Tag: Coke Zero 400

  • ‘Big One’ strikes midway through Cup race at Daytona

    ‘Big One’ strikes midway through Cup race at Daytona

    The “Big One” took out or affected close to a dozen cars near the halfway mark of the Coke Zero 400 at Daytona International Speedway.

    As the field rounded Turn 2 on lap 71, Kyle Busch, running seventh in the top line, wiggled and spun out. Kurt Busch and Ryan Blaney, who were running behind him, drove past Kyle on the high-side before the hole closed. But because he was running closer to the wall in the middle of the field, others weren’t so lucky. Joey Logano, behind Blaney, didn’t reach the hole before Busch was pulled back up track and was collected in, officially, a 10-car pileup exiting Turn 2.

    Prior to the wreck, Busch radioed that he felt a tire going down. Kurt, who was drafting behind his brother when the spin happened, also said he smelled a tire rub. Video replay showed Kyle Busch making contact with Michael McDowell heading into Turn 1, leading to a left-rear tire rub and tire failure.

    “I saw four our five laps before the wreck that the 95 got into the side of the 18. I didn’t see any smoke off the 18, just a near miss. Then four or five laps later I think the left-rear popped on the 18 and around he started going and we were there,” Logano said. “Wrong place at the wrong time again for us. It’s superspeedway racing. Sometimes you’re on the good side of it, sometimes you’re on the wrong side of it. That was the bad one. We’ll just move and head to the next race.”

    Among the collected was, Martin Truex Jr., While whoahing his car down, he hit the rear of Logano’s car and was rear-ended by Jamie McMurray, sending him up into the wall. Austin Dillon was another, who in the smoke of the wreck, submarined under the rear of Truex’s car.

    “I just tried to slow down, but you know you get hit from behind, you hit the guy in front of you – there’s nothing you can do,” Truex said. “When you’re going 190 something and everybody stops in front of you, it’s kind of hard to do anything. Unfortunate night for sure for our Bass Pro Toyota. This July race, man, I don’t think I’ve finished it in like five years. It’s just – it’s been a tough one every time. Every time we feel like we’re doing something okay we get in a big wreck, so it’s been a tough one for sure but rebound and go to Kentucky and hopefully go for some more wins.”

    Dillon, who was blinded by the smoke created from the wreck, said he didn’t see what happened, nor was he sure what had happened.

    “I tried to slow down, I downshifted and it wasn’t enough,” he said. “We knocked the oil cooler and radiator out of ours. Fun race for the American Ethanol Chevrolet race team and as part of this deal you have to shove yourself in a bad position. I should have been smarter and rode around like half of the others in the field, but we were trying to get some bonus points there coming to the end of the stage. It didn’t work out.”

    Kyle Larson turned briefly onto the apron when Busch spun out. The sudden change of banking loosened his car and he spun out exiting Turn 2 onto the apron.

    He was later collected in a multi-car wreck in the closing laps, but leaves with an 18-point lead over Truex. Dillon sits 21st in points, but has a win on the season that locks him into the playoffs. With his “encumbered” win, Logano is still on the outside looking in.

  • Stenhouse Gets Second Win of Season at Daytona

    Stenhouse Gets Second Win of Season at Daytona

    Ricky Stenhouse Jr. took the lead in overtime to earn the second victory of his Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series career.

    With the Coke Zero 400 at Daytona International Speedway going past its advertised conclusion of 160 laps, David Ragan led the field to the green flag. Heading down the backstretch, he made the move to the high line, leaving the bottom open for Stenhouse to swoop down and pass him to drive onto victory.

    Clint Bowyer came home second and Paul Menard rounded out the podium.

    Michael McDowell and Ryan Newman rounded out the top-five.

    Ragan, Brendan Gaughan, AJ Allmendinger, Erik Jones and Chris Buescher rounded out the top-10.

    Dale Earnhardt Jr. led the field to the green flag at 7:58 p.m. He wouldn’t lead the first lap, however. That honor went to teammate Chase Elliott, who passed him in Turn 3.

