You’ve placed your bets, you’ve got your Fantasy Live lineup set, your pre-season Championship 4 picks have been tweeted … now what?

We cooked up some bingo cards for some friendly competition during The Great American Race. Screenshot ‘em, print ‘em out, or just tap the squares throughout the 500 miles of racing Sunday. Try to score as many on- and off-track happenings as possible!

RELATED: Daytona 500 schedule

The penultimate night of racing at the 2022 World Series of Asphalt Stock Car Racing at Florida’s New Smyrna Speedway featured a pair of prestigious, 100-lap events. It also crowned a couple champions.

Matt Hirschman, who won last Saturday’s NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour season-opener on Night 2 of the World Series before reeling off a pair of Tour-Type Modified wins Wednesday and Thursday, won Friday night’s Richie Evans Memorial 100, the Tour-Type Modified divisions finale for the World Series.

“I couldn’t ask for more, really,” Hirschman said of his team’s efforts over the week at New Smyrna. “Exactly what I wanted to have in the car. The only flaw we had was a tire going flat on Monday night. There’s nobody here who could control that.

“One of our best weeks we’ve ever had, I mean what a week. We actually have done this before; I think we won Wednesday-Thursday-Friday one year. But having the (Whelen Modified Tour) win last weekend, just amazing.”

Jimmy Blewett, Patrick Emerling, Teddy Hodgdon and Craig Lutz rounded out the top five in Friday night’s Richie Evans Memorial 100.

For his efforts in all four Tour-Type Modified races throughout the week at the World Series, Blewett clinched the division championship with his second-place run Friday night.

His finishing positions for the week were second, third, second and second.

MORESights and sounds from Richie Evans Memorial

“Obviously we wanted to win,” Blewett allowed. “But the championship was the big picture. We were looking at the big picture the whole week. Even though we didn’t win a race, we won a championship. And it means something to me to do it against a guy like Matt Hirschman, because he barely ever misses.”

Also on Friday night, Kaden Honeycutt won the Hart to Heart 100, the finale for the Pro Late Model class at the World Series, after a late pass of second-place finisher William Sawalich. Cory Hall, Michael Hinde and Mike Hopkins rounded out the top five.

That fourth-place finish for Hinde in the Hart to Heart 100 was enough for him to clinch the Pro Late Model championship at the 2022 World Series of Asphalt.

In the third and final race of the evening Friday, Derek Pugh won the first Pro Trucks race of the week. Jeffrey White, Dylan LeBeau, Richard Lavance and Paul Grynewicz completed the top five. The Pro Trucks will race again Saturday evening.

Saturday brings the final night of the 2022 World Series of Asphalt Stock Car Racing, and the main event of the final night is the Orange Blossom 100, the finale for the Super Late Model division.

Racing starts at 7:30 p.m. ET and can be viewed live on FloRacing.

NEW SMYRNA BEACH, Fla. — There was no stopping Matt Hirschman on Friday night at the World Series of Asphalt Stock Car Racing. Save for a tire issue Monday, there was no stopping him all week.

Hirschman on Friday won the Richie Evans Memorial 100, the last Tour-Type Modified event of the 2022 World Series of Asphalt and the race named after the late Modified racing legend.

It marked the fifth time Hirschman has won the Richie Evans Memorial in the last six years, and his sixth triumph in the event overall.

He has now won the Richie Evans Memorial more times than any other competitor.

“I couldn’t ask for more, really,” Hirschman said of his team’s efforts over the week at New Smyrna. “Exactly what I wanted to have in the car. The only flaw we had was a tire going flat on Monday night. There’s nobody here who could control that.

“One of our best weeks we’ve ever had, I mean what a week. We actually have done this before; I think we won Wednesday-Thursday-Friday one year. But having the (Whelen Modified Tour) win last weekend, just amazing.”

Hirschman took the lead early in Friday night’s race and never lost it despite multiple restarts.

Jimmy Blewett, Patrick Emerling, Teddy Hodgdon and Craig Lutz rounded out the top five.

