RELATED: Bowman earns Daytona 500 pole | Junior gives Bowman kudos

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – Rick Hendrick conceded with a smile that when he first began interacting with driver Alex Bowman two years ago he sometimes mistakenly referred to the young racer as Alex Baldwin.

Getting Bowman’s name right certainly isn’t an issue now as it goes down in the history books as pole winner for next weekend’s 60th annual Daytona 500.

While the two joked about it Sunday afternoon shortly after Bowman’s headline-earning run in the No. 88 Nationwide Chevrolet, the 24-year old driver acknowledged it has been a long and hard-knocks road to finding a job with the Hall of Fame owner Hendrick…and to a bona fide shot to win on NASCAR’s biggest stages.

“If you talked to me in 2015 and told me that in 2018 I was going to be driving the 88 car for Hendrick Motorsports, I would have called you nuts,’’ said Bowman, who replaced the retiring Dale Earnhardt Jr. in Hendrick’s car.

“You know, everything happens for a reason.  My career had a lot of ups and downs, and I’ve been able to lean on my past experiences a lot to make me better and to better prepare myself for this job.

“Honestly, I think I’m better because of the things that I had to go through.  I got to make a lot of mistakes without anybody watching. Just never give up.”

It is just one of the lessons in watching Bowman begin his ascension in NASCAR’s highest ranks. He comes to the opportunity humbly, for sure. 

After one full season (2013) competing in the NASCAR Xfinity Series, Bowman made his Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series debut as a 21-year old driving for BK Racing in 2014 and then Tommy Baldwin Racing in 2015. A 13th-place finish in the 2014 Daytona summer race was his best result in those seasons and the only top-20 finish. He led just three total laps in those first 71 Cup starts (one at Fontana, Calif. in 2015 and two at Kentucky later that season).

RELATED: Bowman ready to ‘own’ nickname

When Rick Hendrick hired Bowman to fill in for the injured Earnhardt in 2016, it was a chance of a lifetime. He drove 10 races while Earnhardt recovered from a concussion, earning three top-10 finishes – highlighted by a pole position and a career best sixth-place finish at his hometown Phoenix track. 

He didn’t make a single Cup start last season, instead spending time in the Hendrick team’s simulator offering feedback to help the team and being “ready” for any call of duty. Earnhardt announced in April he would be stepping away from full-time Cup competition. And then in July, the team formally announced that Bowman would steer the No. 88.

In the excitement of that announcement, Bowman appropriately enough scored his first-ever NASCAR national series victory in an Xfinity Series race three months later at Charlotte – one of two Xfinity starts he made on the year.

“He’s got a tremendous amount of talent and these guys learn so fast with simulation,’’ Hendrick said. “I’m blown away with what a quick study these young ones are and all the things they do’’

Former Daytona 500 winner Denny Hamlin, who will start alongside Bowman on the front row next Sunday, conceded that he really hadn’t spoken to the young driver much at all before congratulating him on the pole award as they posed together for photos.

MORE: Duel lineups

However, the veteran was quick to offer praise and optimism about Bowman’s future.

“He’s earned his position in that car,’’ Hamlin said. “He subbed phenomenally for Dale Jr., and I thought he really earned that right.  So he’s the guy ‑‑ he got here the old‑fashioned way; just like I did many, many years ago, just on hard work and grit.  I think that he’ll handle it. 

“He’s not a full‑blown rookie.  He is a young guy, but he’s been in the Cup Series quite a few years. I think he’ll be the surprising young guy of this year, being that he does have the experience.  He’s just now in a car that will be contending for race wins week in and week out.” 

Bowman will be one-third of a trio of young, up-and-coming talents teamed with seven-time Monster Energy Series champion Jimmie Johnson at Hendrick Motorsports this season and all four drivers (also Chase Elliott, rookie William Byron and Johnson) advanced to the final 12-driver round of front-row qualifying.

“In all of my years in this sport and my company, we have never worked this close together, and it’s something I’ve been wanting to see,’’ Hendrick said. “So the proof is going to be when we get down to the Playoffs.

