The 2023 NASCAR regular season kicks off Sunday with the 65th running of the Daytona 500 (2:30 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), but before that, 2021 NASCAR Cup Series champion Kyle Larson will appear on the next episode of the “Stacking Pennies” podcast with Corey LaJoie.
The 30-year-old driver of the No. 5 Chevrolet for Hendrick Motorsports will look back at his offseason as he prepares for 2023. Larson will also discuss his racing experiences outside the NASCAR circuit, including his involvement in “DIRT,” a six-episode docuseries on FloRacing detailing the driver’s navigation through the dirt-racing realm.
Drawing from his 10-plus-year tenure in the Cup Series, Larson will also talk about what he noticed in the Next Gen car coming off his 2021 title season. With Larson also participating in the Indianapolis 500 in 2024, the NASCAR Cup driver will be eager to prepare for the process in due time.
“I’m pumped about that,” Larson said on the podcast when discussing the Indy 500. “I’m happy it’s going to be next year and not this year because May is not that far away, and I would feel not prepared come 500-time [to do] it this year, so yeah, I’ll get to do as much studying as I can this year.”
The episode is set to release on Wednesday afternoon.
Players must log into their account and go to the NASCAR Fantasy page to assemble their roster for a given week. Players can also get to the game via the NASCAR Mobile App and log into their account. To access Fantasy, click on the menu icon in the top left corner of the app and click on the Fantasy Live link.
The rules for the 2023 season are the same as previous years. Players will pick five drivers to start in their lineup and have a sixth driver in their garage. Before the conclusion of the second stage, players can mix around their lineup. Once the final stage begins, the five drivers in the lineup will be scored.
Throughout the 26-race regular season, players can get up to 10 uses out of a particular driver. Leading into the playoff opener at Darlington Raceway, driver usages will reset and can get up to five additional uses out of any driver. Typically, picks will open every Tuesday.
Points will be based on NASCAR’s scoring system. Each driver can earn you up to 60 points in a given race, just like the on-track product. Drivers in the top 10 at the stage breaks will receive points, with the leader getting 10 points and 10th place getting one point. Should the winner of the race score zero stage points, it will award you 40 points. Official points won’t be handed out until post-race inspection is complete, which is typically within two hours after the checkered flag waves. Should one of your drivers fail post-race inspection, it will resemble your points.
The head-to-head matchups return for 2023. Players will be able to select between two drivers provided and will receive a 10-point bonus for each correct pick with the driver of the higher finishing position. For example, a head-to-head matchup may include Ross Chastain and Denny Hamlin. If you chose Chastain to finish ahead of Hamlin and he does, you get 10 points. Bonus picks will be locked in five minutes before the scheduled green flag and do not count toward driver usage.
New for this year is that you can earn 10 Fan Rewards points each time you set your lineup in NASCAR Fantasy Live. Fan Rewards is a way for registered users on NASCAR.com to earn points toward things like NASCAR tickets, NASCAR merchandise and more. Learn more about Fan Rewards.
Lastly, prizes! The top scorer for this week’s Daytona 500 will win $10,000. The player with the most points for the full 36-race schedule will win $25,000, with the runner-up winning $10,000. Third place will also get $5,000. The top scorer in just the 10-race postseason will win $10,000.
Brent Crews has grown quite familiar with New Smyrna Speedway to open the 2023 season.
Just over a month after finishing second in the facility’s Red Eye 50, the 14-year-old prospect from Denver, North Carolina is back with Donnie Wilson Motorsports for the World Series of Asphalt Stock Car Racing, where he is set to run six Pro Late Model events at New Smyrna over nine days.
The grueling schedule has not intimidated Crews in the slightest, who enters his inaugural World Series of Asphalt with the goal of gaining experience and finding consistency that will help him add his name to a long list of champions in the prestigious event.
“Everything has been going good so far,” Crews said. “I know [Donnie Wilson Motorsports] has put together a great car for me [for the week], but we just have to keep the nose clean.”
Despite his young age, Crews brings both a mature and versatile reputation to the week-long festivities.
In his first year of competing in the Trans Am 2 Championship, Crews quickly adapted to a diverse set of road courses and ended up tallying three victories against established series veterans like Mike Skeen, Rafa Matos and eventual champion Thomas Merrill.