For his efforts in all four Tour-Type Modified races throughout the week at the World Series, Blewett clinched the division championship with his second-place run Friday night.

His finishing positions for the week were second, third, second and second.

MORE: Sights and sounds from Richie Evans Memorial

“Obviously we wanted to win,” Blewett allowed. “But the championship was the big picture. We were looking at the big picture the whole week. Even though we didn’t win a race, we won a championship. And it means something to me to do it against a guy like Matt Hirschman, because he barely ever misses.”

Friday night’s Modified race featured a lengthy and somber pre-race ceremony in honor of Evans and others in the Modified racing community who have died.

Evans was a Modified racing legend who was killed in a crash while practicing at Martinsville Speedway in 1985, soon after he had clinched the inaugural title for what’s now the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour.

The Modified finale at New Smyrna’s World Series of Asphalt has been named in Evans’ honor ever since.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Had the caution light not turned on right after the white flag waved, Christian Eckes thinks he could have caught and passed Zane Smith for the win Friday night at Daytona International Speedway in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series season opener.

Instead, Eckes finished third — his first top five at Daytona — while Smith was credited with the first victory of 2022.

“I felt like I was in a good enough position with my teammate before he pulled out to be able to make a move coming to the checkered,” Eckes said. “But when he pulled out, I still felt like we had a pretty good shot being second.

“So, at the end of the day, we’re going to Vegas.”

RELATED: Zane Smith wins Daytona opener | Official results

Las Vegas Motor Speedway is indeed next on the schedule, set for March 4 (9 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Eckes’ teammate, Ben Rhodes, placed second. All three of the top-three finishers led laps at some point, with Eckes leading the way in that small group with nine circuits around the 2.5-mile track out front. Rhodes was credited with six. Smith, three.

“We’ve build a really great team for the 98 with ThorSport Racing), and I’m super happy with everybody on our team,” Eckes said. “I think it’s just a sign of things to come.”

Tanner Gray came in fourth, and part-timer Parker Kligerman rounded out the top five.

Gray’s effort marked his sixth career top-five run in 49 starts. He’s in his third full-time season. Last season, he only had one top five. Season before, he had four.

“Every speedway race that we’ve been to, I don’t think we’ve even finished,” Gray said. “So it feels good to finally finish one and kind of have some luck go our way.”

He really hadn’t completed a superspeedway race before. His two previous Daytona starts resulted in DNFs. Same with Talladega Superspeedway.

“Headed in the right direction so far, but it’s a long season,” Gray said. “Just got to keep on top of things and try to minimize the mistakes on my part.”

Twelve of the 36 trucks did not finish the event running. A large wreck broke out on Lap 99 or 100 that involved 17 contenders, including John Hunter Nemechek, who swept both stages and paced a race-high 50 laps. He turned out 24th on the results sheet.

Eckes was in the lead at the time of the chaos, nearing the finish line, which could have ended the event then all then.

“I thought we were in a good position coming to the white as well,” Eckes said. “Came out little bit short.”

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – A 17-car incident as the field approached the white flag signaling one lap to go instead sent Friday night’s NextEra Energy 250 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series season-opener into overtime where 22-year old Californian Zane Smith won under caution over defending series champion, Ben Rhodes.

A nearly 16-minute red flag was needed to clean up all the debris from the frontstretch melee, which happened only a few feet before the start-finish line and littered much of the track’s tri-oval. Had Smith – the leader at the time – crossed the line before the wreck began, the race would have ended. Instead, the remaining cars that were able to continue, continued.

RELATED: Race results | Watch big wreck before final lap

So Smith had to do it all over again. He lined up alongside Eckes for the final two-lap run to the checkered. A sturdy nudge from behind from Parker Kligerman sent Smith’s No. 38 Front Row Motorsports Ford-150 to the front and he was able to pull away – taking the white flag before a caution flew on the final lap. He led only three laps on the night – including the important last two.

“It’s something else, man,” Smith said of winning at the iconic Daytona International Speedway. “This place is its own, I’ll tell you that. Literally, my heart hurt during that red flag. I thought we had it.