“There’s some awful good teams in that garage area. There’s some awful good cars that are not going to be in the Playoffs. But I think we’re just going to get better and stronger.”

CONCORD, N.C. (Feb. 12, 2018) – Race fans will rock and roll with Cole before the Monster Energy NASCAR All-Star Race on May 19 at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Platinum-selling singer and songwriter Cole Swindell will light up the biggest all-star event in sports with the Monster Energy All-Star Race Concert Presented by Rayovac Batteries, Kwikset, George Foreman and National Hardware. The concert is FREE with the purchase of any Monster Energy All-Star Race ticket.

Swindell, a favorite among NASCAR luminaries including 2000 All-Star Race winner Dale Earnhardt Jr., has charted seven No. 1 hits, including “Chillin’ It,” “Hope You Get Lonely Tonight,” “Ain’t Worth the Whiskey,” “Let Me See Ya Girl,” “You Should Be Here,” “Middle of a Memory,” and “Flatliner.” Additionally, Swindell’s status as one of country music’s rising stars is also solidified by his success as a No. 1 hit songwriter for performers including Luke Bryan (“Roller Coaster”), Thomas Rhett (“Get Me Some of That”) and Florida Georgia Line (“This Is How We Roll”).

MORE: Buy tickets for Charlotte!

“I’m pumped to be playing NASCAR’s Monster Energy All-Star Race this year,” Swindell said. “I’ve been a fan of NASCAR for so long, I can’t believe I’ll actually be part of the day’s activities. It will be great to see all my driver friends and cheer them on in person.”

The Warner Bros. Nashville artist will deliver a show-stopping performance for fans at the entrance outside of Turn 1 near Gate 8 at Charlotte Motor Speedway, adjacent to the Fan Zone. He will also co-host driver introductions.

Swindell’s travels saw the Bronwood, Georgia, native perform at Earnhardt’s retirement party at Whisky River in uptown Charlotte last December. This May, he’ll rock the pre-race festivities at 2 p.m. on May 19 with a 70-minute concert before the Monster Energy Open and the Monster Energy All-Star Race, where NASCAR’s most heralded drivers – including Chase Elliott, Kyle Busch and Kevin Harvick – will clash for $1 million cash.

PHOTOS: All-time All-Star Race winners

RELATED: Full race results | Keselowski triumphs in The Clash

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — At least Jimmie Johnson is getting closer.

 

On Sunday at Daytona International Speedway, Johnson made it to the last lap of the Advance Auto Parts Clash. He just didn’t make it to the checkered flag.

 

After contact from Kyle Larson’s No. 42 Chevrolet turned Johnson’s No. 48 into the outside backstretch wall, the seven-time champion failed to finish the exhibition race — for the seventh straight year. Johnson was credited with completing 74 of 75 laps in a 12th-place finish, but a DNF (did not finish) is a DNF.

 

“I had some contact from behind and we got turned into the outside wall,” Johnson said. “I haven’t had a chance to look at it and see what exactly happened, but the nose on our Chevy is pretty pointy. I was pushed by a Chevy, so I don’t know if that had something to do with it or not. I just need to get a good look at the replay.”

 

Johnson was running fourth at the time of the crash, having just lost the third spot to Kurt Busch. With a strong car for the bulk of the race, the Hendrick Motorsports driver enjoyed driving the new Camaro ZL1 race car under new NASCAR rules that lowered the bodies of the cars as close as possible to the asphalt.

 

The wreck was another matter.

 

“Yeah, I guess we’re the first real crash at speed with that (configuration),” Johnson said. “I kind of forgot about it once we got going. I think the cars look cool, and they’re going faster, which is more fun from our standpoint. It makes handling a little more of a premium.”

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — In Sunday’s Advance Auto Parts Clash, Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series teams got their first taste of pit stops with five over-the-wall crew members instead of the six allowed last year.

