DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Kevin Harvick is a planner. Always has been, he says.

This year’s agenda looks a little different.

The 2023 NASCAR Cup Series circuit will be Harvick’s final, capping a 23-year career at the sport’s top echelon. Plenty will be routine for the 2014 series champion when he gets to the track. But a lot will be new.

“I always feel like when I start the season, I know what the plan is, and I know what I am trying to accomplish and what I am working toward,” Harvick said. “From the racing side, it is the same. But this year is just a different plan. You go out and execute the plan and start working on the next plan.”

RELATED: Harvick to retire after 2023 | Kevin Harvick through the years

The next step is already public — a transition into the FOX Sports play-by-play booth to serve as an analyst alongside longtime lead Mike Joy and Clint Bowyer, a longtime teammate of Harvick.

Thousands of laps remain before Harvick trades his steering wheel for a microphone, though — coupled with a good bit of reflection.

His recent accomplishments are the most memorable because they are the freshest — 60 career wins, a Cup title and an astounding 790 series starts. His transition to Stewart-Haas Racing in 2014 with crew chief Rodney Childers immediately proved fruitful, producing the Cup championship in addition to five victories that season. Last year, he became the first driver to win back-to-back races in the Next Gen vehicle.

But forgotten these days are the successes of Kevin Harvick Inc., his former Xfinity Series and Craftsman Truck Series teams.

Harvick launched the Truck program in 2001 but didn’t take it full-time until 2004, the same season he launched his Xfinity Series operation. In an eight-year span, that team collected 10 Xfinity wins, 43 Truck victories and two series championships. Harvick also scored Xfinity titles in 2001 and 2006, competing mainly for Richard Childress Racing, where he began his illustrious career.

Kevin Harvick celebrates at Atlanta in 2001.
Jonathan Ferrey | ALLSPORT

The relationship with RCR was deeply rooted by 2001, but Harvick’s leap to Cup that year was shrouded in tragedy, tasked with replacing seven-time champion Dale Earnhardt in the renumbered No. 3 Chevrolet to what became the No. 29 car.

Despite the immense pressure and awkward nature of the circumstances, Harvick overcame and achieved his own significant success, highlighted by an Atlanta win in just his third Cup start. What — and how — Harvick has achieved is not lost on longtime competitor and 2012 Cup champion Brad Keselowski.

“I look at Kevin and think of the opportunity that he had 22 years ago, and I can’t imagine having to go through that set of circumstances and the weight that would come with that and trying to take that forward,” Keselowski said. “And to be able to do that and to overcome that weight and to win races at all three levels and championships as owner [and] driver at all three levels, I can’t think of anyone else that’s done that — at least not in this era to the regard that he’s done it.

“I think that’s a tremendous accomplishment. It’s easy to lose sight of. We get so focused on ‘what have you done last week’ that I think sometimes we lose sight on what people have done over their career and certainly sometimes even over just a few years.”

Through his accomplishments on and off the track, Harvick has garnered respect and admiration from his competitive peers — those who have raced him for two decades and those who are only getting their first tastes of racing the veteran.

Jimmie Johnson and Kevin Harvick stand next to each other
Jonathan Ferrey | Getty Images

Seven-time champion Jimmie Johnson, a rookie in 2002 who returns to Daytona for his first NASCAR appearance since the 2020 season concluded, didn’t always get along with Harvick. He once suggested Childress fire Harvick following a crash in the 2005 duel qualifying race. That dynamic changed over time. Now a team owner himself at Legacy Motor Club, Johnson sees all Harvick has contributed to stock car racing.

“I think Kevin has offered so much in so many ways,” Johnson said. “He’s not only a fierce competitor but is someone who grew up in the sport and grew up in it and cares for it. He’s always taken the time to understand the point he wants to make and is confident in the point that he makes.

“He’s looked through the ownership lens, as we all know, and certainly the driver lens. He’s been with multiple organizations and different leaders. He’s a very well-rounded, intelligent driver/businessman. I have a ton of respect for what’s accomplished inside and out of the car.”

On the other end of the spectrum is Austin Cindric, the defending Daytona 500 champion and Cup Series sophomore who recently had his fair share of Harvick interactions at the exhibition Clash at The Coliseum on Feb. 5.

“My most recent encounter with Kevin was at the Coliseum, and I got dumped twice in one heat race,” Cindric recalled. “But past that, it’s been fun to get to know him. I would categorize him as a polarizing figure just because I feel like he speaks his mind, and I feel like that does a lot for the industry.

“I have gotten an ass-chewing from Kevin at COTA last year, and that was an interesting experience, but I feel like understanding where he sits and where his career is at … I think it’ll be fun to see how he races this year. By that, I mean I don’t think he’s gonna care about anyone else all year, and I think the Coliseum was a good gauge of that.”

Harvick admitted there’s probably some truth to that, courtesy of some advice from another friend and former competitor.

“Dale [Earnhardt] Jr. summed it up for me by saying it was my ‘NFG’ tour. I said, ‘you’re right,’” Harvick laughed. “If we have to settle scores, we will settle them immediately. We aren’t waiting until next week. If it rolls, we are settling them.”