Crews has been at his most efficient on dirt tracks. Already a proven winner in dirt midget racing, Crews put his skills to the test in his second Chili Bowl Nationals attempt in January, where he successfully qualified for the A Main over hundreds of other drivers but finished 24th after an early crash.
The experience on dirt tracks has enabled Crews to transition more seamlessly into pavement racing over the past year, particularly when it comes to compartmentalizing the differences in speed between the two disciplines and how to get the most out of his equipment.
“[Dirt racing] really helps with car control,” Crews said. “The speed on dirt is definitely very different to asphalt. Racing a 410 [Sprint Car] with 960 horsepower on a dirt track is the fastest thing you will ever get in. That makes everything else feel slower and a lot simpler.”
What has impressed Crews’ car owner Donnie Wilson the most in their limited races together is the composure he displays on and off the track.
Despite being 14, Brent Crews has garnered a reputation for his maturity and versatility behind the wheel. (Adam Glanzman/NASCAR)
Having helped develop many drivers in his career, including the most recent World Series of Asphalt Super Late Model champion in current NASCAR Xfinity Series driver Sammy Smith, Wilson said it is not uncommon for young prospects to face some apprehension when they climb into a full-bodied car for the first time.
Wilson has not seen Crews’ mentality get shaken by any obstacle. He expects the young driver to still face a learning curve with both Pro and Super Late Models but is confident Crews’ exceptional race craft will result in a long, successful racing career.
“Brent possesses a lot of knowledge,” Wilson said. “He’s already got a lot of racing experience. He’s fast, he knows what he wants in a car and provides really good feedback. No matter what car you put him in, Brent has a great feel for it and that’s hard to come by for people his age.”
For the World Series, Wilson explicitly wants Crews to understand how track conditions at New Smyrna are going to change every night.
A myriad of factors will influence how the Pro Late Models handle throughout the week along with Wilson’s race-to-race strategy, ranging from the shifting Florida weather conditions to the amount of rubber put down by all the different divisions.
With Crews being used to changing track conditions in dirt midgets, Wilson does not expect him to face too many challenges in that regard but wants his young driver to stay focused on starting up near the front so he can consistently contend for the top spot.
“The goal is for Brent to get a couple of wins,” Wilson said. “With the way the format is, you have to qualify inside the Top 5 every night and see how the dice rolls [with the inverts]. Then we’ll go from there.”
(Photo: Adam Glanzman/NASCAR)
Only one World Series of Asphalt Pro Late Model race lasts longer than 35 laps in the division’s season-ending Hart to Heart 100 on Friday, so Crews understands great qualifying runs are imperative to have a chance at clinching the title.
Crews knows Wilson’s equipment is amongst the strongest at New Smyrna this week but adding another World Series of Asphalt championship for the organization will come down to him utilizing all his experience at the track to be efficient up until Friday’s finale.
“[New Smyrna] is its own animal,” Crews said. “You can run two different lines [in both sets of turns] and that makes it much different than everywhere else. Our expectations are high, but it would be incredible to win a [World Series] championship with this team since they all work so hard.”
Should Crews manage to pull off a title, he would join a stellar list of World Series of Asphalt champions that include Mark Martin, Dick Trickle, Ted Christopher, David Rogers, Matt Hirschman, Ryan Preece and many more.
Crews’ career still has many chapters left to be written, but a World Series of Asphalt championship at one of Florida’s toughest short tracks would continue a strong start to his story.
Editor’s Note: Today’s Team Penske preview completes NASCAR.com’s countdown of team previews for the 2023 Cup Series season, ranked in reverse order of best finish in last year’s owner standings.
Team outlook: Overall, the organization that brought home the Cup Series drivers’ and owners’ championships returns with its core lineup unchanged, a measure of continuity that may bolster its case for a stronger 2023 campaign. Logano became a two-time champ and carried the ball as a four-time winner, and all three drivers qualified for the Cup Series Playoffs. Blaney and Cindric were less-frequent visitors to Victory Lane, but each brought home big prizes — Cindric in the season-opening Daytona 500 and Blaney as a $1 million All-Star Race winner. Finding more win-column consistency across the board rates as a chief goal for Team Penske in the season ahead, but there seem to be no major trouble areas to clean up for one of the series’ biggest chart-toppers in multiple performance categories.