“Just hats off to this whole group. They’ve really put the work in and it’s so damn cool to see when it pays off. Man, this is going to be a really fun year and I’m going to try and make it a record year for myself.”

Reigning series champion Ben Rhodes finished second while his ThorSport teammate Eckes finished third. Former National Hot Rod Association (NHRA) standout Tanner Gray and Kligerman rounded out the top five. Carson Hocevar, Jesse Little, pole sitter Ty Majeski, Danny Bohn and former NASCAR Cup Series driver Matt DiBenedetto rounded out the top 10. This was DiBenedetto’s career first start in the series.

Kligerman, who was the last driver to qualify for the race on speed, started 31st and rallied into the top five ultimately giving that winning push to Smith, who now has four victories and was championship runner-up last year. It was the kind of dramatic racing – there were 18 lead changes – and finish that fans have come to expect of Truck races on the 2.5-mile Daytona International Speedway high banks and it did not disappoint.

RELATED: At-track photos

“This is just huge to get this momentum,” said Kligerman, a part-time series competitor who also does national racing broadcast work for NBC.

He was particularly proud of Friday’s effort considering his truck team has only one full-time employee.

“It’s just such an honor,” Kligerman said. “I’m so grateful to have the chance to just show up here, let alone go out there and compete and reel off a top five. We’re just firing on all cylinders.”

While the ending was certainly exciting, last year’s five-race winner John Hunter Nemechek really dominated the early-going. He led a race-best 50 of the 106 laps and won both Stage 1 and Stage 2. He was caught up in the massive incident while running in the top-five and ultimately settled for a 24th-place showing.

The NASCAR Camping World Truck Series takes a week off and then resumes competition in the Victoria’s Voice Foundation 200 on March 4 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway (9 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Note: Inspection in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series garage is complete. There were no issues. The No. 38 Front Row Motorsports Ford of Zane Smith is officially the race winner.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (Feb. 18, 2022) – Big E, one of WWE’s most versatile Superstars, has been named the Honorary Pace Car Driver for the 64th DAYTONA 500 this Sunday, Feb. 20.

Big E will pilot the “Official” 2022 Toyota Camry DAYTONA 500 pace car, leading the 40-car field to the green flag of The Great American Race, which is scheduled to start at 2:30 p.m. ET. Live pre-race coverage begins on FS1 with NASCAR RACEDAY at 11:00 a.m. ET, before the show’s move to FOX at 1:00 p.m. ET. The season-opener for the NASCAR Cup Series gets the green flag at 2:30 p.m. ET.

Possessing incredible strength, unmatched charisma and the power of positivity, Big E, learned the value of hard work at an early age and found success in football and powerlifting before joining WWE. Big E is a former WWE Champion, Intercontinental Champion and United States Championship, and partnered with Xavier Woods and Kofi Kingston to become one of sports entertainment’s most popular trios, The New Day.

A Tampa, Florida, native, Big E is a former University of Iowa defensive lineman and USA Powerlifting Champion. He actively supports WWE’s bullying prevention program, Be a STAR, as well as the Boys & Girls Clubs of America.

Big E will be a major part of WrestleMania 38, which takes place over the course of two nights on Saturday, April 2 and Sunday, April 3 from AT&T Stadium in Dallas. Tickets for the most stupendous two-night WrestleMania in history are still available at SeatGeek.com.

While the DAYTONA 500 is sold out, there are still plenty of exciting ways to experience the pageantry of Speedweeks Presented By AdventHeath with an excited lineup of super-competitive races. For ticket information, log onto www.daytonainternationalspeedway.com or call 1-800-PITSHOP.

Friday, Feb. 18: NextEra Energy 250 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race (7:30 p.m. ET); ARCA Menards (1:30 p.m. ET) and Camping World Truck Series qualifying (3:00 p.m. ET); NASCAR Cup Series practice (6:00 p.m. ET).