    Elliott dropped to the bottom and let Brad Keselowski pass him without a fight on the sixth lap.

    Caution flew for the first time on lap 10 when Cole Whitt lost an engine.

    It flew again on lap 16 when DJ Kennington lost an engine and spun out in Turn 4.

    Keselowski and Kevin Harvick battled for the lead, which Earnhardt joined in around lap 31 through 35, before Keselowski took the lead for good on lap 38 and won the first stage.

    With Erik Jones now leading, who elected not to pit, the race resumed action on lap 47. Denny Hamlin took the lead from him on lap 49.

    The following lap, Daniel Suarez and McDowell made contact exiting Turn 4. Rather than merge back into line, the two drivers chose to dive full speed down pit road — using it as an escape route, which NASCAR allows drivers to due to avoid a wreck or avoid causing one — and rejoin the pack on the other side.

    Caution flew a lap later when Dale Earnhardt Jr. slammed the wall in Turn 1.

    Caution flew again on lap 59 when Jeffrey Earnhardt suffered an engine failure.

    The first Big One of the night occurred on lap 71 for a 10-car incident in Turn 2.

    The second stage was largely dominated by Denny Hamlin and Matt Kenseth, with Kenseth winning the second stage.

    Gaughan brought out the seventh caution on lap 90 when he hit the wall in Turn 2.

    The next caution flew for Elliott and Trevor Bayne spinning out on the backstretch on lap 98.

    The second Big One happened on lap 106.

    The next two cautions were for a Kasey Kahne solo spin and a shredded tire from Matt DiBenedetto’s car.

    Three laps after the restart with 28 laps to go, Suarez goes to the outside of Stenhouse to take the lead.

    From 22 to 20 to go, Suarez and Kahne raced side-by-side for the lead, with Kahne gaining the upper hand with 19 to go. Stenhouse side-drafted Kahne down the backstretch to retake the lead with 11 to go. Ty Dillon snuck his way into the lead with eight to go.

    Caution flew for the 13th time with eight to go for a multi-car wreck that resulted in Kyle Larson’s car going airborne and Kurt Busch slamming the wall head-on in the tri-oval.

    Back to green with three to go, Dillon had no draft help and Ragan got an excellent push past him going into Turn 1.

    A multi-car spin on the backstretch brought out the 14th caution and set up the run to the finish.

    The race lasted three hours, 17 minutes and 12 seconds at an average speed of 123.986 mph. There were 33 lead changes among 16 different drivers and 14 cautions for 51 laps.

    Larson leaves with an 18-point lead over Truex.

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  • Earnhardt Through the Years at Daytona

    Earnhardt Through the Years at Daytona

    Whether it’s Dale Earnhardt or Dale Earnhardt Jr., the Earnhardt name is synonymous with racing at the world center of racing.

    Combined, the elder Earnhardt has 34 wins across multiple racing series over a career that spanned 26 years. In the same vein, the younger Earnhardt has 17 across multiple series.

    In the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series, Junior first raced on the high banks of Daytona International Speedway on February 20, 2000, coming home 13th in the 42nd running of the Daytona 500. On the return trip in July, he finished 35th.

    The following year, he led 13 laps and pushed teammate Michael Waltrip to his first career victory in the 43rd 500. On the final lap, however, Dale Earnhardt — his team owner and father — got loose in Turn 4, turned up the track and slammed head-on into the wall, suffering a fatal basilar skull fracture.

    On a number of occasions, Junior has told the story of how a week before NASCAR returned to Daytona for the July 7 Pepsi 400, he took a lap around the track, parked his vehicle in Turn 3 and walked until he reached the grassy knoll spot in Turn 4 where his father’s wrecked car came to a rest.

    He did so because he believed it was a placed he wanted to visit. Even to this day, 16 years later, he still takes the time to look at that grassy knoll in Turn 4 every time he comes to Daytona. More importantly, his reason for doing so initially was to know what emotions would bubble up to the surface so he could deal with them at that moment, rather than during the race.

