Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Green flag at the 2015 Daytona 500, aired live on Fox. The following is a list of the American television networks and announcers who have broadcast NASCAR's annual Daytona 500 throughout the years. Throughout its history, the Daytona 500 has been aired on all four major networks in the U.S., including ABC, CBS, NBC, and Fox.
Studio analyst for 2001 Daytona 500/Speedweeks only Formerly worked for NASCAR on CBS and NASCAR on TBS as play-by-play announcer and later studio host until 2000. He was a studio analyst for Fox only for the 2001 Daytona 500/Speedweeks before he retired from broadcasting. Darrell Waltrip: 2001–2019 Color commentator
List of NASCAR broadcasters; NASCAR on television in the 1960s; NASCAR on television in the 1970s; ... List of Daytona 500 broadcasters; F. List of NASCAR on Fox ...
Wally Dallenbach Jr. – color commentator (2001–2006) Dallenbach also returned to NBC for a cameo appearance on the pre-race show of the 2020 Cup Series race at the Daytona Road Course. Dale Earnhardt Jr. – color commentator for the Cup and Xfinity Series (2018–2023). he left to join Amazon and TNT's broadcast teams starting in 2025 at ...
As part of the new contract, the Daytona events were split evenly between the networks. Fox would air the Daytona 500 in every odd-numbered year during the contract, with NBC covering the then-Pepsi 400 those years. NBC would then, in turn, air the Daytona 500 in every even-numbered year, with Fox covering the Pepsi 400.
List of Daytona 500 broadcasters; E. Kevin Patrick Egan; H. Jen Hale; Heather Hennessy; J. ... List of NASCAR broadcasters; List of NASCAR on Fox broadcasters;
On November 11, 1999, NASCAR signed a contract that awarded the U.S. television rights to its races to four networks (two that would hold the broadcast television rights and two that would hold the cable television rights), split between Fox and sister cable channel FX, and NBC and TBS (whose rights were later assumed by TNT) starting with the 2001 season. [2]
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 ]