Saturday, Feb. 19: Lucas Oil 200 Driven By General Tire ARCA Menards race (1:30 p.m. ET) and Beef. It’s What’s For Dinner. 300 NASCAR Xfinity Series event (5:00 p.m. ET); NASCAR Cup Series final practice (10:30 a.m. ET); NASCAR Xfinity Series qualifying (11:35 a.m. ET).

Sunday, Feb. 20: DAYTONA 500, The Great American Race (2:30 p.m. ET).

** Schedule subject to change

Fans can stay connected with Daytona International Speedway on TwitterFacebook and Instagram, as well as the all-new NASCAR Tracks App, for the latest speedway news.

Big E’s participation in The Great American Race was unveiled earlier this evening on WWE Friday Night SmackDown on FOX. Fans can follow Big E on Twitter and Instagram, in addition to WWE on Twitter and Instagram, for behind-the-scenes access at Daytona International Speedway this Sunday.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – Already riding a wave of positive momentum and international attention, Sunday’s 64th-annual Daytona 500 (2:30 p.m. ET on FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) is again shaping up to be one of the most high-profile, highly-competitive events as it ushers in the 2022 season.

Reigning NASCAR Cup Series champion Kyle Larson will start his No. 5 Chevrolet from the pole position alongside Hendrick Motorsports teammate Alex Bowman’s No. 48 Chevrolet – leading a field of 40 cars that includes six past Daytona 500 winners, eight former series champions and even a past Formula One world champion in NASCAR’s newest generation of race cars.

RELATED: Daytona 500 lineup | Full schedule for Daytona | Meet the 2022 competitors

The Chevrolets, Fords and Toyotas – aptly referred to as the Next Gen cars – will feature different technical modifications and aesthetic enhancements – from the sequential shifter and 670 horsepower to single center-lock wheel nuts, rearview camera mirror and car numbers now placed behind the front wheels.

The response for the new cars and the sport, in general, has already benefitted from a successful debut at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum two weeks ago. The non-points Busch Light Clash was a nearly sold-out show with some estimates that 70 percent of the crowd were first-time NASCAR race attendees.

The diehards and first-timers paying attention this week at the sold-out annual season-opener at Daytona are expected to be treated to a highly competitive race.

Although Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolets have won the pole position in seven of the last eight Daytona races, the multi-championship organization hasn’t won a Daytona 500 since Dale Earnhardt Jr. did so in 2014. The last time a Daytona 500 pole sitter won the race was 22-years ago when Dale Jarrett won the 2000 edition. Hendrick’s former champion driver-turned-team executive Jeff Gordon won from pole in 1999.

More often, this race has come down to the final thrilling laps. That was certainly the case last February when Front Row Motorsports driver Michael McDowell earned his career first NASCAR win taking the checkered flag by inches – credited with leading only the last lap.  That scenario has played out frequently in recent years with race winners Austin Dillon (2018) and veteran Kurt Busch (2017) also capturing the win leading only the final lap.

There is only one multi-time winner in Sunday’s race – three-time Daytona 500 champion Denny Hamlin, who drives the No. 11 Toyota for Joe Gibbs Racing.

RELATED: See every Daytona 500 winner | See every Daytona 500 pole winner

Adding to the drama in 2022 are several new team/driver combinations. Busch is now driving a second car for the second-year 23XI Racing Toyota team owned by Hamlin and NBA legend Michael Jordan. His former teammate at Chip Ganassi Racing, Ross Chastain has similarly joined a new team. He’ll team with Daniel Suarez in the No. 1 Chevrolet fielded by TrackHouse Racing, which is co-owned by former driver Justin Marks and musical superstar Pitbull.

Former series champion Brad Keselowski has expanded his presence in the sport and now co-owns the Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing two-car team. His involvement with the RFK team – as owner and driver of the No. 6 Ford – has already resulted in two trophies. Keselowski (Duel 1) and Chris Buescher (Duel 2) helped RFK Racing to a sweep of Thursday’s Daytona qualifying races the first time a team accomplished a the feat since 2015.