AUSTIN CINDRIC, NO. 2 FORD
Experience: One full-time season in the NASCAR Cup Series. 2022 stats: 12th in final standings; 1 win, 5 top fives, 9 top 10s 2023 championship odds (BetMGM): 50-1
Outlook: Cindric cashed in on Sunoco Rookie of the Year honors last season, establishing himself as the front-runner just one race in. Claiming a Daytona 500 ring counts as the best first-season kick-off imaginable, and Cindric made that his ticket to the postseason in his first year as Brad Keselowski’s replacement with the No. 2 team. His first pole position came just one race later, but only four more top-five finishes followed that initial victory, and he went 0-for-10 in top 10s during the playoff stretch. The 24-year-old driver remains a work in progress, still fairly early in his development even with four years of seasoning as a standout in the Xfinity Series. So far, he’s proven to be an adept superspeedway racer, and his talent for road courses should come through as more of those events appear on the schedule.
“Obviously, last year, a great building block to what I want to make a career in the Cup Series,” Cindric said during a Goodyear tire test last month at Circuit of The Americas. “So, for me, it’s finding what the next level of that is, finding the next level in myself and the people around me and being able to elevate. Obviously, I work with a group of people and in a building that are championship-caliber. Joey’s proved that. It’s great to be surrounded by guys like Joey and Ryan, that I feel like have different strengths in different areas and able to learn from them and compare myself and push each other. I think we’ve got a great group, so yeah, trying to find a way to get myself to that level.”
RYAN BLANEY, NO. 12 FORD
Experience: Seven full-time seasons in the NASCAR Cup Series. 2022 stats: 8th in final standings; 0 wins, 12 top fives, 17 top 10s 2023 championship odds (BetMGM): 10-1
Outlook: Blaney’s 2022 campaign was marked by statistical oddities. He led the Cup Series in stage wins (9), ranked fifth in laps led (636) and finished the regular season third in the points standings. On the flip side, Blaney went winless for the first time in five years — claiming only the exhibition All-Star Race among his triumphs — and squeaked into the postseason field by snagging the final spot in the 16-driver grid. He enters his second season paired with crew chief Jonathan Hassler ready to shake the win-column goose egg, building on the solid consistency by closing the deal. He finished up 2022 strong with finishes of third (Martinsville) and second (Phoenix) to wrap the season.
“Definitely after the year we had last year of kind of missed opportunities and not having the best of years and things like that, not winning, it feels like it makes you more motivated than ever,” Blaney said before the Busch Light Clash. “Really, how our season ended I would say motivates me the most, even without the wins in the regular season or things like that, I messed up two of the races in the Round of 8, and it kept us from getting to Phoenix, and we had a car that could contend at Phoenix, for sure. That kind of stinks and you look back at that, and you’re disappointed in yourself when you’re the one who kind of inflicts both of those mistakes. I think everyone is motivated and I feel like, as a driver, as you get older your mindset is trying not to dwell on those things too hard and just learn from them and move on and realize you’re gonna have good years and bad years and try to figure out a way to come off the bad years and turn them into good years and take the positives out of it and apply it. I think that’s kind of what fuels our team.”
JOEY LOGANO, NO. 22 FORD
Experience: 14 full-time seasons in the NASCAR Cup Series. 2022 stats: Series champion; 4 wins, 11 top fives, 17 top 10s 2023 championship odds (BetMGM): 10-1
Outlook: The veteran of the Team Penske lineup would be hard-pressed to improve upon a title-winning march through the playoffs, where his impeccable timing in winning the Round of 8 opener led to a wealth of confidence for the Phoenix finale. Logano has 11 consecutive years of scoring at least one win, a streak that should continue in 2023. Crew chief Paul Wolfe returns for his fourth year with the No. 22 team, but his contract is up at the end of the season. NASCAR hasn’t had a back-to-back Cup Series champion since Jimmie Johnson ended his five-peat run in 2010. The 32-year-old Logano seems primed to contend for another crown, with plenty of racing years seemingly in front of him and no signs of losing his edge.