    “I told myself what I was going through is the same sadness that some guy somewhere in the Midwest is dealing with right now,” he said in a feature on NBCSN. “Who am I to go on and on about how hard it was, because somebody, somewhere right now is dealing with a loss.”

    Earnhardt had the dominant car in the Pepsi 400, leading over 100 laps. But on the final restart with six laps to go, he was running sixth behind Johnny Benson, Dave Blaney, Ken Schrader, Jeremy Mayfield and Tony Stewart. Rounding Turn 1, Stewart went high to pass Mayfield, and the two gave Earnhardt a run that he tried to use up high. Stewart blocked it, but Earnhardt dove to the inside and took fifth exiting Turn 2. He passed Schrader, who was denied the bottom line by Mayfield entering Turn 3, to take fourth.

    With help from Mike Wallace, he drove to the outside of Mayfield in the tri-oval to take third with five to go. He side-drafted Blaney to take second down the backstretch and set his sights on Benson.

    He carried the momentum past Benson on the high side through Turn 3, took the lead with four to go and was pushed by teammate Waltrip to victory.

    “It’s going to be Dale Earnhardt Jr., using lessons learned from his father to go from sixth to first and score the victory in the Pepsi 400,” said NBC play by play announcer Allen Bestwick as the field was coming to the checkered flag.

    The next two years at Daytona were hit and miss for Earnhardt with finishes of 29th, sixth, 36th and seventh.

    On February 15, 2004, six years to the date his father won his first Daytona 500, Junior passed Stewart with 19 to go and drove on to victory in the 46th running of the Daytona 500.

    In the 10 years between his 04 and 2014 victory, he finished top-10 11 out of 19 starts.

    Entering the 54th running of the Daytona 500 in 2014, Earnhardt was in the midst of a 55-race winless drought. He wasn’t much of a factor in the first quarter of the race, hanging around mid-pack. But after a lengthy rain delay, he drove his car to the front, led 54 laps in the process and scored the victory in what turned out to be his first multi-win season in a decade.

    A year later on Independence Day weekend, he led over half the race in a clinical performance on his way to victory lane.

    He was taken out of the 56th running of the Daytona 500 by a late wreck, finished 21st in last year’s Coke Zero 400 and was caught up in a multi-car wreck, while leading, halfway through the 58th running of the Daytona 500.

    With four wins and 19 top-10 finishes in 35 career Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series starts, Earnhardt has been pretty great through the years at Daytona.

    If you asked Earnhardt what’s made him great over the years, he’ll tell you it’s the cars.

    “I know this is not a lot of fun to write, but it’s the cars. We have had some really, really good cars here,” he said. “When I get the car that I need or when I’ve had the cars that I have had that were so good here, you could just do whatever you wanted with them. If you know a little bit about what you are doing, you can make some things happen and control the race. I say that because I have had some races here that I haven’t had the car that I felt that I needed – me personally. And, I know without that kind of a race car, I don’t feel confident in getting the job done. The car has always been really critical.

    “When we had our string of runs at DEI (Dale Earnhardt, Inc.) from (20)01 to (20)04, we could be here or Talladega in XFINITY or the Cup level and those were some really amazing cars, and some really smart people…we had kind of the whole thing. We had the guys that knew how to create the bodies the way they needed to be, and we also had some great motors with (Ritchie) Gilmore and those guys working on those engines. We just had a really awesome, perfect situation for a while there for the plate stuff.

    “I knew that Hendrick (Motorsports) had the same kind of strength having raced against them. So, when I got in those cars, it was no surprise to me that we ended up coming up here in some pretty fast stuff. Probably should have won more races than we did.

    “It starts with the car. You go out there and practice. It either surprises you – I had my car yesterday do a couple of things that I thought ‘WOW, this is alright’. Sometimes you go out there and practice that first practice and you are a little underwhelmed, and then you are kind of concerned and you work on it, and hopefully, improve, but sometimes you don’t. You take a car like that into the race, it is just hard to be confident in making choices and making moves and being on the offense and doing stuff all the time. When your car is really, really strong, you’ll try any run you get because you just know that if it doesn’t work, it’s not going that bad; you are not going to fall back too far. There’s not a whole lot of risk in trying whatever you want to try. So the cars are a big part of it.”