 

The new rules led to a variety of approaches, with the most prevalent featuring the tire carrier bring two tires over the wall at the same time. FOX Sports broadcasters credited Kurt Busch’s team with the fastest four-tire stop under the new rules at 16.95 seconds, a far cry from the sub-11-second stops that had become commonplace in NASCAR’s top series.

RELATED: Watch a five-person pit stop at Stewart-Haas Racing

 

“A 16.9 is, obviously it’s quite a bit slower than what we’re used to,” said Paul Wolfe, crew chief for Clash winner Brad Keselowski. “And that’s just it — we’re not sure what to expect yet. And speedways are different, as well, from the mile and a half tracks.

 

“I mean, that’s pretty slow from what we’re used to, but you take one guy out of the equation, and some different (air) guns and things, and it all changes. I think, like I said, there’s going to be a lot of pit departments studying film and trying to understand different ways and ideas, and I think we’ll see this evolve a lot. 

 

“I would expect to be quite a bit faster when we come back to Daytona in July. I would expect you’d see a good second or two shaved off of those times.”

MORE: Pit road emphasis returns to the athletes

RELATED: Alex Bowman wins Daytona 500 pole

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Winning the Daytona 500 pole position is becoming old news for Hendrick Motorsports owner Rick Hendrick. The venerable leader and NASCAR Hall of Fame member watched his team make it four straight in Sunday’s qualifying, an even dozen overall.

So it’s not a groundbreaking event for the powerhouse organization, but there still was something different about this celebration on pit road. Hendrick was the first one to embrace 24-year-old Alex Bowman, a relative newcomer to the driver roster, as he exited the car after collecting his second career premier series pole.

A quick scan of the scoring pylon’s top 10 revealed a familiar face in Hendrick mainstay Jimmie Johnson, a solid third in qualifying. But there was 20-year-old William Byron, the fifth-fastest qualifier and a cherub-faced HMS rookie who indicated he’d be shifting his focus to completing a homework assignment for his spring course load at Liberty University. And then Chase Elliott, logging the 10th-fastest lap as he enters just his third full season at age 22.

There are full-scale sea changes afoot at Hendrick Motorsports these days, key among them being the four individuals wheeling the Chevrolets that basked in the Daytona qualifying sunshine for yet another February. For the man whose name is on the building, the effect has been rejuvenating.

“I’m just having so much fun with these young guys,” Hendrick said. “It’s just fun to see them excited and the team’s excited. We don’t know what to expect. We’re just going to go have fun.”

The fun began Sunday with Bowman earning the No. 1 starting spot for the 60th Daytona 500 (Sunday, 2:30 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM), his first start as the full-time replacement for Dale Earnhardt Jr. in the No. 88 Chevrolet. He’s the oldest of the three twenty-somethings in the driver mix with Johnson, the seasoned 42-year-old who has won a record-tying seven Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series championships.

RELATED: Full Speedweeks schedule | Duels lineups | Clash results

But the driver composition isn’t the least of the changes. Hendrick and the rest of the Chevy organizations have had to adapt quickly to reskinning their competition fleet for the Camaro ZL1 model. And after a 2017 season that left the 68-year-old team owner with a sour taste, Hendrick reshaped the way the four teams operate.

Scrapped was the two-stable system — Nos. 48 and 88 in one camp, the Nos. 24 and then-5 in the other — that served the organization well for many years. In its place is a restructured competition department that emphasizes a one-team concept.

It’s early in its inception, but Hendrick is already enjoying the resulting cohesion.

“In all of my years in this sport and my company, we have never worked this close together, and it’s something I’ve been wanting to see,” Hendrick said. “… I think last year we kind of peaked and we knew there was change coming, so we just said, ‘OK, let’s change it all.’ Let’s just take all the experience we have, Jeff Andrews (VP of competition) done an unbelievable job, (team president) Marshall Carlson. And again, I give the crew chiefs credit because they designed this themselves in a room with a white board, and we started putting it together, and it was a change.

MORE: Bowman says pole means more control of Daytona 500 destiny

“People don’t like change, but it’s happened pretty … everybody is buying in. I’ve been with the crew out here in the garage area, and there’s an intertwined deal that hadn’t been happening.”