MORE: 2023 Daytona 500 schedule | Cup Series schedule

Chase Elliott, the five-time defending Most Popular Driver, had his own heated encounter with Harvick at Bristol Motor Speedway during a playoff race in 2021. While that memory lingers, it doesn’t cloud what Harvick has meant to Elliott, the 2020 Cup champion.

“I feel like there’s been a lot of mutual respect,” said Elliott, who begins his eighth full-time season this year. “Our disagreement there at Bristol is probably always going to stand out. But it goes much deeper than that.

“Kevin has been a great ally of mine early in my career. I’ve referenced that, the questions here lately. I’m very appreciative of that, him being able to lend a hand there early in my career. I appreciate his time and willingness to help me learn and help get me and steer me in a good direction going into some of those tracks for the first time in my rookie year of Xfinity.”

Kyle Busch and Kevin Harvick
Brian Lawdermilk | Getty Images

Another once-fiery rivalry that has cooled considerably is Harvick’s with Kyle Busch. The duo traded plenty of barbs (and paint) over the years — including a Darlington conflict in 2011 that saw Busch punt Harvick’s empty car into the wall post-race.

These days? The two are good enough friends to have shared a rental-car ride on Wednesday, conjuring memories of a NASCAR film classic.

“It’s kind of weird, right?” Busch quipped. “Almost the ‘Days of Thunder’ where we should have got our own rental cars. Would have been a Ford versus Chevy. That would have been funny. But yeah, him having Keelan, me having Brexton and us having other things outside of just the race track and different things in life, like you mentioned about focusing on and what it’ll teach you has certainly meant a lot to the both of us and how we can relate and work with one another.”

Harvick has established himself as a leader inside the NASCAR garage, an authoritative voice as the series’ most experienced driver. He didn’t always want to accept that role, though.

Feeling as though his opinions hadn’t been considered, Harvick began shying away from significant involvement within the paddock and with the sport’s leadership. That changed over the past year as Kurt Busch and Alex Bowman incurred concussions from crashes during the 2022 season.

From left, Chase Briscoe, Chase Elliott, Kevin Harvick and Martin Truex Jr. smile ahead of the Clash at the Coliseum
Araya Doheny | Getty Images

“It really lit a fire to me to make sure that you didn’t leave them hanging before you left, and you tried to establish something that was better for them before we left,” Harvick said. “For all of us, it has been eye-opening to have to establish relationships and talk to each other in the same room because it just hasn’t been that way in 15 years.

“When Dale [Earnhardt Sr.] and all those guys were coming up through the years, those guys all traveled together and were really good friends. And it has kind of evolved away from all of that with the way that today’s industry works. For us to have to sit in rooms and talk to each other and learn more about each and get to know each other, I feel like I have gotten to know more of the guys over the last year-and-a-half than I have in the last 10 years.”

Harvick’s accomplishments and contributions to NASCAR have solidified an outstanding legacy, one which will surely be enshrined in the NASCAR Hall of Fame once eligible to be voted in. KHI still reigns strong, now as KHI Management, a sports service and celebrity-marketing agency that represents athletes from racing to mixed martial arts. Current NASCAR competitors repped by the brand include Ryan Preece, Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and Harrison Burton.

“I think there are a lot of people in this sport who are successful in one piece of the environment,” Keselowski said. “But to be successful in multiple pieces of the environment is that much more challenging, so to be able to have that legacy is one that I’m sure Kevin is proud of. And as the industry reflects back over the course of the year, I hope it takes the time to remember as well.”

NEW SMYRNA BEACH, Fla. — William Sawalich won the Super Late Model battle in the World Series of Asphalt at New Smyrna Speedway, but Casey Roderick won the war.

Despite having to watch Sawalich take his second World Series of Asphalt win of the week after dealing with brake issues for most of the night, Roderick still managed to salvage a sixth-place finish in Saturday’s Orange Blossom 100, earning him a title in his first attempt at the prestigious event.

The frustration of his brake issue was at the forefront of Roderick’s mind immediately after race, but he did come away with a sense of pride knowing he will always be remembered as a World Series of Asphalt champion.

“I feel good, but I’m disappointed in our finish,” Roderick said. “A brake line or something came loose on the right rear. It just went to the floor, so I did the best I could to get in the corner, but I’m proud of these guys. They did an awesome job all week, but it sucks we didn’t have anything to show for it tonight.”

RELATED: Complete point standings from the World Series of Asphalt

From the moment they arrived at New Smyrna for the World Series of Asphalt, the cars Anthony Campi supplied to Roderick and Katie Hettinger proved to be two of the fastest at the facility.

Along with Hettinger earning a Pro Late Model victory on Thursday evening, Roderick earned five poles across seven Super Late Model features before taking consecutive victories on Wednesday and Thursday.

William Byron matched Roderick’s win total by winning on Monday and taking the Clyde Hart Memorial 100 the following night, while Sawalich bookended the Super Late Model division with trips to Victory Lane.

A blown engine for Sawalich in the Clyde Hart Memorial 100 hindered him from making a significant run at Roderick for a World Series of Asphalt title, but he was more than satisfied to celebrate another win with the organization.

“I can’t thank the Donnie Wilson crew enough for giving me a great car,” Sawalich said. “I’m super happy for all of them, and there’s no better way to cap off [the week] with [another win].”

Sawalich had to earn his victory by going up against one of the best Super Late Model drivers in Bubba Pollard.