  • Earnhardt Takes Pole Position at Daytona

    Earnhardt Takes Pole Position at Daytona

    In what might be his final start at a track synonymous with the Earnhardt family, Dale Earnhardt Jr. will lead the field to the green flag tomorrow night after grabbing pole position for the Coke Zero 400 at Daytona International Speedway.

    The driver of the No. 88 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet won the pole after posting a final round time of 47.127 and a speed of 190.973 mph.

    “I have to give Hendrick Motorsports a lot of credit, particularly for me personally it has been the No. 24 (Chase Elliott) bunch. We’ve been kind of pushing each other over the last several years in qualifying at Talladega and Daytona. It’s been a healthy competition,” Earnhardt said. “That’s why we win poles and qualify so well at some of these race tracks is a healthy competition within the company. Greg and all the guys deserve all the credit for the car. I don’t do anything in qualifying except hold the wheel and make sure I don’t hit the apron. The car does everything. A lot of credit to the power and the body man back at the shop. All that stuff is so critical and they did a great job today.”

    It’s his 14th career pole in 612 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series starts.

    Teammate Chase Elliott will start second after posting a time of 47.171 and a speed of 190.795 mph. Brad Keselowski will start third after posting a time of 47.297 and a speed of 190.287 mph. Kasey Kahne will start fourth with a time of 47.356 and a speed of 190.050 mph. Kevin Harvick will round out the top-five after posting a time of 47.357 and a speed of 190.046 mph.

    Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Joey Logano, Jamie McMurray, Ryan Blaney and Danica Patrick will round out the top-10.

    Clint Bowyer and Jimmie Johnson round out the 12 drivers that made the final round of qualifying.

    Forty cars entered, so none were sent home.

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  • Daytona – Did You Know?

    Daytona – Did You Know?

    The Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series travels back to Daytona Beach for the Coke Zero 400. Forty drivers will compete for the trophy as NASCAR celebrates the Independence Day holiday with a weekend filled with racing and patriotism.

    But did you know that the first summer race at Daytona International Speedway was called the Firecracker 250? The 250-miles race was held on July 4, 1959, and was won by Fireball Roberts. He dominated the caution-free event, leading 84 of 100 laps and finishing ahead of the second-place finisher, Joe Weatherly, by 57 seconds.

    Sixty-one drivers have won at least one race at Daytona but only five drivers have posted consecutive wins in the July race including Fireball Roberts (1962-1963), A.J. Foyt (1964-1965), Cale Yarborough (1967-1968) David Pearson (1972-1974) and Tony Stewart (2005-2006).

    Sweeps are rare but did you know that five drivers have won both the Daytona 500 and the July race in the same year? The list includes Fireball Roberts (1962), Cale Yarborough (1968), LeeRoy Yarborough (1969) and Bobbie Allison (1982). The last driver to sweep Daytona was Jimmie Johnson in 2013. This year’s Daytona 500 winner Kurt Busch hopes to join this elite group.

    NASCAR Hall of Famer Richard Petty leads all drivers with 10 Daytona victories, scoring his 200th win at the track on July 4, 1984. But did you know that Dale Earnhardt Jr. leads all active drivers with four?

    Brad Keselowski is the defending race winner with three top fives and four top 10s. He has two wins this year and is one of 11 different drivers who has captured checkered flags. As we head to Daytona, Kyle Busch has the series-best driver rating of 94.7. He’s followed by Earnhardt Jr. (94.2), Kurt Busch (90.6), Denny Hamlin (89.7) and Joey Logano (87.8). But did you know that all of the top five have at least one win at Daytona?

    Kyle Busch (one win) and Jimmie Johnson (three wins) lead all active drivers with three runner-up finishes each. Kurt Busch (one win) leads the way with seven top-five finishes among active drivers as well as being tied with Earnhardt Jr. with nine top-10 finishes.