The feeling of unity trickled down to the crew chief of the moment, Greg Ives, whose reserved expressions and poker-faced tendency to keep his strategies under wraps have earned the nickname, “The Riddler” from his young driver. Ives indicated he’s invested in the new Hendrick philosophy of unification; the part about the spirit of fun from the young, ambitious drivers hasn’t quite taken root.

“It’s nerve-wracking,” Ives said with a grin. “These kids are fearless. They just stand on the gas and go. The fun part is when you’re running well and you’re fast. It’s never fun to not be, and that’s our goal this year. We want to show that we’re a team as Hendrick Motorsports. That’s what I’m calling our team. We’re not individuals, the 88. We’re a whole Hendrick group that’s looking for great things this year.”

Sunday’s showing was more about single-car speed and bragging rights among the teams’ speedway programs. But the start was auspicious for an organization seeking its 13th championship, sitting just one points-paying win away from No. 250.

“To have four cars in the top 10, that’s hard to do,” Hendrick said. “Now we’ve just got to finish it.”

What channels are NASCAR races on this week? We answer that and provide all the weekly NASCAR television listings here in the NASCAR TV schedule.

Note: All times are ET.

MORE: Get the NBC Sports App |  How to find FS1, FS2 | Get FOX Sports GOHow to find NBCSN

Monday, February 12
1:30 a.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Advance Auto Parts Clash (re-air), FS1
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1

Tuesday, February 13
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1

Wednesday, February 14
noon, Daytona 500 Media Day, FS1
5 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub (2-hour show), FS1

Thursday, February 15
2:30 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub, (re-air), FS1
4:30 a.m., A Perfect Storm: The 1979 Daytona 500, FS1
5:30 a.m., Classic NASCAR: 1993 Daytona 500, FS1
11:30 a.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series practice, FS1
1 p.m., Untold Stories: Daytona, FS1
2 p.m., Classic NASCAR: 1979 Daytona 500, FS1
2:30 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series practice, FS1
3:30 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Weekend Edition, FS1
4:30 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series final practice, FS1
5:30 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay, FS1
7 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series: Can-Am Duels at Daytona, FS1 (Canada: TSN 1, 4)
10 p.m., Classic NASCAR: 1998 Daytona 500, FS1
10:30 p.m., Classic NASCAR: 1993 Daytona 500, FS1

Friday, February 16
3:30 a.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series: Can-Am Duel at Daytona (re-air), FS1
noon: NASCAR Xfinity Series practice, FS1 (Canada: TSN GO)
1 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series practice, FS1 (Canada: TSN GO)
2 p.m.: NASCAR Xfinity Series final practice, FS1 (Canada: TSN GO)
3 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series practice, FS1 (Canada: TSN 1)
4 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Weekend Edition, FS1
4:30 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series qualifying, FS1
6 p.m., Beyond the Wheel 2018, FS1
7 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay, FS1
7:30 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series NextEra Energy Resources 250, FS1
10 p.m., Classic NASCAR: 1998 Daytona 500, FS1
10:30 p.m., Classic NASCAR: 1998 Daytona 500, FS1
11 p.m., Beyond the Wheel 2018 (re-air), FS1

Saturday, February 17
2:30 a.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series NextEra Energy Resources 250 (re-air), FS1
4:30 a.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series practice (re-air), FS1
5:30 a.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series practice (re-air), FS1
6:30 a.m., Refuse to Lose: Jeff Gordon and the 1997 Daytona 500, FS1
7:30 a.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series NextEra Energy Resources 250 (re-air), FS1
9:30 a.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series qualifying, FS1 (Canada: TSN GO)
11 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Weekend Edition, FS1
noon, Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series final practice, FS1 (Canada: TSN 2)
1 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Weekend Edition, FS1
2 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay: Xfinity, FS1
2:30 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: PowerShares QQQ 300, FS1 (Canada: TSN 1, 3, 4)
5 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series Post Race, FS1
5:30 p.m., Beyond the Wheel, 2018 (re-air), FS1