“I know I’m not anywhere near the end of my career because I can’t wait to get back in a race car,” Logano said before the Busch Light Clash. “That’s kind of, to me, the telltale sign of where you’re at, and I was very excited about just getting back out here and racing again.”
There was plenty of star power on hand for the fourth night of the World Series of Asphalt Stock Car Racing at New Smyrna Speedway on Monday.
William Byron set the tone early by dominating the 35-lap Super Late Model feature, which also included current NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series competitors in Stewart Friesen and 2016 champion Johnny Sauter.
The evening’s festivities also included races for the Modified, 602 Modified, Pro Late Model and Florida Modified divisions, where plenty of competitors found their opportunity to shine amongst the stars.
Below are the key takeaways from Monday’s on-track action in the World Series of Asphalt.
Three-time World Series of Asphalt Modified champion Matt Hirschman kicked off his quest for another title by taking the 50-lap feature. He had to fend off Saturday’s NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour winner Ron Silk, whose night ended with 14 to go with a blown engine.
Patrick Emerling took home second in the Modified feature despite starting to lose power with 10 laps remaining. Joey Coulter placed third, with Tyler Rypkema and Eric Goodale rounding out the Top 5.
Lapped traffic enabled Conner Jones to move Katie Hettinger out of the way with 15 laps remaining for his second Pro Late Model victory in the World Series of Asphalt. Ryan Luza finished in the second position, with the rest of the Top 5 finishers consisting of Hettinger, Hunter Wright and Gus Dean.
Trevor Catalano picked up from where he left off in Sunday’s incredible photo finish by taking the checkered flag in the 25-lap 602 Modified feature. He was followed in the running order by Ricky Collins, Andrew Lewis, Lee Sharpsteen and Paul Hartwig Jr.
Wayne Parker claimed Monday’s 25-lap Florida Modified race but was disqualified after failing post-race inspection along with third place finisher Jerry Symons. Cody Stickler was declared the winner.
The World Series of Asphalt continues on Tuesday with another full schedule consisting of 602 Modifieds, Florida Modifieds and the 100-lap Clyde Hart Memorial for Super Late Models. FloRacing has the cover starting at 7:30 p.m. ET
NEW SMYRNA BEACH, Fla. — Monday at the World Series of Asphalt Stock Car Racing at New Smyrna Speedway was an evening to remember for Donnie Wilson Motorsports.
Wilson’s cars claimed three of the top four positions in the evening’s super late model feature, and leading the brigade was four-time NASCAR Cup Series winner William Byron, who won twice in his first World Series of Asphalt last year.
Having gone winless since last year’s Blue Emu Maximum Pain Relief 400 at Martinsville Speedway, Byron was relieved to find his way back to Victory Lane and build some momentum heading into the Cup Series season.
“This feels awesome,” Byron said. “[Everyone at Donnie Wilson Motorsports] gave us a great car tonight. It’s nice to come in on short notice and have such a great car. I haven’t won a race in half a year, so it’s nice to do that again.”
Byron said the specific purpose of his trip to New Smyrna for the World Series of Asphalt was to perfect his craft. He believes he improves with every super late model appearance.
That efficiency was prevalent from the green flag, as Byron easily passed the pole-sitter in teammate William Sawalich and faced no pressure for the entire 35-lap feature.
Sawalich, who finished third in front of his other Donnie Wilson Motorsports teammate, Giovanni Ruggiero, found himself in an uphill battle on restarts stuck in the bottom groove. Despite coming up short of a second win on the week, Sawalich felt he gained valuable experience by following Byron.
“This is a crucial part of the learning process [at New Smyrna],” Sawalich said. “I was watching him on track and just trying to do the same things he was doing, and I felt that helped me a lot.”
Byron had seen the success Sawalich enjoyed in both super late model and pro late model competition during the 2022 season and knew he would have to be perfect on restarts to keep the talented young driver in his rearview mirror.
“I was nervous about William,” Byron said. “He’s raced a lot in these cars, so he knows what he is doing. He can have great restarts and maintain with you, so he made me feel nervous going into this race.”
William Byron in action during the super late model feature Monday at the World Series of Asphalt Stock Car Racing at Florida’s New Smyrna Speedway (Photo: Adam Glanzman/NASCAR)
With another night ahead for Byron at the World Series of Asphalt, he intends to keep mentoring both Sawalich and Ruggiero on the minute details that can make them more well-rounded on the track. But Byron admitted both are already mature competitors.
