RELATED: Results | Standings | Blaney amongst sport’s next class of greats


DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – All things considered, Ryan Blaney‘s runner-up finish in Sunday’s Daytona  500 was essentially an early season victory for the 23-year old driver.

He started from the rear of the field in a backup No. 21 Motorcraft Ford, avoiding several multiple-car crashes and surviving a final-lap push to the front despite concerns about running out of gas.


Any runner-up finisher – especially one in the Daytona  500 – would concede some disappointment on the day, but Blaney still left Daytona Beach deservedly feeling accomplished. And encouraged.


"I thought we had a good car all day to start off," Blaney said. "We showed that definitely in the first half of the race. Then we got some damage there in one of those big wrecks about middle of the race. Kind of hurt our car a little bit."

But, Blaney explained, he finally got some well-timed help going forward in the final laps.


"I started kind of running out the gas there into (Turn 3), we started sputtering pretty bad," Blaney said. "Luckily made it back to the line. It was a good showing for us. It was a good way to start off the year. Stinks to be so close. But I think that’s good momentum for our team, to be good at the beginning of the day, get some damage and be able to rally for a good finish."


While Blaney’s final lap effort was certainly dramatic, his Wood Brothers Racing team felt all along the car was good enough to challenge for the trophy. And that Blaney was good enough to challenge for the trophy.


Blaney joked that not having his "rookie stripe" — or yellow tape — on the rear of his Ford may have helped encourage the veterans to stick with him.


Of course, driving a super-fast car doesn’t hurt either.


"I thought our car in the Duel race was spectacular and it’s a shame it got torn up, but our backup car was honestly, I felt like, just as good," Blaney said. "We came from the back really early and were able to drive up through the middle, and our car handled correctly where we could be up the middle and be aggressive when the time was right. We were able to stay up there."


Blaney’s crew chief Jeremy Bullins said he will arrive in Atlanta later this week feeling very encouraged by the work of the team and his driver.


"Obviously, we showed speed in the 150s [Daytona qualifying race], but we tore that car up," Bullins said. "It was an easy decision to get this car out. It was built just the same, just as fast. Had a good car all day, got ourselves up front pretty quick, got a little bit of damage a couple of times and had to work on it a little bit, but phenomenal job by Ryan of timing his moves and getting back through there at the end.


"We knew we were close on fuel, got him to save a little bit, which was just enough to get us to the end. Almost where we wanted to be, but really close."


It is Blaney’s best Daytona finish in four races (three Daytona  500 starts) and places him second in the series points standings heading to Atlanta Motor Speedway – all in all, an impressive mark for him and a fine start to the season.


"Any time you get a good finish anywhere, no matter what track, it always propels you into the next week," Blaney said. "Maybe it feels a little better when it’s the Daytona  500.


"It doesn’t mean your car is going to be great when you go to Atlanta [next week], doesn’t mean your car is going to be great when you go out West. Until you get nine or 10 in, then you can kind of get a good judge of how your cars are and where your team stacks up.


"No matter where it is, if you get a good finish, it definitely helps your team confidence‑wise for the next week and maybe a couple weeks after that."

2018 DAYTONA 500 VIP Ticket Packages are now available from PrimeSport! As the Official Ticket Exchange of Daytona International Speedway, PrimeSport has your access to all the action at the World Center of Racing! Receive $50 off per reservation when you book your 2018 DAYTONA package by Saturday March 4th. Use code DAYTONA18 at checkout. Coupon code DAYTONA18 is active now through Saturday March, 4th. | GO HERE

RELATED: Full coverage of announcement | Official NASCAR press release

 

Editor’s note: Stage 1 for the Daytona 500 will end on Lap 60, Stage 2 will end on Lap 120 and Stage 3/race conclusion is slated to end on Lap 200.

 

NASCAR’s race enhancements announced Monday detailed how and why races will be run in stages in 2017. Below are answers to some of the potential questions.

 

How many stages are in a race?

Three — Stage 1, Stage 2 and the Final Stage. Stage 1 and Stage 2 will reward drivers who are leading, or in the top 10, at the conclusion of each stage. The Final Stage will determine the race winner.

 

What is Stage 1?

The green flag begins the race, and therefore Stage 1. Its length is approximately 25-30 percent of the event’s total length — it is different for each race, dependent on track size and race length — with the ending marked via a stage checkered flag (the stage can end under caution, if necessary).

 

Who benefits most?