    As the regular season winds down wins become crucial. Kyle Busch, Chase Elliott, Jamie McMurray and Denny Hamlin are currently in the top 10 in the points standings but are winless this year. But did you know that Clint Bowyer (11th), Matt Kenseth (12th) and Erik Jones (16th) are in the most danger of falling out of the top 16 unless they visit Victory Lane soon?

    However, they are not alone. This will be Earnhardt’s last race at Daytona as a full-time competitor in the Cup Series and it could be his best chance to turn around a disappointing season that has seen only four top 10 results. His ability to work the draft at restrictor plate tracks could give him the advantage he needs if he has any hope to make the playoffs.

    It may seem unlikely given his results this season but his success at Daytona is undeniable. Did you know he has a career total of 17 wins which ranks him third all-time behind his father, Dale Earnhardt, who has 34 victories, and Tony Stewart with 19?

    He also seems to have a knack for winning at Daytona when everything is on the line. After losing his father in the 2001 Daytona 500, he came back in July to win the Pepsi 400, in one of NASCAR’s most memorable and poignant races. Take a look at the video below as Earnhardt discusses the emotional win.

    The on-track action begins Thursday at 3 p.m. ET for the first Cup Series practice and culminates with the Coke Zero 400 race Saturday evening at 7:30 p.m. on NBC.

    Follow @angiecampbell_ for the latest NASCAR news and feature stories.

     

  • The season of Kurt Busch after 16 races

    The season of Kurt Busch after 16 races

    When the season started, Kurt Busch stood atop the NASCAR world by stretching his fuel and winning the 59th running of the Daytona 500.

    Running second behind Kyle Larson on the final lap, he made his move jumping to the high side rounding Turn 1, just as Larson’s fuel cell ran dry, to assume the lead and drove on to take the checkered flag.

    He and his team followed the tradition observed by the teams that win Lord Stanley’s Cup in the National Hockey League and took the Harley J. Earl trophy on a “world tour.”

    “When Earl and I went out on a boat ride on Lake Norman it was in May,” Busch said. “He looked at me and said, ‘Hey man, I’m tired. I want to hang out with the other trophies in the trophy room.’ When he was hanging out with the crew guys they didn’t do a lot of things on social media with him that should have been done.”

    But as happens every year, the end of Speedweeks means the weekly grind of the season truly starts. And his season, in a nutshell, has been hit or miss.

    He followed up his win with a seventh at Atlanta Motor Speedway, but went four straight races with finishes no better than 24th, including getting caught in a multi-car wreck at Martinsville Speedway.

    This poor run took him from first in points to 19th.

    Busch ended his anemic run with a 10th at Texas Motor Speedway and his season started to stabilize, with poor finishes coming every other race.

    That’s not even an exaggeration. Since Texas, he’s finished 25th at Bristol, eighth at Richmond, sixth at Talladega, 19th at Kansas, sixth at Charlotte, 37th at Dover (after getting loose and collecting Brad Keselowski early in the race), fourth at Pocono, 12th at Michigan and seventh at Sonoma.

    Since his 10th-place at Texas, he’s moved from 19th to 14th in points.

    Meeting with the media in the Daytona International Speedway deadline room, Busch said while winning the Daytona 500 and hoisting the Harley Earl trophy “was a special moment and the highlight of my career,” it’s not something to rest on.

    “To start off winning the biggest stock car race in the world and to have the chance to hoist up the Harley J. Earl trophy, that was a special moment and the highlight of my career. That isn’t something to rest on,” Busch said. “I would say a few weeks after that, we were slightly hungover, not necessarily literally. I just seemed like a fog. The energy I get sent on a media tour. Tony Gibson lives here in the shadows of Daytona International Speedway. All of us were so excited. We’re ordering rings, flags. We’re taking the Harley J. Earl trophy to Ford’s headquarters, Monster’s headquarters, Haas’ headquarter…there was a lot going on. Once we settled in and learned the balance of our Ford and how things were changing here and there, quite honestly, I think we’ve done great. In half the races this year we have a top-10 finish. Harvick won last week on a road course. For us to win at a superspeedway shows the versatility that Stewart-Haas has. We have to focus on the mile-and-a-halves and making sure we are best prepared for when the playoffs start”

  • The Story of Speedweeks 2017 for Chase Elliott

    The Story of Speedweeks 2017 for Chase Elliott

    Coming off a stellar rookie season not seen in many years, Chase Elliott looked to capitalize on a spectacular run through Speedweeks 2017.

