Here's a crash course — a cheat
sheet, really — for the 67th running of the Daytona 500
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[February 15, 2025]
By DAN GELSTON and MARK LONG
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Welcome to the Daytona 500!
Maybe you’re new to the sport, have a casual interest or are just
coming around to the edge-of-your-seat wrecks, the thrilling
finishes and the stars that make up the Daytona 500 field.
Daytona Beach became the unofficial “birthplace of speed” in 1903
when two men argued over who had the fastest horseless carriage and
decided to settle things in a race on the white, hardpacked sand
along the Atlantic Ocean.
Since then, the region has become a motorsports mecca, and the first
Daytona 500 was held Feb. 22, 1959, in front of a crowd of more than
41,000. They watched 59 cars race for a purse of less than $70,000,
and the finish was so close it took three days to determine Lee
Petty had edged Johnny Beauchamp.
So much has changed since then, in technology and terminology, and
there’s plenty to catch up on ahead of Sunday’s edition — the 67th
running of “The Great American Race.”
NBA Hall of Famer Michael Jordan is here (he bought a race team in
2020) and so is four-time Indianapolis 500 champion and “Dancing
With The Stars” winner Helio Castroneves.
So let’s wave the green flag (we’ll get to that below) and take a
crash course on some of the basic names and terms to know for the
Daytona 500.

Former Daytona 500 winners
The field is littered with past winners, starting with 2024 champion
William Byron. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. (2023), Austin Cindric (2022),
Michael McDowell (2021), Austin Dillon (2018) and Joey Logano (2015)
are all in the field.
Jimmie Johnson is a two-time winner (2006, 2013). Denny Hamlin could
become the third driver ever with at least four Daytona 500
victories. He won in 2016 and then went back-to-back in 2019 and
2020.
So who has the most wins?
Richard Petty won seven times, and Cale Yarborough has four. Jeff
Gordon, Dale Jarrett and Bobby Allison have three each.
What is drafting?
Drafting at superspeedways is paramount. It’s a technique in which
two or more cars race bumper-to-bumper to reduce aerodynamic drag
and create more speed together than they would alone. NASCAR Hall of
Famer Junior Johnson used the science to perfection to win the 1960
Daytona 500.
How fast are the cars going?
They are traveling about 190 mph but could be going in excess of 200
mph. NASCAR, however, mandates cars use tapered spacers to reduce
the amount of air flowing into engines — thus limiting horsepower
and speed. The power-sapping safety measure was first installed
after Bobby Allison’s car, traveling at 210 mph, went airborne and
tore through the catchfence at Talladega Superspeedway in 1987. The
car came dangerously close to landing in the grandstands.
What is The Big One?
It’s a wreck. OK, not just a wreck, but THE wreck that destroys
cars, alters the outcome of the race and puts drivers in danger.
There was a scary one in 2020, with Ryan Newman's terrifying tumble
that nearly killed him on the final lap of the race. The wreck
started when Newman hit the wall, bounced back into traffic and was
drilled by another driver. His car flipped, landed on its roof and
skidded to a halt in a harrowing, heart-stopping show of sparks and
flames.
NASCAR fans and fellow competitors feared the worst for Newman, but
the 2008 Daytona 500 winner walked out of the hospital 48 hours
later holding hands with his daughters.
Byron went on to win last year, even after Hendrick driver Alex
Bowman hit his car from behind and it caused Byron to sideswipe Brad
Keselowski and trigger a 23-car crash that caused a red flag that
lasted more than 15 minutes.
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Kyle Busch waits by his car before the start of the first of two
NASCAR Daytona 500 qualifying auto races at Daytona International
Speedway, Thursday, Feb. 13, 2025, in Daytona Beach, Fla. (AP
Photo/John Raoux)

Some Daytona 500 history
NASCAR’s most prestigious race started as a much shorter version on
a nearby beach. Drivers raced partially on sand and partially on an
adjacent highway. The first 500-mile event in Daytona happened in
1959. Two year later, the Daytona 500 moniker was adopted and is now
considered one of racing’s most well-known events.
Winless in the Daytona 500
Getting to victory lane at Daytona requires as much luck as it does
skill. It’s the main reason why four former series champions — Kyle
Busch, Brad Keselowski, Kyle Larson and Martin Truex Jr. — have
never won NASCAR’s most storied race. Busch is 0 for 19 in the 500.
Keselowski is 0 for 15. Larson is 0 for 11. And Truex is 0 for 20.
Hall of Famers Tony Stewart, Rusty Wallace and Mark Martin are the
most notable drivers to never win the Daytona 500.
Which manufacturers race in NASCAR?
NASCAR currently has three manufacturers: Chevrolet, Ford and
Toyota. Dodge spent decades in the sport before pulling out at the
end of the 2012 season because of economic challenges. Dodge also
was out between 1977 and 2001. Chevy and Ford have been in NASCAR
since its inception, with Toyota joining in 2007.
NASCAR’s racing royalty
Richard Petty and the late Dale Earnhardt, both seven-time series
champions, are two of NASCAR’s most iconic stars.
The 87-year-old Petty, who won a record 200 races, remains an
ambassador at Legacy Motor Club. Earnhardt died during a last-lap
crash at the 2001 Daytona 500, creating a pivotal move toward better
safety in a sport that had endured plenty of death.
Fun with flags
The most common ones waved by the flagman are:
Green flag: Used to start or restart a race.
Yellow flag: Slow down. Often waved because of an accident or other
debris on the track that must be cleared before the race can resume.

Red flag: Stop. The track is no longer safe.
Checkered flag: Waved when a driver crosses the finish line and wins
the race.
Team Worldwide
Pitbull, yes, the rapper, had an ownership stake in Trackhouse
Racing but it is coming to an end right as this year the team is
fielding cars for four drivers from four countries.
Mr. Worldwide truly lives up to his name.
Ross Chastain, a watermelon farmer out of Florida, is an American.
Shane van Gisbergen is a native of New Zealand. Daniel Suarez is
Mexican but became an American citizen last year. Castroneves, a
four-time Indianapolis 500 champion, is Brazilian and rounds out the
team headed into his NASCAR debut.
Best odds to win the race
Ryan Blaney and Busch are listed as co-favorites (+1200) to win the
race, per BetMGM Sportsbook.
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