After Pollard took the lead on a restart, Sawalich patiently bided his time behind the veteran until he made his move with just over 10 laps remaining. Once he cleared Pollard, Sawalich drove away from the field to add another win to his growing resume.

“That was a game of patience,” Sawalich said about his battle with Pollard. “I had to analyze what my car had versus what [Pollard’s] had. I capitalized on his weakness and got him with my strong points.”

(Photo: Adam Glanzman/NASCAR)

With the World Series of Asphalt now complete, Sawalich is turning his attention toward his ARCA commitments, where he is scheduled to run 20 races across the three divisions.

For Roderick, the World Series of Asphalt gave him and Campi a perfect game plan for the rest of their 2023 season. He is confident the brake issues that hindered them on Saturday will be rectified and that they will continue to build off the momentum from their World Series of Asphalt title.

“I knew coming into [this week] we had a shot [at the World Series of Asphalt],” Roderick said. “We were strong in every race and had a chance to win. We’ve just got to keep digging and go into these other races by doing the same thing we did this week.”

Gabe Sommers wrapped up his World Series of Asphalt season by placing third in the Orange Blossom 100. Defending New Smyrna track champion Brad May was fourth, while Connor Mosack, who had finished second in the ARCA Daytona 200 a few hours earlier, rounded out the top five.

The Super Late Models shared the track with five other divisions on Saturday. Below are the other key takeaways from the final night of the World Series of Asphalt at New Smyrna.

  • Bill Burba took home the checkered flag in the Florida Modified finale, allowing him to overtake Cody Stickler for the championship, who was eliminated on Lap 5 after sustaining contact in a battle with Wayne Parker for the lead.
  • Parker ended up finishing in second in Saturday’s feature, where he was followed by Tim Moore, Shain Held and Michael Mark.
  • Brennon Pletcher was victorious in the lone Pro Trucks feature of the World Series of Asphalt. Taylor Watson placed second with Richard Griffis, Kenneth Canales and Becca Monopoli completing the top-five finishers.
  • For the Mod Mini feature, Sean Bass put together a commanding performance that saw him beat Dylan Reynolds by 4.3 seconds. David Russell, John DeGeorge and Rex Christianson rounded out the top five.
  • Paul Koci won the 50-lap Super Stock race over Rich Clouser, Blake Clouser, Doug Samion and Bobby Holley.
  • Noah Partlow formally put a bow on the 2023 World Series of Asphalt with a win in the Bomber B feature, which he took over Frank Button, Chuck Rush, Rick Gaither and Daniel Bromley.

The Action Network specializes in providing sports betting insights/analytics and is a content partner with NASCAR. Check out more NASCAR betting analysis here.

For the first time ever, I am attending the Daytona 500!

I’m dating myself here, but I have attended a NASCAR Cup Series race at Daytona International Speedway — the Pepsi 400 way back in 2002.

Daytona 500 odds have been widely available for several months, so I have a handful of NASCAR picks that I’ve already made. However, I’ll be away from my computer for a chunk of the weekend while traveling to the race.

As a result, I decided to tap a handful of fellow NASCAR bettors to provide their top Daytona 500 picks for Sunday’s race (2:30 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM) to make sure I’m not missing out on any of the top value bets for the “Great American Race.”

So with a little help from my friends, I’ve detailed the latest Daytona 500 odds and NASCAR picks with value heading into this afternoon’s race.

Daytona 500 Odds, Picks

*Odds as of Sunday morning

RELATED: BetMGM updated race-day odds

PJ Walsh: Aric Almirola to Win (+3300 at BetMGM)

Christi Walsh is already on my favorite bet for the Daytona 500, which she details below, so I am highlighting my second-favorite wager instead to avoid repetition.

The Action Network’s Nick Giffen and I have been all over Almirola since odds opened through Thursday night’s Duel races, so this pick may seem a bit redundant. But for those now starting or finishing up their Daytona 500 betting cards, there’s still plenty of value in this number.

Almirola has a knack for superspeedway racing, including wins at Daytona and Talladega in the Cup and Xfinity Series.

In addition, Almirola finished fifth in this race one year ago, which is significant since it was also run in NASCAR’s Next Gen car.

But what makes me most bullish on Almirola is how his car performed en route to a victory in Thursday night’s second Duel race.

At the very low-risk, high-upside price of 33-1, we’re getting an experienced and successful superspeedway racer who appears to have one of the best cars for today’s Daytona 500.

Nick Giffen: Top Toyota — Christopher Bell (+550 at bet365)

Seven Toyota drivers are entered in this year’s Daytona 500. Two of those drivers are rookies making their Daytona 500 debuts.

If every Toyota had equal odds, they’d all be listed at +600, but Bell rates higher than both Travis Pastrana and Ty Gibbs.

My model also rates him better than Martin Truex Jr. and Tyler Reddick. That makes sense given Reddick’s performance in his Duel race, and Truex’s lack of solid superspeedway results over a large sample size.

Bell nearly won his Duel qualifying race over Joey Logano, even without getting much help from his Toyota teammates.

I have Bell’s fair odds at about +475, so +550 at bet365 is one of the better values of any bet still out there per my model. I’d bet this down to +500 and feel good about it.