    He kicked it off by taking the pole position for the 59th running of the Daytona 500 and winning the first Can-Am Duel race, giving him a 10-point head-start on the season.

    So naturally, February 26, 2017, looked promising for the son of 1988 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series champion and NASCAR Hall of Famer Bill Elliott. While he didn’t win either of the first two stages, he found himself in the lead with 27 laps to go and his chances shot higher when the lead pack formed into a single-file line running against the wall.

    But with four laps to go, his fuel cell ran dry and he went from first to 14th.

    After the race, he said it was a “disappointing” end to a great day.

    “It was a disappointing finish to a good day,” he said. “Just one of those things you can’t do anything about.”

    Elliott enters Daytona sixth in points and still in search of his first win. Which judging by his run at Daytona in February and Talladega in May, before getting caught up in a wreck with 20 to go, isn’t a long shot by any stretch of the imagination.

    While meeting with the media today in the Daytona International Speedway deadline room, he said he felt “good” about his plate racing program and that it’s improved since he earned his first pole in the 2016 Daytona 500. He also went more in depth about his performance through Speedweeks.

    “I feel like our race this past February, just the execution of the Duels, the whole 500 race and all that went really, really well,” he added. “We ran better throughout the whole course of the race in this past 500 than we did in 2016. We didn’t make it very far in 2016 but regardless I think our car was more suited to run well in the race this past year and I think I noticed that and it showed up and was pretty apparent when the race started.

    “I think our car had the same tendencies and ability at Talladega this year but that didn’t go very well either. I thought our car was pretty fast and was able to do things that we would like to see in our race car and I could be that guy.

    “When you talk about plate racing you want to be the guy that everybody wants to work with to push and help. If that is the case, then opportunities are going to be there that typically wouldn’t be if you were slower and couldn’t make a lane move forward. It’s really hard to see that in practice and see who is going to be that person or what cars are going to be those cars that you want to work with. But once the race starts, it becomes apparent who those cars are and who is going to be good. It seems like people are just magically more interested in helping you and being with you when that is the case, so that is our goal.”

  • Earnhardt Fastest in Final Practice at Daytona

    Earnhardt Fastest in Final Practice at Daytona

    Dale Earnhardt Jr. topped the chart in final Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series practice at Daytona International Speedway.

    The driver of the No. 88 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet was the fastest with a time of 46.553 and a speed of 193.328 mph. Michael McDowell was second in his No. 95 Leavine Family Racing Chevrolet with a time of 46.572 and a speed of 193.249 mph. Jimmie Johnson was third in his No. 48 HMS Chevrolet with a time of 46.577 and a speed of 193.228 mph. Brendan Gaughan was fourth in his No. 75 Beard Motorsports Chevrolet with a time of 46.578 and a speed of 193.224 mph. Kasey Kahne rounded out the top-five in his No. 5 HMS Chevrolet with a time of 46.579 and a speed of 193.220 mph.

    Clint Bowyer, Chase Elliott, Trevor Bayne, Erik Jones and Joey Logano rounded out the top-10.

    Johnson posted the fastest 10 consecutive lap average at a speed of 192.349 mph.

    First Practice Results

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  • Kyle Busch Fastest at Daytona in First Practice

    Kyle Busch Fastest at Daytona in First Practice

    Kyle Busch topped the chart in first Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series practice at Daytona International Speedway.

