With NASCAR production days in the rearview, we’ve had a glimpse of the fresh fire suits and sparkly helmets that Cup Series drivers will adorn for the 2026 season. The Cook Out Clash at Bowman Gray Stadium is on deck this Sunday (8 p.m. ET, FOX, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), with the Daytona 500 right around the corner. And while it’s important to get off to a scorching start in 2026 NASCAR Fantasy Live, players need to find the right balance, knowing there are 25 other grueling races before the return of The Chase.
Over the last handful of seasons, the Daytona 500 has turned into a skillful crapshoot. Sure, William Byron is aiming to become the first driver to ever hoist the Harley J. Earl Trophy in three consecutive years. But before Byron’s two triumphs, Michael McDowell, Austin Cindric and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. each scored upset victories, with the former two visiting Victory Lane for the first time in their respective Cup careers.
The rough-and-tumble nature of the last 10 “Great American Races” have resulted in six overtime finishes, including the longest Daytona 500 in 2023 (530 miles) won by Stenhouse. The Hyak Motorsports driver’s name comes up often at superspeedways, with all four of Stenhouse’s Cup victories coming in the draft. He’s certainly a driver to keep on the list of potential starters for Daytona. But fantasy is not all about Daytona.
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Budget your roster for the 2026 season
Don’t overload with heavyweights at superspeedways, which includes the grandaddy of them all, the Daytona 500. Mixing and matching is fine, but the total allotment of points scored by even the highest-tallying driver on drafting tracks in 2025 was Tyler Reddick (199). Divide that by the six races, and it’s barely cracking the 33-point barrier per event.
Until Kyle Larson erupted to the second-most points scored at drafting tracks in 2025 (197), along with the second-best average finish (12.3), trailing only Reddick in both categories, superspeedway racing was a detriment for the two-time Cup champion. Consider this, though: Each player gets limited starts with a driver. Would you really want to burn one up on a superspeedway race? The No. 5 bunch is certainly capable of winning at Daytona, but the odds of tallying more points in another race in the near future (hello, Las Vegas, Bristol and Kansas) is far more likely.
It can get tricky with other drivers, such as Byron and Ryan Blaney. Both drivers excel at superspeedways, with Blaney being the most recent victor at the famed 2.5-mile oval last summer. Both drivers also cracked the top five in points tabulated at superspeedways last year. But it’s worth remembering these drivers will likely also be in your lineup frequently throughout the 2026 season, and Daytona could be a wasted start. Personally, I’ll wait to see the rhythm of Speedweeks before settling on any big-name drivers in my lineup.
Front-running drivers at Daytona often wreck late
The unpredictability of Daytona presents an opportunity to choose drivers for your lineup who might not make the cut at a standard track. And the drivers who dominate the Great American Race tend to wreck out late. Three-time Cup champion Joey Logano has led 21.9% of the laps across the last two 500s (88 of 401) and has a dissatisfying 33.5 average finish to show for it. He has one Daytona win on his resume, some 11 years ago in the 2015 “Great American Race.”
Brad Keselowski, who’s still searching for his first Daytona 500 win, also fits squarely into this category. The 2012 champion is arguably the best superspeedway racer of his generation – seven combined victories – but he has a best finish of ninth in his last 11 cracks in the coveted race. In his four starts in the season-opener since becoming a co-owner of RFK, Keselowski has led the most laps twice (2022, 2023) and has three finishes of 22nd or worse in a row.
The flipside to both Logano and Keselowski at Daytona is with how elite they are at drafting, they can rip off stage points in bunches, netting out to a respectable sum for the day. It remains to be determined on if I’ll use either in this year’s conquest of Daytona.
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Think outside the box
When analyzing which longshot and undervalued drivers you could settle on for Daytona, remember that some drivers just have a knack for the draft. Stenhouse is top of mind, having a pair of victories at Daytona in 27 attempts. Spire Motorsports driver Michael McDowell (152), and his former Front Row Motorsports teammate Todd Gilliland (151) fit the bill, respectively scoring the eighth- and ninth-most points at superspeedways in 2025.
Some off-the-wall names to look at for Daytona, specifically: Cole Custer, who was in position to win both Daytona races in 2025 on the final lap. He was ultimately the catalyst for the final-lap melee in last year’s 500 but rebounded with a season-best fourth-place effort in August. Corey LaJoie first needs to qualify for the race in a fourth bid from RFK Racing, but should the No. 99 Ford make the show, he could be lethal. LaJoie led 10 laps last year after making the race with Rick Ware Racing and was in position to pull off the upset had he not been involved in a late wreck. Nine of his 11 career top-10 finishes have come at drafting tracks, with five coming at Daytona alone.
Daytona is among the few tracks on the calendar where you can’t go wrong with making an off-chance choice for your lineup. With the unpredictable nature, you just hope those choices are correct.
Don’t panic!
While earning the most fantasy points at Daytona does entail a $10,000 reward, should you come up short, there is still a lot of racing left – and a lot to play for this season. The overall winner of NASCAR Fantasy Live in 2026 takes home $25,000, with the runner-up netting $10,000 and third-place earning $5,000.
It’s a tall task to build the perfect roster for Daytona, which makes it a true game of chance. But strategies are plentiful for the duration of the schedule, with plenty of resources available to assemble the best roster each week.