Sunday, February 18
1 a.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: PowerShares QQQ 300 (re-air), FS1
3:30 a.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series final practice (re-air), FS1
4:30 a.m., 100,000 Cameras: Daytona 500, FS1
5 a.m., Refuse to Lose: Jeff Gordon and the 1997 Daytona 500, FS1
6 a.m., A Perfect Storm: The 1979 Daytona 500, FS1
7 a.m., Classic NASCAR: 1979 Daytona 500, FS1
7:30 a.m., Untold Stories, Daytona, FS1
8:30 a.m., Classic NASCAR: 1988 Daytona 500, FS1
9 a.m., Classic NASCAR: 1993 Daytona 500, FS1
9:30 a.m., Classic NASCAR: 1997 Daytona 500, FS1
10 a.m., Classic NASCAR: 1998 Daytona 500, FS1
11 a.m., NASCAR RaceDay, FOX
1 p.m.. Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Pre Race, FOX
2:30 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series: Daytona 500, FOX (Canada; TSN 1, 3, 4, 5)

RELATED: Full race results | Every winner of The Clash
SHOP: Keselowski gear

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – For once, as he put it, Brad Keselowski didn’t “choke away” a chance at victory during Speedweeks at Daytona.

 

Just the opposite. Taking the lead on Lap 39 of the Advance Auto Parts Clash at Daytona International Speedway, Keselowski held it the rest of the way to win the exhibition kick-off race to the 2018 season, leading Team Penske to a 1-2-4 finish.

 

And Keselowski, who led 43 of the 75 laps, took the checkered flag with a large piece of debris on the nose of his No. 2 Ford Fusion, with the water temperature in the engine rising to dangerous levels.

 

“I was worried about the run (of cars behind him), but the car was way overheating there at the end, and I was more worried about it blowing up than anything else,” Keselowski said. “(Engine builder) Doug Yates and his guys did a good job giving me something real durable to take all that and keep digging.

 

“I’m really proud of the whole effort here. What a way to start Speedweeks, putting the Miller Lite Ford in Victory Lane. I’m really proud of my team… I felt like we were due today.”

 

Keselowski has five victories at Talladega, but his only other superspeedway win came in the July 2016 race at Daytona. During February, the 2012 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series champion was batting .000, making Sunday’s start to Speedweeks a special occasion.

 

“It means a lot,” Keselowski said. “I’ve never won anything here during Speedweeks, and I feel like I’ve choked them away, to be quite honest. You need one to break through. Hopefully, this is our breakthrough.”

RELATED: Keselowski happy to come through with a win at Daytona

 

Last year’s Clash winner, Joey Logano, finished second to his teammate, with Kurt Busch running third and Team Penske newbie Ryan Blaney fourth—with Ford drivers sweeping the top four positions.

 

Austin Dillon, who started from the pole, came home fifth in the No. 3 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet, avoiding a last-lap melee that started when contact from Kyle Larson’s Chevrolet turned Jimmie Johnson’s No. 48 into the outside wall on the backstretch.

 

Johnson failed to finish the Clash for the seventh straight year.

 

After Keselowski grabbed the lead, the field gradually strung out to single file in the top lane, with smaller groups of cars unable to make significant runs on the bottom. On the final lap, however, Kurt Busch darted past Blaney, who had dropped to the inside in a last-ditch effort to win the race.

 

Behind the lead cars, Larson tagged Johnson and turned him into the wall, collecting the cars of Chase Elliott, Kyle Busch, Kasey Kahne and defending series champion Martin Truex Jr. in the wreck.

 

Kurt Busch, the defending Daytona 500 winner, was pleased with his third-place result and what it might portend for his defense in the “Great American Race.”

 

“Project number one was to do all the laps so that we could understand more about our tires and our setup and the way that the car was going to handle,” Busch said. “Then step number two was to have fun. I had a blast.