Byron would love to sweep both of his planned appearances at the 2023 World Series of Asphalt by defending his victory in the Clyde Hart Memorial 100 on Tuesday. He expects a more challenging outing with the Clyde Hart Memorial 100 being 65 laps longer than Monday’s race, yet he remains confident he can duplicate his performance.
“[Tuesday] is going to be more of the same,” Byron said. “It’s going to take a little bit more luck [in the Clyde Hart Memorial 100], but we just have to stay dialed in.”
The Clyde Hart Memorial 100 will serve as the headliner for the 2023 World Series of Asphalt’s fifth night. FloRacing has the coverage of the on-track activities starting at 7:30 p.m. ET.
Great rivalries are built with intense, head-to-head competition. Most often, there is a hero and a villain. But what happens when there are a pair of heroes?
You get the 1976 Daytona 500.
When the green flag waved over the 18th edition of the “Great American Race,” racing titans Richard Petty and David Pearson had battled one another 420 times at NASCAR’s top level. Petty won 93 of these matchups, with Pearson running second 27 times. Pearson held his own, winning 80 of those races and Petty finishing second 30 times.
In a sport where Petty once described second-place as the first loser, a slim advantage is enough to brag about.
The difference between the two was even more pronounced in the Daytona 500.
In his 13 Daytona 500 races, Petty had five wins. Pearson challenged him twice with top-five finishes, but Pearson had not yet won the biggest race in motorsports. Pearson had three Firecracker 400 victories in the Daytona summer event — but Petty was always his shadow, finishing second in each.
The two just couldn’t shake one another.
If one is lucky, they get to watch the drama play out live. And the 1976 Daytona 500 had a number of future NASCAR racers doing just that.
NASCAR Research & Archives Center | Getty Images
Jack Roush was one of 125,000 fans in the grandstands that afternoon. It was the first NASCAR race Roush had ever attended, and he was standing in the Wood Brothers’ pits, cheering for their driver Pearson.
“I was in sensory overload, so taking it all in was almost more than I could stand,” Roush said. “But it came down to the final lap, and Richard Petty caused a wreck between himself and David Pearson. Richard spun off into the infield and stopped. David came chugging around the corner with a crashed race car, went on, and took the checkered flag.”
Six cautions waved during the first 174 laps. The final green waved with 22 remaining and Pearson in the lead. After overcoming a lost lap earlier in the race, Petty was now on Pearson’s back bumper, determined this would be his sixth Daytona 500 win and his 178th overall.
In the 1970s, cars were wide and created a lot of aerodynamic wake — and it was widely accepted that in close duels, the slingshot pass was the way to win a superspeedway race.
After leading 11 circuits around the track, Pearson relinquished the lead on Lap 188 and then tucked closely behind Petty, waiting to make his move.
On the final lap, Pearson perfectly executed the slingshot pass on the backstretch. But Petty did not win five previous 500s without a trick or two of his own: He tucked into Pearson’s wake entering Turn 3 and then crossed under Pearson exiting Turn 4.
Petty believed he had the momentum to sweep in front of Pearson. He was wrong. Petty hooked his back bumper on Pearson’s nose and sent both into the wall.
As Petty pirouetted down the frontstretch, Pearson slid to the entrance of the pits and kept his car running. It appeared Petty would have the momentum to slide across the start/finish line.
And as all this unfolded, Mark Martin, 17, was sitting in the grandstands watching rapturously.
Martin’s first Daytona 500 attendance came in 1973, watching Petty lap the field twice. He immediately became a fan of “The King.”
“Of course, we went back the next year in ’74, ’75 and ’76. I was actually in the stands right at the start/finish line in ’76 when my man Richard Petty and David Pearson tangled off Turn 4,” Martin said. “I could not believe my eyes what happened.”
Four years later, Martin would make his first NASCAR Cup start. Twelve years later, he would be the first driver hired by Roush in the Cup Series.
Martin had one of the best views from the stands. But if he looked down next to the fence, Martin might have seen a 20-year-old Rusty Wallace being shooed away from the fence by security.