    The driver of the No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota was the fastest with a time of 45.584 and a speed of 197.438 mph. Brad Keselowski was second in his No. 2 Team Penske Ford with a time of 45.632 and a speed of 197.230 mph. Kevin Harvick was third in his No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford with a time of 45.639 and a speed of 197.200 mph. Joey Logano was fourth in his No. 22 Penske Ford with a time of 45.647 and a speed of 197.165 mph. Ryan Blaney rounded out the top-five in his No. 21 Wood Brothers Racing Ford with a time of 45.647 and a speed of 197.165 mph.

    Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Matt DiBenedetto, Austin Dillon, Trevor Bayne and Kurt Busch rounded out the top-10.

    Bayne posted the fastest 10 consecutive lap average at a speed of 196.073 mph.

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  • NASCAR Racing Schedule for Daytona

    NASCAR Racing Schedule for Daytona

    The Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series travels to Daytona International Speedway this weekend for the Coke Zero 400 while the XFINITY Series will hit the track for the Coca-Cola Firecracker 250.

    Please check below for the complete schedule of events. All times are Eastern.

    Thursday, June 29:

    On Track:
    2- 2:55 p.m.: XFINITY Series Practice – NBCSN
    3- 3:55 p.m.: Cup Series Practice – NBCSN
    4- 4:55 p.m.: XFINITY Series Final Practice – NBCSN
    5- 5:55 p.m.: Cup Series Final Practice – NBCSN

    Garage Cam: (Watch live)
    1:30 p.m.: XFINITY Series
    2:30 p.m.: Cup Series

    Press Conferences: (Watch live)
    1 p.m.: Sam Flood and NBC Talent Season Preview
    1:45 p.m.: Kurt Busch
    2:15 p.m.: Chase Elliott
    4:15 p.m.: Ricky Stenhouse Jr.

    Friday, June 30

    On Track:
    2:10 p.m.: XFINITY Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying – NBCSN
    4:10 p.m.: Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying – NBCSN
    7:30 p.m.: XFINITY Series Coca-Cola Firecracker 250 (100 laps, 250 miles) – NBCSN – Postponed to Saturday

    Press Conferences: (Watch live)
    1 p.m.: Dale Earnhardt Jr.
    1:30 p.m.: Matt Tifft, Peter Intermaggio, Carol Eggert
    3:30 p.m.: Brad Keselowski
    3:45 p.m.: Richard Petty
    5:30 p.m.: Post-Cup Series Qualifying

    Saturday, July 1

    On Track:
    Noon: XFINITY Series Coca-Cola Firecracker 250 (100 laps, 250 miles) – CNBC – (Find CNBC on your TV)
    7:30 p.m.: Cup Series Coke Zero 400 Powered by Coca-Cola (160 laps, 400 miles) – NBC
    11 p.m.: Cup Series Post-Race – NBCSN

    Press Conferences: (Watch live)
    2:30 p.m.: Post-XFINITY Series Race
    4 p.m.: Andrew Lumish, The Good Cemetarian
    4:15 p.m.: Gen. Wesley Clark, Richard Childress, Austin Dillon
    11 p.m.: Post-Cup Series Race

    Race Details:

    NASCAR XFINITY Series Coca-Cola Firecracker 250
    Date: Friday, June 30 – Postponed to Saturday – See above for complete details
    Time: 7:30 p.m. ET
    TV: NBCSN, 7 p.m. ET
    Radio: MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio
    Distance: 250 miles (100 laps); Stage 1 (Ends on lap 30), Stage 2 (Ends on lap 60), Final Stage (Ends on lap 100)

    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Coke Zero 400 Powered by Coca-Cola
    Date: Saturday, July 1
    Time: 7:30 p.m. ET
    TV: NBC, 7:30 p.m. ET, NASCAR America Saturday, NBCSN, 5 p.m.
    Radio: MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio
    Distance: 400 miles (160 laps); Stage 1 (Ends on lap 40), Stage 2 (Ends on lap 80), Final Stage (Ends on lap 160)

    Complete TV Schedule

    Follow @angiecampbell_ for the latest NASCAR news and feature stories.