 

“I wanted to make another move on the last lap but ran out of steam because the guys behind me got too wide. I couldn’t jump in there and go after the Penske guys. It’s a good day for Ford and good day for us and Billy Scott, my new crew chief. Now we’ll go back and debrief about our car.”  

RELATED: Bowman wins Daytona 500 pole | Drivers of the No. 88

Dale Earnhardt Jr. may not be driving this season, but the No. 88 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet still took a familiar position on Sunday with newcomer Alex Bowman winning the Daytona 500 pole ahead of the Feb. 18 (2:30 p.m. ET on FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) race.

This marks the second straight season with the No. 88 sitting on the front row for the “Great American Race.” And from the sidelines, Junior and wife Amy Earnhardt were cheering on their former team.

PHOTOS: Dale Jr. through the years

RELATED: Full qualifying speeds | How the Duels work

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – Junior Nation, you have a new standard bearer.

Alex Bowman, the successor to Dale Earnhardt Jr. in the No. 88 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet Camaro ZL1, couldn’t have had a more auspicious start to the next phase of his Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series career — namely, winning the pole position for next Sunday’s season-opening Daytona 500 (2:30 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

In his first official competition as the full-time driver of the vaunted No. 88, Bowman sped around 2.5-mile Daytona International Speedway in 46.002 seconds in the second and final round of Sunday’s single-car qualifying, a time that translated to an average speed of 195.644 mph.

Bowman knew from the outset he had a car capable of winning the pole. The pressure was squarely on his shoulders to fulfill the potential of his equipment.

“It was a little nerve-wracking,” said Bowman, who won his second career pole in his last three Monster Energy starts, dating back to November 2016 at Phoenix, where he was subbing for an injured Earnhardt. “Our Nationwide Camaro ZL1 has been great since we unloaded.

“All the guys back at the chassis shop, body shop, and the Hendrick engine shop have been top-notch. They’ve all worked so hard. And we knew we were going for the pole. That’s what we’re here to do.” 

MORE: Projected Duels lineups

Bowman was the 12th driver to take a lap in the first round of qualifying, and his speed of 194.885 mph stood up as fastest of the session. But that also meant Bowman had a long wait as the last to make a run in the final round.

“I thought we were at a little disadvantage, letting the car cool down as long as we did, since we went pretty early in the first round,” said Bowman, the 41st different driver to win a Daytona 500 pole. “I was a little nervous for that second round. But it took off well off pit road, and I did everything I could do.

“But it really comes down to the crew and all the guys back at the shop, whether it’s the aero group, the engine shop, the chassis shop. Everybody works so hard at these speedway cars, especially (for) the 500. It just means the world to have (sponsor) Nationwide support and to be able to put it on the pole.”

Under a format in which the only the two front-row qualifiers are locked into their starting positions for the Great American Race, Bowman topped second-place Denny Hamlin, the 2016 Daytona 500 winner, who covered the distance in 46.132 seconds (195.092 mph).

Though he was one spot short of the pole, Hamlin was elated to secure a front-row starting spot for the first time in his career. Make that elated and surprised.

“This was way out of the blue for us,” Hamlin said. “I literally am so ecstatic. It’s just so out of the blue, because, obviously, I thought that today was going to be a tough day qualifying. We focused so much on race trim yesterday (in Saturday’s practice).

“We stuck in a pack, and I think we did one real mock run which wasn’t really even a mock run and we were so far off that we just switched and made sure our car was going to handle real good on Thursday and obviously next Sunday.”

Jimmie Johnson was third fastest on Sunday at 194,734 mph, earning the second-place starting position in Thursday night’s first Can-Am Duel 150-mile qualifying race, one of the two events that sets the starting order for the Daytona 500.

Kyle Busch (194.704 mph) will start on the outside of the front row in the second Duel after qualifying fourth. Sunoco Rookie of the Year contender William Byron was fifth fastest in time trials, giving Hendrick Motorsports three of the top five cars in the competitive debut of the new Camaro ZL1 race car.