Drivers who are running first through 10th at the conclusion of Stage 1 will receive stage bonus points, starting with 10 points for first place, nine points for second place, down to one point for 10th place. Additionally, the driver who finishes Stage 1 first will receive one playoff point to carry into the postseason, should that driver qualify. Those can add up quickly over the course of a season.

 

What about Stage 2?

At the conclusion of Stage 1, there is a caution period for drivers to come down pit road (innovative strategies will be crucial under these enhancements.) Stage 2 will then begin with a drop of the green flag for the restart. Its length is approximately 25-30 percent of the event’s total length — it is different for each race, dependent on track size and race length — with the ending marked via a stage checkered flag (the stage can end under caution, if necessary).

 

What about Stage 2 bonus points?

Same as Stage 1: Drivers who are running first through 10th at the conclusion of Stage 2 will receive stage bonus points, starting with 10 points for first place, nine points for second place, down to one point for 10th place. Additionally, the driver who finishes Stage 2 first will receive one playoff point to carry into the postseason.

 

What about the final stage?

Following another caution period, which gives fans another natural break in the action, the final stage begins with another green flag drop and restart. Drivers then race for the event win … and the five bonus points that come with it.

 

How are points distributed?

The final stage produces the race results, so the end of the final stage is the end of the race. Whoever crosses the start/finish line first at the checkered flag is the race winner. Race points are then awarded to the entire field based on finishing order. The winner receives 40 points. Second place receives 35 points, third place receives 34 points, fourth place receives 33 points … down to one point for drivers who finish 36th-40th. The maximum points a driver can earn in a race is 60 (40 for the race win plus 20 points for winning both stages).

 

There no longer will be a bonus point for leading a lap, or a bonus point for leading the most laps.

 

And the winner?

The race winner receives five bonus points toward the postseason (this is up from three last year under the new enhancements), plus postseason eligibility. If a driver leads at the end of both Stage 1 and Stage 2, and then wins the race, then he or she would receive seven bonus points to carry into the postseason.

 

For which series were these enhancements designed?

The Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series, the NASCAR XFINITY Series and the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series will all use this enhanced format.

 

By rewarding hard racing through the duration of the season, will there be an official regular-season champion?

Yes, there formally will be a regular-season champion. That driver will earn 15 additional playoff points to carry into the postseason.

 

Any more bonus points for points standings at the end of the regular season?

Yes. In addition to the regular-season champion, drivers who finish in the top 10 of the regular season all receive some measure of playoff points to take into the postseason. Here’s the breakdown:

 

First place in regular season points earns a driver 15 playoff bonus points in addition to the points earned with race or stage wins; second place earns 10 playoff points; third place, 8; fourth place, 7; fifth place, 6; sixth place, 5; seventh place, 4; eighth place, 3; ninth place, 2; 10th place, 1.

 

In this enhanced format, when is a race official?
At the conclusion of Stage 2.

 

How does the postseason work?

Once the postseason begins, points will be reset to 2,000 for the opening round, with each driver’s accrued bonus points tacked onto that total. Four drivers still will be eliminated in each round of the postseason, setting up a final four in Miami for all three national series.

 

What is the tweak for playoff points?

Playoff points earned for race wins or for leading at the end of Stage 1 or Stage 2 now will carry over round-by-round if a driver continues advancing. It’s not just for the first round any more. Additionally, drivers can build off and add to those bonus points.

 

So if a driver has 70 playoff points heading into the postseason, and then wins the playoff opener (five-point bonus), he or she would advance to the next round and carry 75 additional points — or more, depending on his or her results over the next two races in the round.

 

Does winning a race in the postseason still automatically qualify that driver for the next round, regardless of points?

Yes. Winning trumps all.

 

Will bonus points still carry over to Miami?

No. Miami is the exception. All four drivers competing for the championship will start with the same amount of points. There will be no bonus points for this race for those final four drivers. First to the line wins the title.

RELATED: Read more Inside Groove | Celebrities at Daytona

 

Things just have a way of being a whole lot bigger at the annual Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season-opening Daytona 500 — the fun, the stakes, the wrecks and, now, the fans.

 

Rob Gronkowski, the 6-foot-6, larger-than-life personality and Super Bowl-winning tight end for the New England Patriots, is out in full force at Daytona International Speedway and he’s brought the party with him.

 

"Just enjoying it, seeing everyone pre-game, tailgate, talking to everyone. Just having a blast so far," Gronkowski told media ahead of the "Great American Race."