Kaulig Racing added to its championship-caliber NASCAR Xfinity Series program with a full-time NASCAR Cup Series car driven by Justin Haley in 2022 and a second car that will be shared by three drivers. Erik Jones – a former summer race winner at Daytona – will team with Ty Dillon in the newly formed Petty GMS Motorsports organization.

And first-year NASCAR Cup Series drivers – former NASCAR Xfinity Series champion Austin Cindric (Team Penske) and second-generation NASCAR drivers Harrison Burton (Wood Brothers Racing) and Todd Gilliland (Front Row Motorsports) will compete for top rookie honors.

RELATED: Updated Daytona 500 oddsChanges to know for the 2022 season 

Cindric has the top starting position (fifth) among rookies. The defending Daytona 500 winner McDowell will start sixth after an impressive run in Thursday’s qualifying race. And the 2015 Daytona 500 winner Logano will drop to the rear and have to go to a back-up No. 22 Team Penske Ford after an accident in his qualifying race.

Former Formula One champion and 1995 Indy 500 champion Jacques Villeneuve, 50, and current Xfinity Series title contender Noah Gragson raced their way into the Daytona 500 starting field in qualifying. It will be the first start in this race for both and Gragson’s first Cup start.

Kaz Grala qualified for the Daytona 500 starting field with a dramatic last-lap pass to claim an “open” position available to non-chartered teams based on their Duel race result. Greg Biffle, 52, a former NASCAR Camping World Truck Series and Xfinity Series champion and perennial Cup Series title contender from 2003 -2016, earned the other 500 position with his finish in the second Duel.

RELATED: Kaz Grala, Greg Biffle snap up Daytona 500 berths | How The Money Team Racing made the Daytona 500

Overall, the qualifying races were run with rave reviews. And the car manufacturers said they have high expectations for Sunday’s race.

As is customary just prior to the season-opening Daytona 500, executives from all three NASCAR manufacturers – Chevrolet, Ford and Toyota – spoke to the media on Friday. All reported being greatly satisfied with the racing to date at Daytona, yet cautioning there is a lot to be learned about the cars and the way they race. Inventory counts remain conservative but all three makes expect that to be changing in the upcoming months. 

“For the next few weeks we’ll have to be mindful and make good decisions,” Toyota Racing Development’s David Wilson said. “What we can’t do is ask a driver once he pulls that visor down to mitigate his performance based on concerns about parts. That’s not racing.”

They also pointed to pit strategy as playing a greater role in the race. That was certainly the case in the qualifying races with the Ford contingent taking only two tires on its pit stop to get back out on track in front of the Chevrolets, which all serviced four tires on their pit stop.

“On the surface, I don’t envision 40 cars lined up three by three heading to the finish line. I just don’t think that’s going to happen,” Wilson said. “There’s the potential for more cars to go a lap down or two, but strategy, communication, teamwork are going to be absolutely critical to whomever wins that race on Sunday afternoon.”

Reigning Daytona 500 champion Michael McDowell was the fastest man in Daytona Beach, earning the top spot in third practice for Sunday’s Daytona 500 (2:30 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Ford Performance drivers took up the first six spots in the 50-minute session. McDowell’s No. 34 Front Row Motorsports Ford was followed up by teammate and NASCAR Cup Series rookie Todd Gilliland in the No. 38 Ford.

RELATED: Daytona 500 schedule | Lineup for SundayThird practice results

David Ragan finished third in the No. 15 Rick Ware Racing Ford. Chris Buescher and Brad Keselowski rounded out the top five after both drivers swept the Bluegreen Vacations Duel qualifying races for Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing on Thursday night.

Cody Ware, Bubba Wallace, Chase Briscoe, Aric Almirola and Noah Gragson finished out the top 10.

Wallace and other Toyota counterparts, including Denny Hamlin and Martin Truex Jr., paced a handful of laps before taking it to the garage for the evening. During FS1’s broadcast, Wallace indicated that the No. 23 23XI Racing team are done with their practice efforts despite the final practice session scheduled for Saturday morning (10:30 a.m. ET, FS2, coverage moves to FS1 at 11 a.m. ET). Kurt Busch, Wallace’s teammate, also noted that he and the No. 45 team would elect to forgo the last session.