Stephen Young: Cody Ware Lead Lap Finish (+225 at BetRivers)

It wouldn’t be Daytona if I didn’t have a fun bet that I liked a lot.

In 12 career superspeedway races, Ware has three lead-lap finishes. With that said, he’s been running at the end in 10 of those 12 races.

Half the battle at Daytona is running at the end of the race. If his team can clean up on pit road, Ware should avoid issues while running toward the back. He had a 28.1 average running position on superspeedways last season.

At the end of the day, I like looking for long-shot bets for the 500, and I think this has a good chance of hitting if there are a lot of other issues. There have been at least seven cautions in eight of the last 10 Daytona races.

Christi Walsh: Ryan Blaney to Win (+1200 at FanDuel)

It’s no secret that I absolutely adore betting Blaney, and across the four Cup Series races run in the Next Gen car last season at Daytona and Talladega, YRB posted the best average finish while leading the most laps.

Additionally, three of Blaney’s seven career Cup Series wins have come at Talladega and Daytona.

There’s a valid reason for the price tag, but he’s worth it.

Jim Sannes: Winning Manufacturer — Ford (+150 at DraftKings)

When I look at outright values in my model, almost all of them (excluding Bell at +3000) are Fords.

So, rather than picking one, let’s just lump them all together and bet Ford at +150. DraftKings still has a “winning manufacturer” bet available at those odds. The implied odds there are 40%, and I’ve got Fords winning 41.9% of the time.

We saw their strength on Thursday, and we’ve seen it consistently at superspeedways in the past. I’m fine betting guys like Kevin Harvick (+2500) and Austin Cindric (+2700) individually if you want longer odds.

However, this is the best way to bet them in my eyes.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — JR Motorsports team owner Dale Earnhardt Jr. tweeted about the queasy feeling he had as Saturday evening’s NASCAR Xfinity Series opener headed into its final stage. Three of his four cars had spent time leading on Daytona International Speedway’s high banks, and the lot of them were squarely in the top five and in contention for victory as the laps ticked away.

The nausea turned out to be a fairly accurate predictor of the bedlam that ended Saturday’s Beef. It’s What’s For Dinner. 300.

The JR Motorsports quartet of Josh Berry, Justin Allgaier, Sam Mayer and Brandon Jones all sat lined up second through fifth in that order in the closing laps behind Austin Hill’s No. 21 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet, but none could mount a united charge to overtake it — each with results that varied on the disappointment scale and with questions about the timing of their late-race bid for the win.

RELATED: Race results | Daytona weekend schedule

When overtime came, the list of JRM hopefuls had been trimmed to two who each seemed to have an edge against Hill — Allgaier, who led at the white flag, and Mayer, who avoided his teammate’s block and zipped by on the high side through Turns 1 and 2. The two nearly touched but a tight squeeze with Hill turned Mayer’s No. 1 Camaro into the outside wall, where it made contact and flipped, throwing sparks as it skidded on the backstretch asphalt. He was checked at the infield care center and unhurt, just missing out on his first Xfinity Series victory.

“That really sucks. I mean, I’m more emotionally drained because I was so close yet again,” Mayer told NASCAR.com after returning to the garage area with a 27th-place finish, last among the JRM drivers. “It’s just like, you can taste it, you can see it, you can feel it, and then all of a sudden, you’re feeling something completely different that ain’t that good. But I mean, our team, I’m super proud of everything that we put together today. I mean, we’re hauling the mail, we were able to control the race for a little bit and experience that.”

Allgaier wound up keeping his car straight after his closely contested battle with Mayer, placing third behind Hill and runner-up John Hunter Nemechek. As he took the white flag, Allgaier built out a lead of several car lengths that was quickly erased by Mayer and Hill in front of the more aero-efficient pack. “I knew that if I lifted, I was gonna get swallowed up,” Allgaier said, “and I just didn’t think that was the right choice.”

The choice that Allgaier made with just two laps left in regulation helped turned the outcome. His No. 7 team told him over the radio communications to be ready, preparing him for the move that would break up the single-file group. When Mayer appeared to feint low, Allgaier dove to the bottom lane to set JRM’s attack in motion.

“I really thought it was a little late to be honest with you, which is kind of funny,” said Allgaier, who led 36 laps, second only to Hill’s race-best 39. “You know, (Mayer) felt like it was a little early; I felt like it was a little late. I thought we made the right move, just then you’re worried about running out of fuel and all the other scenarios.”

Said Mayer: “I think it was probably one lap early, but I think the cars, the way we’re set up here, I think it’s what you have to do almost in certain situations. Because once you get the lead, it’s easy to control it once you get up there. You’ve just got to get there first. So I think that’s why he did what he did and why everyone did what they did. But I mean, it’s Daytona. All hell’s gonna break loose anyway. No matter what you do, something’s gonna go wrong, and sometimes you’re on the short end of the stick like we were tonight.”

MORE: At-track photos

Behind them, the jostling continued and contact between Berry and Jones sent the latter’s No. 9 Chevrolet out of line and spinning into the backstretch grass. He drove away from the off-course excursion and finished 14th, on the lead lap.