 

"It’s my first Daytona 500. Having a great experience and just having a blast," Gronkowski said. "I’ve never really gotten to tailgate, never got to run around, so it’s cool to run around, meet people, enjoy the atmosphere and seeing how it really goes down outside the stadium when everybody is getting prepared for the big event."

 

Gronkowski, a Monster Energy athlete, pulled double-duty as pace car driver and grand marshal at Chicagoland Speedway in 2015, and has taken to NASCAR and its "strong" drivers and "passionate" fans since.

 

RELATED: Gronk spends family time, double-duty at Chicago

 

"I’ve been to Chicagoland one or two years ago and I see the fans and I see how passionate they are about the racing," said Gronkowski. "It just puts a new level of respect to the game. To be out there for three or four hours, being able to race that long, (drivers have) got to have that mentality, that strong mentality in your mind to just keep on going, keep on driving and doing everything right, every single turn. 

 

"It’s just critical, so you’ve got to give huge respect to the drivers on what they do and how focused they are throughout the three hours."

 

With a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series shirt on his back and a Monster Energy drink in his hand, Gronkowski was asked which he was a bigger fan of — the drink or the trademark Monster Energy girls.

 

"I’m a fan of both (Monster Energy drink and Monster Energy girls)," he said. "I’ve got my own drink, too, I make the girls drink my own drink so I get the benefit of both."

 

It’s official: The Daytona  500 is a very special day for Denny Hamlin.

 

Last year’s "Great American Race" saw the Joe Gibbs Racing wheelman win by the smallest margin of victory in race history (.010 seconds) over Martin Truex Jr. And the 2017 event became perhaps even more memorable than 2016 even before the race went green, as Hamlin’s longtime girlfriend, Jordan Fish, announced the pair were expecting baby No. 2 in the sweetest way.

 

 

The couple are already parents to 4-year-old Taylor, who seems pretty excited to become a big sister.

 

Congrats to the entire family!

2018 DAYTONA 500 VIP Ticket Packages are now available from PrimeSport! As the Official Ticket Exchange of Daytona International Speedway, PrimeSport has your access to all the action at the World Center of Racing! Receive $50 off per reservation when you book your 2018 DAYTONA package by Saturday March 4th. Use code DAYTONA18 at checkout. Coupon code DAYTONA18 is active now through Saturday March, 4th. | GO HERE

RELATED: FAQ for race format

The Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series saw NASCAR’s 2017 race enhancements in action in Sunday’s Daytona  500, with Kevin Harvick winning Stage 2.

The Stewart-Haas Racing driver was ahead at the end of the 120-lap mark in his No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford and as a result, earned 10 race points and one playoff point for the 10-race championship run. Kyle Busch led Stage 1 (ahead at the Lap 60 mark) and also received 10 race points and one playoff point prior to his early departure for a Lap 104 wreck. The top 10 drivers also earned points after Stages 1 and 2, as distributed in the tables below.

The race winner will receive 40 points and five bonus playoff points. The top 10 finishers will also earn race points.

2018 DAYTONA 500 VIP Ticket Packages are now available from PrimeSport! As the Official Ticket Exchange of Daytona International Speedway, PrimeSport has your access to all the action at the World Center of Racing! Receive $50 off per reservation when you book your 2018 DAYTONA package by Saturday March 4th. Use code DAYTONA18 at checkout. Coupon code DAYTONA18 is active now through Saturday March, 4th. | GO HERE

RELATED: Ride along with Junior, others during wreck

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Dale Earnhardt Jr. emerged from the Daytona International Speedway infield care center Sunday managing a slight smile and a heart full of gratitude despite being wrecked out of the season-opening Daytona  500. His car lasted until just after the midpoint of his first Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race since suffering concussion symptoms last summer.

"I feel good," said Earnhardt, who hasn’t raced since July of 2016 and ended up 37th on Sunday. "I don’t have any symptoms for anything I’ve experienced in the past. It wasn’t that hard of a hit, but still, that doesn’t mean you can’t get injured.

"I’ve just got to thank NASCAR because we got with them in the offseason about some things to help myself inside my car and we changed some things in the interior that are going to help me going forward. I just appreciate all the effort NASCAR has put into safety."

2018 DAYTONA 500 VIP Ticket Packages are now available from PrimeSport! As the Official Ticket Exchange of Daytona International Speedway, PrimeSport has your access to all the action at the World Center of Racing! Receive $50 off per reservation when you book your 2018 DAYTONA package by Saturday March 4th. Use code DAYTONA18 at checkout. Coupon code DAYTONA18 is active now through Saturday March, 4th. | GO HERE

What channel is NASCAR programming on this week? We answer that and provide all the weekly NASCAR television listings here.