Wallace was trying to get an even closer look.
“I first started grasping the fact that I wanted to race in NASCAR was when my dad took me to my very first Daytona 500, and that’s the race that Richard Petty’s crashing and David Pearson’s crashing, and I think Pearson goes across the line, wins the race,” Wallace said. “And I’m like, ‘I can’t believe that.’ I was right up against the fence until the police would run me off, and I listened to cars go by and shoot dirt and stuff in my eyeballs, I’m like, ‘Oh my God, I can’t believe how fast these cars are.’ It just blew me away.”
• • •
Rivalries are most often rancorous. That was not the case between Pearson and Petty. Neither driver showed any anger after the race, but in the heat of the battle, Pearson felt his temperature rise.
Despite a quick flash of temper immediately after contact from Petty, Pearson kept his cool. More important, he kept his car running. Driving through the frontstretch grass and then back onto the track he rose above the rest to claim that keystone win that was missing from his personal record book. It would be the only Daytona 500 win of his career.
And perhaps a touch of bragging, too, when it was all said and done.
“David passes Richard on the last lap, and then the crowd roars something awful, and I know that something has happened,” Pearson’s car owner Leonard Wood recalled. “It was right off of Turn 4, where I couldn’t see. And I saw Richard’s car coming backwards up against the wall, and then I couldn’t find David. I looked down to the inside, and he’s spinning around down in the grass, down on the inside. Keyed the radio and says, ‘The blank hit me.’ So anyway, so Richard comes spinning and looks like he [is] going to slide right across the finish line in the grass, but he stopped about 50 feet short.
“Somebody asked David and says, ‘Was you mad?’ He said, ‘No, but I was getting ready to be if I hadn’t won that race.’ ”
“Those guys had run so many races nose-to-tail, first and second, lap after lap after lap,” Kyle said. “You knew it was going to come down to whoever was in the right position because they would just exchange the lead, exchange the lead. And it’s like musical chairs. And you knew as it came down to three or four laps to go that you were going to be in the right seat when they went into Turn 3.
“And my dad, as he did it, he made the move, and he thought he was clear and he thought David was going to do one thing and David didn’t do it. And that’s one thing my dad always said about that race was he didn’t do what I thought he was going to do. And that comes from racing somebody. You just begin to try to think the way they think. So, they crashed.”
NASCAR Research & Archives Center | Getty Images
Kyle and the crew ran into the infield to push Richard’s car across the line, which was and is against the rules, but since Richard had a lap on third-place Benny Parsons, he was still credited with second — the 58th time he and Pearson finished 1-2.
Kyle Petty was ready to lead the crew into Victory Lane to fight the Wood Brothers’ crew.
Until he was stopped in his tracks by a command from the King.
“In a loud way but not screaming, he said, ‘Stop. Come here’. … and he says, ‘This race is over. Next week is Rockingham. Take this car, load it up, and we’ll go to Rockingham and we’ll get him there.’ And we all pushed the car back into the garage area, and nobody ever said a word.
“There was no confrontation. There were no bad feelings. It was over with. And as far as he was concerned, it was. And if it was over for him, it was over with for us.”
Richard was true to his word, winning his 178th race the next week in the Carolina 500 at North Carolina Motor Speedway. Pearson broke an oil pump and was not around for the finish.
But on that spring afternoon in Florida, the biggest race of the 1976 season was in the books, and for the moment, Pearson held a record over Petty. The Daytona 500 was Pearson’s 34th speedway win; Petty had 32.
The team loaded up the trailer and headed off for a bite to eat before heading back to the shop.
They were not alone.
“When that race was over, we left and went across the street,” Wallace recalled. “And there was a restaurant over there, and I’ll be a son of a gun if an old flatbed truck is sitting there with the winning Daytona 500 car parked on it with the whole front end mashed in, David Pearson’s car. I couldn’t believe that it was out there all by itself, sitting in a parking lot.”
We at NASCAR are stoked about kicking off the sport’s 75th anniversary season with Sunday’s 65th annual Daytona 500 (2:30 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Not only will it be great to see cars back on track, but it also will be awesome to take part in the celebration of all the seasons that got us up to this point.