“Josh did all he could do to try to win the race, right,” Jones told NASCAR.com in the Xfinity garage. “He wanted to make the move to try to get that train started. And here I was late, I was slow, whatever it was, just to make that block and he can’t lift, I don’t think at that point, you know what I mean? If he lifts, it’s gonna stack his deal up, and at that point, I’m committed. I’ve got to try to take it and hope for the best. And it’s something I’ve just got to work on a little bit probably in the future, is just really getting aggressive with making the move like that.

“But it’s just tough, right? You run around all day, and wait and wait on when the plan is going to happen, and when we’re all going to make our move to go. And really, it’s kind of coming a little late for me. I was thinking in my head, eight to go-ish and that’s when we need to start thinking about making this move. And then we get down to five (laps left) and it’s something that never really happened. And so it got down to where it was gonna be pretty late, you’re gonna have one shot at it.”

Berry continued after his contact with Jones, but those same concerns that Allgaier voiced about running out of gas struck his No. 8 Chevy, which sputtered dry under yellow on the first extra lap.

“I think Brandon was sort of late on that block obviously. The last thing I want to do is spin out one of my teammates, but I felt like I was plenty far up on him that I don’t feel like I did anything wrong,” Berry said after finishing 26th.

None of their four efforts were enough to dislodge Hill’s solo march.

“I feel like, everyone has a different opinion, but I felt like we were better with our strength in numbers trying to beat the 21,” Berry said. “He thought otherwise.”

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – After Sam Mayer spun on the roof of his Chevrolet on the backstretch at Daytona International Speedway, trailing a shower of sparks, Austin Hill, Justin Allgaier and John Hunter Nemechek sat in their cars and waited.

And after what must have seemed to be an eternity to the drivers, NASCAR reviewed video of the final lap of overtime and declared Hill the winner of his second straight season opener at the World Center of Racing in front of the largest crowd to witness an Xfinity Series race at Daytona since the $400-million renovation of the facility in 2016.

RELATED: Official race results | At-track photos

A consummate superspeedway racer, Hill led a race-high 38 laps in Saturday’s Beef. It’s What’s for Dinner. 300 and was narrowly ahead of surging John Hunter Nemechek when the sanctioning body called the caution for Mayer’s spectacular accident on Lap 125—five circuits beyond the scheduled distance.

“As soon as the caution lights came on, I thought I had it, but it was so close,” Hill said. “To get back-to-back here at Daytona, it’s really special. That’s three wins for me now, two in the Xfinity, one in the truck here. We came from the back two different times.

“I hope everyone enjoyed it. It was such a blast. I had so much fun. We won at Daytona! Let’s go!”

A screenshot from the finale of the Daytona Xfinity Series race
Here is the photo NASCAR competition officials used to determine the winner. The tower utilizes frame-by-frame video that syncs the time of caution with the time stamp of the video. This is the frame at the time of the final caution of the race.

Hill’s first thought, however, was for Mayer. Contact between Hill’s No. 21 Camaro and Mayer’s No. 1 Chevrolet sent Mayer spinning and then flipping upside down until his car hit the infield grass and landed upright. Mayer was treated and released from the infield care center.

“When I saw the 1 (Mayer) and the 7 (Allgaier) get together, I just went to go squeeze them, and the 1 came down, he started getting loose, and then you can’t lift—it’s last lap,” Hill said. “I hope Sam is OK, man. That was a heck of a flip there.”

Allgaier, who was credited with a third-place finish, had another close call in the race that has eluded him.

“I’ve been short my whole life, so I guess it’s just fitting,” quipped the 5-foot-6-inch driver. “But really proud of everybody at JR Motorsports. Our Chevy Camaros tonight were absolutely blazing fast.

“Obviously, I’m glad Sam is OK. He had a heck of a run there at the end.”

Rookie Parker Retzlaff finished a career-best fourth, followed by Myatt Snider. Riley Herbst, Joe Graf Jr., Ryan Sieg, Cole Custer and Justin Haley completed the top 10.

Hill won the first stage, but only through Allgaier’s benevolence. On the final lap of the stage, Hill steered down the track to block Allgaier’s Chevrolet. Allgaier backed out of the throttle to give Hill room, as the rear bumper of Hill’s Camaro slid uncomfortably close to the nose of Allgaier’s car.

“If I don’t lift, I wreck the whole field,” Allgaier said on his radio. “It’s stupid racing.”

AUSTIN HILL: ‘No idea’ how he won the race

“Justin really cut me a break,” Hill acknowledged. “I really appreciate that from him.”

Allgaier must have gotten some karmic benefit from his magnanimity. When Parker Kligerman turned Sheldon Creed’s Chevrolet while bump-drafting near the entrance to Turn 1 on Lap 40, Allgaier’s Chevrolet spun sideways onto the apron behind the initial wreck.

After a tape job to the left rear of his car, Allgaier returned to the track, started at the rear of the field and quickly charged back into the lead on Lap 54. Allgaier went on to win the second stage, with Mayer close behind him.

“To go to the back and have that spin and just battle our way through, it’s crazy how fast our car was tonight and how good we were in traffic,” Allgaier said.

Unfortunately for the veteran driver, speed, maneuverability and good karma could carry him only so far.

The Xfinity Series will return to action at Auto Club Speedway on Feb. 25 (5 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Note: Inspection in the Xfinity Series garage is complete with no issues, confirming the No. 21 entry of Austin Hill as the race winner.