RELATED: Find NBCSN in your area | See Atlanta races live

All times ET

Monday, Feb. 27
3 a.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Daytona  500 (re-air), FS1
6:30 a.m., NASCAR Victory Lane (re-air), FS1
7 a.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series: PowerShares QQQ 300 (re-air), FS1
6 p.m., NASCAR America, NBCSN
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
7 p.m., Beyond the Wheel 2017, FS1

Tuesday, Feb. 28
6 a.m., 1993 Daytona  500 (re-air), FS1
6:30 a.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Daytona 500 (re-air), FS1
5:30 p.m., NASCAR America, NBCSN
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
7:30 p.m., Refuse to Lose: Jeff Gordon and the 1997 Daytona 500 (re-air), FS2
8:30 p.m., 1997 Daytona 500 (re-air), FS2
9 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Daytona 500 (re-air), FS2

Wednesday, March 1

5:30 p.m., NASCAR America, NBCSN
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1

Thursday, March 2

5:30 p.m., NASCAR America, NBCSN
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub (re-air)

Friday, March 3

10 a.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series practice, FS1
11 a.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series practice, FS1
Noon, Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series practice, FS1
1:30 p.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series practice, FS1
2:30 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series practice, FS1
3:30 p.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series final practice, FS1
4:30 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series final practice, FS1
5:30 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, FS1

Saturday, March 4

4 a.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series practice (re-air), FS1
5:30 a.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series final practice (re-air), FS1
7:30 a.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying (re-air), FS1
9 a.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, FS1
10:30 a.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Keystone Light Pole Qualifying, FS1
Noon, Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series final practice, FS1
1:30 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay: XFINITY, FS1
2 p.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series Rinnai 250, FS1
4:30 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Active Pest Control 200, FS1
6:30 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Post-Race Show, FS1

Sunday, March 5

5 a.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Active Pest Control 200 (re-air), FS1
12:30 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay (re-air), FS1
2 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series FOX Pre-Race Show, FOX
2:30 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Folds of Honor QuikTrip  500, FOX
11 p.m., NASCAR Victory Lane, FS1
11:30 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Folds of Honor QuikTrip  500 (re-air), FS1

 

 

 

RELATED: Full results | Standings

 

Contact from Trevor Bayne sent Jimmie Johnson‘s No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet spinning on Lap 127 in Sunday’s Daytona  500 at Daytona International Speedway. The ‘Big One’ also collected Danica Patrick, Clint Bowyer, Kevin Harvick, Joey LoganoDenny Hamlin, Kurt BuschJoey Gase, Chris Buescher and Landon Cassill, among others.

Johnson was running third when the wreck unfolded. He was ruled out of the race, along with Patrick, due to extensive damage that was not fixed in the five-minute window on pit road. The wreck involved 17 cars in total.

Less than 15 laps later, a wiggle from Chase Elliott‘s No. 24 Chevrolet caused a multi-car pile-up that involved Brad Keselowski, Jamie McMurray, Daniel Suarez, Ty Dillon and Ryan Newman, and brought out the eighth caution flag at Lap 141. All told, 11 cars were involved. Together, the two wrecks reshaped the running of the 59th annual Daytona  500.

WATCH: Wreck collects Suarez, Keselowski, others

"The Fords were really fast today," Patrick said. "We got organized and we were gone! It was the (most fun) 500 I’ve ever had. Well, probably not 500, more like 300 or 250. It is a real shame. I feel like we could have been a contender at the end, for sure we could have been an influencer."

Austin Dillon and Kasey Kahne were running 1-2 as cleanup for the wrecks commenced, although Kurt Busch — involved in the first of these wrecks — rallied for victory.

 

All told, 15 cars finished more than 10 laps back largely due to these incidents.

2018 DAYTONA 500 VIP Ticket Packages are now available from PrimeSport! As the Official Ticket Exchange of Daytona International Speedway, PrimeSport has your access to all the action at the World Center of Racing! Receive $50 off per reservation when you book your 2018 DAYTONA package by Saturday March 4th. Use code DAYTONA18 at checkout. Coupon code DAYTONA18 is active now through Saturday March, 4th. | GO HERE

RELATED: Read more Inside Groove | Full race results

Kurt Busch won the 59th annual Daytona 500 on Sunday in legendary fashion, coming to the lead in the closing laps of the first race under the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series banner. 

 

NASCAR Nation reacted to the truly remarkable day — here are some of the best tweets.