Hendrick Motorsports drivers, including Busch Light pole sitter Kyle Larson, front row starter Alex Bowman, Chase Elliott and William Byron took advantage of the time on track, drafting with each other until the conclusion of the session.

Editor’s note: Bozi Tatarevic is a professional racing mechanic and pit crew member. He will provide technical analysis for NASCAR.com throughout the 2022 season.

Things heated up as the second Bluegreen Vacations Duel qualifying race was coming to a close Thursday night when leader Joey Logano attempted a block on the No. 17 Ford of Chris Buescher, which ended with Logano’s No. 22 Ford breaking loose and going nose first into the wall. The impact resulted in Logano’s car bouncing back from the wall and impacting the right front corner of the No. 21 Ford driven by Harrison Burton. This was our first view of what a multi-car crash at a superspeedway might look like in the Next Gen era, and the results have been encouraging so far.

RELATED: Daytona 500 lineupJoey Logano shoulders blame for Daytona Duel crash

Driver safety is an integral part of the Next Gen car and Logano shared that he was encouraged by what he experienced in that crash.

“I feel OK. I feel fine. I got out and I feel fine. That’s a good sign,” Logano said. “I hit the wall fairly hard and got out no problem. That part is good if there’s a positive to it. I don’t want to be the crash test dummy, but definitely was today.”

With Logano being released from the infield care center, the attention turned to his damaged car and how his team would help him get back on track as quickly as possible. The decision was made that they would go to a backup car in order to save time over repairing the damaged car. The engine and a few other components that needed to be transferred over were removed from the damaged car to be installed in the backup car, and then it was trucked back to North Carolina.

Once back in North Carolina, the car was stripped down and according to sources familiar with the process, the damage was less extensive than expected with the front edge of the front clip sustaining the brunt of it. In addition to the front end damage, it also had a broken toe link in the right which was the result of the impact with Burton. The toe link break makes sense, as that is somewhat of a sacrificial part since it can be replaced easily but prevents bigger components in the suspension from sustaining damage.

Front clip

Inset1 Frontclip

The general condition of the No. 22 car points to repairs that could likely be completed in less than a day with the installation of a new front clip and body panels, plus some suspension repair on the right rear. This is promising for the long-term goals of being able to reuse the Next Gen car for many races. In this case, it made more sense to go to a backup car and save a little time since one was available, but that wrecked No. 22 Ford  is likely to be repaired in the coming days and make an appearance at a race down the road.

The No. 21 Ford of Burton fared a little bit better as its front right corner impacted the right rear corner of the No. 22 after it rolled back into traffic. This type of impact would have likely resulted in the use of a backup car with the previous generation Cup, but the No. 21 crew decided to complete a repair and the process appears to be better than expected.

Bumper support

Inset Bumpersupport

As we noted earlier this week, the composite body panels on the Next Gen car are individually replaceable. In this case, the No. 21 Ford required a new bumper cover, fender and hood. In addition to those body components, the Ford also received a new front bumper support, which is the piece that sits between the front clip and the bumper cover. The front splitter that sits below the bumper cover was also replaced.

Outside of the cosmetics, some of the suspension components on the right front corner of the car were also replaced as the wheel had an impact during the incident and may have bent some of the pieces behind it. Overall, it appears to have been a fairly straightforward repair that only took a few hours versus the move to a backup car that we might have seen after a similar impact last year, since the bumper support was not a piece that could be replaced as easily.

This is a promising start for the reparability of the Next Gen car. A superspeedway is one of the toughest environments for a race car, and being able to reuse a car after it crashed at Daytona would often require extensive repairs in the past.

Giselle Zarur has never seen Daytona International Speedway in person until this weekend, but her first footsteps on the hallowed grounds will be historic ones.

When FOX Deportes fires up the airwaves for Sunday’s Daytona 500 broadcast, Zarur will become the first Hispanic female pit reporter to cover NASCAR’s most prestigious event.