Contributing: Staff reports.

Daytona 500 at Daytona International Speedway
(⏰ 2:30 p.m. ET | 📺 FOX, FOX Sports App | 📻 MRN, SiriusXM)

Everything you need to know for Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Daytona, the 65th running of the “Great American Race.”

Weekend schedule | TV schedule | Weather tracker | Daytona 101

Location: Daytona Beach, Florida
Race purse: $26,934,357
Grand marshals: NASCAR legends set to give command
Race distance: 200 laps | 500 miles
Stages: 65 | 130 | 200
Starting lineup: Polesitter and more for Sunday
Pit stall assignments: Where drivers will pit on Sunday
How the order was set: Info from qualifying, Duel races
Team previews: Outlook for each team in 2023


Key things to watch 🔑

Top story line

Winning the Daytona 500 is special, no matter the case. But Sunday’s star-studded field, including seven-time Cup Series champion Jimmie Johnson and motorsports superstar Travis Pastrana, has this race tabbed to be one of the all-time greats. If you’re a points-paying regular, winning the opening race of the season sets the tone for a potential championship run and has you less worried about even making the playoffs; for open entrants and other part-time racers, winning this race will certainly be the highlight of their entire year. Capturing the Harley J. Earl Trophy changes how you are seen, a forever champion in the sport’s most iconic race. Being the 65th “Great American Race” winner in the sport’s 75th anniversary season is just that much sweeter.

RELATED: See how drivers fared in the final practice

History tells us…

Even though Chevrolet has the pole-winning speed, it is Ford and Toyota that usually rise to the occasion in the Daytona 500 — at least, in recent memory. In the last eight Daytona 500 races, Ford (four) and Toyota (three) have combined to win seven times, while Austin Dillon collected the only win for the bowties in 2018. Denny Hamlin is the only repeat winner in the last 11 races, winning the Harley J. Earl Trophy an incredible three times. Though Chevrolet has flashed the dominant speed, they have rarely put together a complete race in recent memory and will certainly be looking to buck this trend Sunday with Alex Bowman and Kyle Larson starting on the front row. (Stats courtesy of Racing Insights)

Denny Hamlin, Chase Elliott and Ryan Blaney are the betting co-favorites to win, but watch out for…

Austin Cindric. In his limited Cup Series experience, making his full-season debut in 2022, Team Penske’s rising star has been incredibly consistent in some of the most difficult situations stock car racing has to offer. Since finishing 15th in his first Daytona 500 (2021), Cindric hasn’t finished outside of the top three at Daytona, dating back to his Daytona 500 win and including Thursday night’s Bluegreen Vacations Duel 2 where he finished runner-up. Some may call it lucky, but the No. 2 wheelman seems to have something figured out and is driving for a Team Penske organization that always shows up for superspeedway races. If Cindric can park his Mustang in Victory Lane again Sunday, he will enter the rare air of back-to-back Daytona 500 winners and one of few who have won the crown jewel more than once.

Familiar favorites ⭐️

Our biggest pieces of the week — get covered for race day from all angles.

• Paint Scheme Preview: Dashing colors and schemes for Daytona | Pick a favorite
• Power Rankings: Austin Dillon off to quick start in RCR’s new era | Last week’s driver rankings
• Betting odds: See the favorites, long shots for Sunday’s race | Top bets, underdog picks
• Fantasy Fastlane: After Duel win, is Joey Logano a lock for your lineup? | Fantasy tips, sleepers
• At-track photos: Capturing the best scenes from Daytona Speedweeks | Scroll through them
• Stacking Pennies:
Kyle Larson talks Indy 500 ambitions, Cup season and more | Listen to the podcast
• On the Move:
Changes to know before the 2023 season | Catch up on the details

💎 NASCAR 75: Check out exclusive NASCAR content throughout the anniversary season | Learn more, explore

Hot off the press 📰

Key stories and breaking news from the week leading up to the race.

• Bigger restart zone: New change for 2023 could increase gamesmanship | Read more
• NASCAR Exclusive: How will the choose rule affect the Daytona 500? | Watch the breakdown
• NASCAR 75: 75 greatest drivers to be named as part of anniversary celebration | Read more
• Kevin Harvick: ‘If we have scores to settle, we will settle them immediately’ | Read more
• Garage 56: Race livery for Le Mans unveiled at Daytona | Read more
• Elton Sawyer:
Feature story on one of the leaders at R&D | Read more
• Ross Chastain:
Trackhouse Racing, Chastain reach new contract | Read more
• More contract extensions: Alex Bowman, Ally | Daniel Suárez, Trackhouse
• New faces, new places:
Kyle Busch, Tyler Reddick among changes | Read more
• Official Partner:
Powerball becomes Official Partner of NASCAR | Read more

Get in on the action 💰

Think you know NASCAR? Put your mettle to the test with gaming, fantasy and Fan Rewards.

• Fan Rewards: New in 2023, get rewarded for your participation! | Learn more
• Betting insight: Las Vegas sportsbook takes sharp action on Denny Hamlin | Read full analysis
• Fantasy Live: A new season of NASCAR Fantasy Live will begin with the Daytona 500 | Tips for 2023
• NASCAR BetCenter: Don’t miss your chance to make picks each week | Visit the BetCenter
• Going all the way:
2023 Cup Series championship odds | See them here

Dreaming of Daytona 💫

Relevant history, recent race winners and more from NASCAR’s most iconic track. 

