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The 2010 Daytona 500 was the 1st of the 36 stock car races in the 2010 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, [2] and the 52nd edition of the event. [5] It was held on February 14, 2010, in Daytona Beach, Florida, at Daytona International Speedway, [2] The layout used for the Daytona 500 is a four-turn, 2.5-mile (4.0 km) superspeedway.
1 Daytona 500: February 14 2 Auto Club 500: Auto Club Speedway, Fontana: February 21 3 Shelby American: Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Las Vegas: February 28 4 Kobalt Tools 500 (Atlanta) Atlanta Motor Speedway, Hampton: March 7 5 Food City 500: Bristol Motor Speedway, Bristol: March 21 6 Goody's Fast Pain Relief 500: Martinsville Speedway ...
2010: After six consecutive years of moving the start time further from 1 pm to 3:30 pm by 2009 to reach a prime-time finish, NASCAR and Fox agreed to return the race to a 1 pm ET start as part of a uniform agreement on start times of 1 pm, 3 PM, or 7:30 pm for the majority of NASCAR Cup Series races during the season, ending what had become a ...
Here is the all-time winners list for the NASCAR Daytona 500, which starts each season and began in 1959. Richard Petty has the most Daytona 500 wins with seven and Cale Yarborough is second with ...
500 WINNERS: Daytona 500 past winners history: Every driver to win NASCAR's 'Great American Race' The 500 has come down to late-race passes and green-white-checkered finishes over the last 15 years.
Here is all the information you need to get ready for the 2024 Daytona 500, the season-opener of the NASCAR Cup Series: What time does the 2024 Daytona 500 start? Saturday's Xfinity Series opener ...
Trevor Bayne and Bobby Allison are the youngest and oldest Daytona 500 winners, winning at the ages of 20 years and 1 day in 2011 and 50 years, 2 months, and 11 days old in 1988, respectively. [15] [16] Petty also holds the distinction of having the longest time between his first and last wins, 17 years between the 1964 and 1981 races. [17]
NASCAR on ESPN is the now-defunct former package and branding of coverage of NASCAR races on ESPN, ESPN2, and ABC.ABC, and later the ESPN family of networks, carried NASCAR events from the sanctioning body's top three divisions at various points from the early 1960s until 2000, after the Truck Series rights were lost.