RELATED: Daytona weekend schedule | FOX Deportes: NASCAR

“I feel super honored and humbled for these moments because as a Latino woman, I feel proud about it, of course, but I work to be here and I want to make sure I’m not the only Latino woman to do it,” Zarur told NASCAR.com. “I feel a responsibility to embrace more women to follow their dreams no matter where they are or what they want to do. For me, there’s no limits.”

Zarur’s dream to cover sports started at a young age.

Beginning with her middle school and high school days, Zarur began following sports because her brother was a big fan of soccer. The emotions that were brought out of her brother when he watched enticed her to follow along with him, learning how sports bring out passionate feelings.

After realizing the essence of sport, Zarur began following soccer and other forms of athletics. She combined the new fandom with her desire to begin a broadcast journalism career by studying communications during her collegiate years.

The sports journalism path brought her closer to the competition than she could have ever imagined – launching her career at Televisa Deportes in 2010. During that span, she served as a reporter for Mexico’s soccer league Liga MX, tennis, Formula E, WRC and NASCAR Mexico. She also covered Formula 1 for Canal F1 Latinoamérica, the organization’s official network in Latin America.

“The best way to be connected to sports — because I’m not an athlete and I didn’t practice sports and I loved them as a fan — but a good way to be closer to sports was doing sports journalism,” Zarur said. “I started that way, looking for jobs in journalism always in sports. That’s the way the story began.”

Prior to her NASCAR endeavors, the Mexico City native transformed into a seasoned Formula One reporter, covering the likes of Lewis Hamilton, Sebastian Vettel and Fernando Alonso. Zarur has also interviewed some of the world’s top athletes in other realms, including Usain Bolt, Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal, Mo Farah, Lorena Ochoa, Michael Phelps and Ana Ivanovic.

Zarur is currently an on-air talent for FOX Deportes’ top properties, including Liga MX, NFL and NASCAR. While she’s no stranger to iconic events that previous journalistic responsibilities allowed her to showcase her talents, she is well-versed in why the high banks of Daytona are so meaningful to so many.

RELATED: Learn more about NASCAR’s diversity efforts

“I think Daytona is special,” Zarur said. “I’ve never been there, so it’s my first time going to that race. There’s a lot of emotions together. It’ll be my first time doing pits for NASCAR, my first time going to Daytona, my first time of everything. I’m excited. I can’t wait to see that monster of a track.”

While breaking another barrier to make history is another highlight to her storied career, what’s even more important is the impact she hopes to make for other women who have the same career aspirations. The messages of support from other women on social media also drive her top-notch work ethic in the process.

“I do this because I love it,” Zarur said. “This is my passion. Every time I go to work, I don’t see it as work. I’m just having fun because I love to do it. So, when I read all these things, it makes conscious of the responsibility of each one of my words and each one of my interviews … my word has to be an example for them because if they’re getting inspired by this, I want them to feel motivated, to see that they can do it and to embrace them to follow all the dreams and their goals.”

Zarur also had the chance to cover the Busch Light Clash at the L.A. Memorial Coliseum, which put NASCAR in the heart of Los Angeles. After taking in the event, she hopes NASCAR continues to push their limits and think about growth on an international stage.

RELATED: Jusan Hamilton to become first Black race director of Daytona 500

“It will only help the sport – to make it bigger and to go worldwide,” Zarur said. “It’s opening up different doors and different opportunities for people to see the sport and see how amazing it is. There’s a lot of space to grow for NASCAR.”

When Zarur grabs the microphone on Sunday, she wants to represent and empower women of other nationalities – displaying that those same steps she is set to take on pit road in NASCAR’s most iconic stage will leave a trail of possibility for the next generation.

“There’s someone on the other side that is watching you, so I think I learn also from them,” Zarur said. “I learn because the way they are interested, it reminds me of how I started with it – with this emotion and doing everything with all my heart.

“For me, it’s not that I inspire them, but they inspire me to be better every day.”