• Starting P1: Every pole winner in Daytona 500 history | See them all here
• Photo, please: Closest finishes in Daytona 500 history | How many can you remember?
• Back to the beach: Photos from the earliest racing days in Daytona | A lot of history here
• Winner, winner: Complete Daytona 500 winner history | Every winner, ever
• Best of the rest: Best drivers to never win the Daytona 500 | See our full list
• Memory lane:
Key moments in the ‘Great American Race’ | Learn which moments stood out

EXCLUSIVE STORYTELLING

The story behind Dale Sr.’s Daytona 500 burnout
Twenty-five years later, Dale Earnhardt’s Daytona 500 victory still stands the test of time
Mark Martin witnessed the most awesome thing as young fan at 1976 Daytona 500
Present and future collide at historic 1976 Daytona 500

Take some notes 📝

Five hard-hitting, race-relevant statistics, brought to you by the experts at Racing Insights.

Alex Bowman has three Daytona 500 poles in seven starts, making him one of seven three-time pole winners in this race.
The last time a defending Cup Series champion won the Daytona 500 was Dale Jarrett in 2000.
Ford and Toyota have combined to win seven of the last eight Daytona 500s.
Kyle Busch leads all drivers in laps led among drivers that are winless in the Daytona 500 with 324.
Chase Elliott and Michael McDowell finished top-10 in the last two Daytona 500s, the longest active streak.

Predicting the winner: Using data to set a projected finishing order

Quote of the week 🎙

A notable quote from one star of the sport heading into Sunday’s race.

• “My first race in the Next Gen car is done, and we finished 14th in the Duel. Wish that we finished a little bit better, but we got a ton of great reps for the No. 84 Carvana Chevy team. I have new over-the-wall guys, a new spotter, new crew chief, a new team – to have this behind us is really good, and I think it was a really successful day. I wish that our strategy was a bit better for the cars we were running with, but we have 500 miles on Sunday to figure that out.” — Jimmie Johnson, driver and co-owner of the No. 84 Legacy Motor Club Chevrolet

As we’ve inched closer to the start of the 2023 season, NASCAR.com has taken a tour through the garage and previewed the upcoming campaign for all the NASCAR Cup Series teams.

Find out what’s new with each organization, plus get a team outlook and analysis on each driver — as well as their championship odds, provided by BetMGM — before Sunday’s Daytona 500 (2:30 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, Sirius XM NASCAR Radio).

MORE: Daytona 101 | Full Daytona 500 odds

Team previews were rolled out and ranked in reverse order of best finish in last year’s owner standings. Here are all the team previews in one place:

Jan. 23: Non-chartered and teams outside the top 30 joey logano drives through the garage
Jan. 24: Spire Motorsports
Jan. 25: Wood Brothers Racing
Jan. 26: JTG Daugherty Racing
Jan. 27: Front Row Motorsports
Jan. 30: Kaulig Racing
Jan. 31: RFK Racing
Feb. 1: Legacy Motor Club
Feb. 2: Richard Childress Racing
Feb. 7: 23XI Racing
Feb. 8: Stewart-Haas Racing
Feb. 9: Joe Gibbs Racing
Feb. 10: Hendrick Motorsports
Feb. 13: Trackhouse Racing
Feb. 14: Team Penske

Brad Keselowski topped the leaderboard in Saturday’s final NASCAR Cup Series practice at Daytona International Speedway at 191.201 mph in the No. 6 RFK Racing Ford.

The morning session was the final tune-up for Sunday’s Daytona 500 (2:30 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR). Last year, Keselowski placed ninth in the “Great American Race.”

RESULTS: Final Daytona 500 practice

Right behind him was former teammate and reigning champion Joey Logano in the No. 22 Team Penske Ford at 191.196 mph.

The top six on the leaderboard were all blue ovals, with Ryan Blaney keeping the Ford contingent rolling in third, followed by Ryan Preece in the Stewart-Haas Racing No. 41, Harrison Burton in the Wood Brothers Racing No. 21 and Chase Briscoe in the SHR No. 14.

RELATED: Johnson tops first practice | Daytona 500 101

Defending Daytona 500 winner Austin Cindric was 14th fastest with a speed of 180.281 mph in the No. 2 Team Penske Ford.

Only 17 of the 40 cars set to line up Sunday elected to make a run during this session, with Burton’s 27 laps setting the high tally.

All that’s left now? The 65th annual running of NASCAR’s most historic race — the Daytona 500.

MORE: Projected Daytona 500 winner | Full odds for the ‘Great American Race’

After a five-day sabbatical, Mother Nature made her grand return to the World Series of Asphalt Stock Car Racing at New Smyrna Speedway on Friday evening.

Shortly after the conclusion of the Hart to Heart 100, which served as the finale for the Pro Late Model division, rain descended upon New Smyrna, forcing track officials to cancel the rest of the evening’s activities, including the prestigious Richie Evans Memorial 100.

