuring a massive photo of his face? Fine, whatever.

Recreating it for iRacing, so LaJoie’s luscious hair and beard can haunt your monitor? Too far, Shawn Howell.

NASCAR Heat 3 Video of the Week

A fun Easter egg in NASCAR Heat 3: it appears bumping the pace car will make the car take off and run a full-speed lap.

 

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.

We mean that literally — the entire day.

RELATED: Daytona 500 odds

Host Jonathan Merryman will kick off coverage in the morning and NASCAR Digital will live stream interviews with all 42 drivers attempting to make the Daytona 500 field. Kim Coon joins Merryman as co-host as the event, and special guest NASCAR Next driver Hailie Deegan will be on air interviewing drivers as well.

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

The show doesn’t end until 4 p.m. ET — yes, that’s eight hours (with a lunch break thrown in). 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.