Last season’s Monster Energy Series Sunoco Rookie of the Year, Erik Jones was sixth, followed by Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Daniel Suarez. Kevin Harvick was eighth quickest in the No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford, as four Chevrolets, four Toyotas and four Fords transferred to the second round of qualifying.

Notes: For her last start in a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series car, Danica Patrick was 28th fastest in qualifying in the No. 7 GoDaddy Chevrolet… The Daytona 500 pole was the fourth straight for team owner Rick Hendrick, tying him with Harry Ranier (1979-1982) for most consecutive poles for the Great American Race… Former Hendrick driver Kasey Kahne was 18th fastest in his competitive debut in the No. 95 Leavine Family Racing Chevrolet… Darrell “Bubba” Wallace qualified 25th in his first outing as the full-time driver of the No. 43 Richard Petty Motorsports Chevrolet… In his debut in the No. 10 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford, Aric Almirola was 13th fastest, failing to transfer to the final round by .005 seconds.

PHOTOS: The best of the weekend

Sunday’s Daytona 500 single-car qualifying set only the front row for the ‘Great American Race’ —  Alex Bowman is on the pole in the No. 88 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet and Denny Hamlin will start second in the No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota when the green flag drops Feb. 18 (2:30 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

The qualifying speeds also set the lineups for Thursday’s Can-Am Duels at Daytona (7 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), the twin 60-lap races that determine the full starting lineup for the 60th running of the Daytona 500.

RELATED: How Daytona 500 qualifying works

Duel 1 is typically comprised from the odd-numbered drivers on the Daytona 500 qualifying speed chart — first, third, fifth, etc. Duel 2 is then the even-finishing drivers. The duel lineups could be minimally altered from that formula, though, to ensure an even number of Open, non-Charter teams in each duel race.

Below are the official lineups for each Duel race.

DUEL 1 LINEUP

 STARTING POSITION
 DRIVER  TEAM
 1. Alex Bowman Hendrick Motorsports
 2. Jimmie Johnson Hendrick Motorsports
 3. William Byron Hendrick Motorsports
 4. Daniel Suarez Joe Gibbs Racing
 5. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Roush Fenway Racing
 6. Joey Logano Team Penske
 7. Aric Almirola Stewart-Haas Racing
 8. Ryan Blaney Team Penske
 9. Kurt Busch Stewart-Haas Racing
 10. Brad Keselowski Team Penske
 11. Ryan Newman Richard Childress Racing
 12. Jamie McMurray Chip Ganassi Racing
 13. Darrell Wallace Jr. Richard Petty Motorsports
 14. Ty Dillon Germain Racing
 15. Chris Buescher JTG Daugherty Racing
 16. Brendan Gaughan Beard Motorsports
 17. Justin Marks Rick Ware Racing
 18. Jeffrey Earnhardt Starcom Racing
 19. David Gilliland RBR Enterprises
20. David Ragan Front Row Motorsports

DUEL 2 LINEUP

STARTING POSITION
DRIVER TEAM
1. Denny Hamlin Joe Gibbs Racing
2. Kyle Busch Joe Gibbs Racing
3. Erik Jones Joe Gibbs Racing
4. Kevin Harvick Stewart-Haas Racing
5. Chase Elliott Hendrick Motorsports
6. Paul Menard Wood Brothers Racing
7. Austin Dillon Richard Childress Racing
8. Clint Bowyer Stewart-Haas Racing
9. Kasey Kahne Leavine Family Racing
10. Trevor Bayne Roush Fenway Racing
11. Kyle Larson Chip Ganassi Racing
12. Michael McDowell Front Row Motorsports
13. Martin Truex Jr. Furniture Row Racing
14. Danica Patrick Premium Motorsports
15. AJ Allmendinger JTG Daugherty Racing
16. Matt DiBenedetto GO FAS Racing
17. DJ Kennington Gaunt Brothers Racing
18. Mark Thompson Phoenix Air Racing
19. Corey LaJoie TriStar Motorsports
20. Gray Gaulding BK Racing