RELATED: Follow the World Series of Asphalt on FloRacing

From the moment the green flag waved, the Hart to Heart 100 belonged to Ryan Luza, who passed polesitter Conner Jones on Lap 4 and faced no pressure as he cruised to Victory Lane. The win for Luza was his second during the World Series of Asphalt this year, having previously triumphed on Wednesday.

Despite coming up short of a win, Jones’ second place finish was enough for him to secure the Pro Late Model championship, which capped off a stellar week for him in the division that included two victories and no finishes outside the top five.

Brent Crews and Hunter Wright enjoyed an intense battle to settle the third position, with Crews ultimately prevailing in the closing laps. The rest of the top-10 finishers were Eddie MacDonald, Dawson Sutton, Carson Brown, Katie Hettinger, Gus Dean and Isabella Robusto.

Although the Richie Evans Memorial 100 is not being rescheduled, results will still be counted based off qualifying times earlier in the day. With Matt Hirschman setting a fast lap of 17.545 seconds, he clinched his fourth World Series of Asphalt Modified title while quietly becoming the first driver to sweep the entire week in the division.

The final night of racing in the World Series of Asphalt will be headlined by the Orange Blossom 100 for Super Late Models. Florida Modifieds, Trucks, Mod Minis, Super Stocks and Bomber Bs are also on the docket.

FloRacing has coverage of the final night starting at 7:30 p.m. ET.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Rain got the better of Daytona International Speedway—and that was perfectly all right with reigning NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series champion Zane Smith. NASCAR called Friday night’s NextEra Energy 250 after 79 of a scheduled 100 laps, making Smith the winner when the fifth rain shower of the evening thwarted track-drying efforts.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos

Smith won the season opener for the second straight year, having taken the lead for the final time on Lap 65.

The race would feature only four more green-flag laps after that, as rain continued to interrupt the proceedings.

“I tried to play that race as smart as possible,” said Smith, who will race in the Daytona 500 for the first time on Sunday. “When it was getting really aggressive, I was getting out of it. I knew these patches of rain were a thing in our Ford meeting earlier in the day. I didn’t think it would stick around for this long.

“I just wanted to be there after Stage 2 was over. You never know what can happen. A huge, huge shoutout to all the race fans. I apologize so much that we couldn’t go back racing for you all. Hopefully, we’ll give you guys a good show tomorrow (in Saturday’s NASCAR Xfinity Series race), and I’ll be out there Sunday—so super excited about that.”

Despite suffering minor damage in two multicar wrecks, Tanner Gray was second when the race was stopped. Christian Eckes earned a third-place finish, with Colby Howard and Grant Enfinger completing the top five. For Howard, it was his first career top-five finish.

“Obviously, with the way our night was going, second is a good night for us,” said Gray, whose finish was a career-best in 72 starts. “Not as smooth of a race as we’d like—I got caught up in about every wreck there was.

“All in all, came out with a good finish. That’s all we can ask for.”

Racing for the newly-minted TRICON Garage team, Gray said his Toyota had suffered damage to the front splitter during the two earlier incidents.

On Lap 58 of a scheduled 100, the No. 24 GMS Racing Chevrolet of Rajah Caruth broke loose and applied the coup de grace to the Silverados of Matt DiBenedetto and Daniel Dye, whose trucks had escaped serious harm in earlier incidents.

Smith surged into the lead after a restart on Lap 65 and held the top spot when rain slowed the race for the fourth time. On Lap 74, NASCAR brought the trucks to pit road and halted 6the action. After track drying, the field ran five more laps under caution before rain struck again.

With 12 laps left in the second stage, the No. 84 Toyota of Clay Greenfield spun sideways near the entry to the tri-oval and ignited a seven-car wreck that ruined the ThorSport Racing debut of Hailie Deegan, who No. 13 Ford was severely damaged in the melee.

MORE: Multicar wreck ends Deegan’s day | Caruth involved in Final Stage pileup

The trucks of DiBenedetto, Dean Thompson, Gray, Daniel Dye and Bret Holmes also suffered varying degrees of damage in the incident.

“I saw the 84 (Greenfield) sideways, and that was pretty much that,” Deegan said after her truck was towed to the garage. “I saw him going down the track, so I went up. It was a split-second decision.

“You just go right or left, and they ended up bouncing back up off another truck, so it is what it is. We know that Daytona is one of those races where you either finish in the top 10 or you end up on the trailer home.”

Moments after NASCAR called the fourth caution of the race because of the wreck, rain interrupted the proceedings for the third time, after having caused two short earlier cautions for light sprinkles—first in Turns 1 and 2 and later in Turns 3 and 4 on the massive property.

After the action resumed, the No. 99 Ford of Ben Rhodes turned the No. 52 Toyota of Stewart Friesen into the outside wall on the final lap of Stage 2, with Friesen, who was running at the front of the outside lane, admitting he threw a late block that went awry.

The trucks of Codie Rohrbaugh, Howard, Parker Kligerman and Holmes also sustained damage, as Tyler Ankrum won the stage under caution.

Eckes won the first stage, which was twice put under caution because of the rain.

The Truck Series will take next weekend off and return to action at Las Vegas Motor Speedway on Friday, March 3 (9 p.m. ET, FS1, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Note: Inspection in the Truck Series garage is complete with no issues, confirming the No. 38 entry of Zane Smith as the race winner.

Contributing: Staff reports