We have big plans to celebrate this special anniversary, and you won’t want to miss any of it. That’s why we have built the NASCAR 75 hub page area of our website to make it easier for you to catch up with all the untold stories, photo memories, longform articles and other unique content that we will roll out throughout the season.
Be sure to bookmark the NASCAR 75 hub page and come back to it often for updates. Check out our historical timeline to take in the key moments in NASCAR’s history. Sift through the season-in-review pages to relive past champions and story lines from 1949-2022. Or pick your dream team of four drivers from different eras and share them with your friends.
Then, don’t forget to hit our news, video or gallery main pages regularly to get updated content throughout the season because it will stream into these pages upon publishing.
This year’s NASCAR 75 coverage plan will be broken up into three segments; our version of stage racing, if you will. The first segment (from January through May) will focus on honoring the past. The second segment (May-August) will celebrate the present. And the final segment (August-November) will drive toward the future.
Join us for what should be a special journey — the 75th such journey for the sport of NASCAR, the 2023 season. We can’t wait to see what new history will be made along the way.
NASCAR’s season kicks off in grand fashion with the biggest race of the year in the Daytona 500. Unique to the “Great American Race” is the qualifying format that includes single-car qualifying and the Bluegreen Vacations Duels that will set the 40-car starting lineup. Here’s a breakdown of how it all plays out.
What time is Daytona 500 single-car qualifying?
Speedweeks festivities begin with a random draw Tuesday afternoon that will determine how cars will roll off pit road for Daytona 500 qualifying. The top 20 in owners points from the previous season will hold the last 20 spots to go in the Wednesday evening session that is scheduled to begin at 8:15 p.m. ET (FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
Each entrant will get one timed lap around the 2.5-mile superspeedway. The two fastest qualifiers will be locked into the front row for Sunday’s Daytona 500 (2:30 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). The rest of the race lineup will be determined by Thursday evening’s Duels.
Chevrolet has won the last 10 Daytona 500 pole awards with Hendrick Motorsports claiming seven in that span. The 2021 Cup Series champion Kyle Larson is the most recent pole winner.
The Bluegreen Vacations Duels will set the lineup from third to 40th for the season opener.
Both races will consist of 60 laps, 150 miles with lineups that were set by the previous night’s qualifying session. The finishers of the first duel will make up the inside rows for the Daytona 500 while the second duel will make up the outside rows.
The charter and open teams will be balanced out with 18 Charters in each duel race and three Open cars [currently] given the six open entrants.
The first Bluegreen Vacations Duel is scheduled for 7 p.m. ET on Thursday while Duel No. 2 is tentatively scheduled for 8:45 p.m. ET (FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
Can open teams qualify for the Daytona 500?
With a 40-car field and 36 guaranteed spots for chartered teams, the “Great American Race” will have four non-chartered teams make the show. If there are more than 40 entrants for the Daytona 500, there will be open teams that won’t qualify for the race.
The two fastest open teams in single-car qualifying will automatically lock into the Daytona 500 without needing to race their way through the Duels. The last two spots will be determined in the duel races.
The highest finishing Open team in each Duel race will earn a spot in the Daytona 500. If the highest finishing Open team already earned a spot in qualifying, then the next fastest Open car in qualifying will lock into the Daytona 500.
There are expected to be at least 42 entries in this year’s Daytona 500, which means two open teams will go home before Sunday. Drivers that will have to make the race in this matter are: seven-time Cup champ Jimmie Johnson, 2022 Truck Series champion Zane Smith, Austin Hill, Travis Pastrana, Chandler Smith and Conor Daly.
The top-10 finishers in each duel will be rewarded points that count toward the regular season but no playoff points will be awarded to the winners of each duel race. The winners of the duels will receive 10 points, the second-place finishers get nine points and so on to the 10th-place finishers who will get one point.
What happens if there is a rainout?
If both duels are canceled due to inclement weather, NASCAR officials will determine the four open teams making the Daytona 500 based on Wednesday’s qualifying results.
In the event just the second duel gets canceled, then NASCAR officials will award the open Daytona 500 spots to the highest-finishing open car in the first duel and determine the other three spots based on qualifying results.
If all qualifying events leading up to the Daytona 500 are canceled and cannot be rescheduled, the starting lineup will be set per the NASCAR Rule Book.