NASCAR

Daily Fantasy NASCAR: Current Form, Track History, and Betting Odds for the GEICO 500

In Talladega, we know our directive for NASCAR DFS: we gotta stack the back.

That's a bit less true in our non-qualifying era than it was previously. Perfect lineups from last year's two Talladega races were filled with drivers starting in the middle of the pack. But with drivers running in packs the entire day and lap-leaders hard to identify, we still know that our hunt for quality plays starts with those starting at the back of the grid.

That doesn't mean we're just picking drivers with no research at all. Talladega is less chaotic than Daytona, so we're less likely to get an out-of-nowhere top-10 from an underfunded team. We have to make sure these drivers aren't in lemons before we plug them in.

Looking back at past data can give us an idea of that.

The sheet below tries to provide a mix of data from pack tracks and others so that we can tell which drivers may not have the speed to keep up with the draft. If they can't do that, they're unlikely to be great plays regardless of how deep they're starting.

The current-form section includes the most recent three races at Daytona, the other pack-racing track on the schedule. The other three current-form races are the three to use the 550-horsepower package this year. They require more giddy-up than the shorter tracks, giving us a good signal as to whether these cars can keep pace.

As with other weeks, the data listed is each driver's average running position rather than their finish. That data is less valuable in Daytona and Talladega than others because drivers will sometimes hang in the back of the pack early, hoping to avoid wrecks, only to surge at the end. This strategy can work; Denny Hamlin ($13,000 on FanDuel) won the 2020 Daytona 500 after hanging around in the back the entire first stage.

The reason to still include that data is that it can tell us which cars were just totally out to lunch during a race. J.J. Yeley ($2,000) has had average running positions of 39th and 40th in his two pack-racing events on the sheet, meaning he's a tough sell despite starting 37th.

The other data listed here is each driver's starting position, FanDuel salary, and win odds at FanDuel Sportsbook. The win odds are presented in fractional form, so Hamlin being listed at 7 means he's +700 to win.

This is another thing we can use to cross drivers off. Those with +50000 odds are unlikely to have the necessary juice to compete. Once you get to +15000, there's likely at least something positive we can latch onto to justify considering them for DFS.

Track
History
Current
Form
Driver FD
Salary
Win
Odds
Starting 2020
Fall
2020
Spring
2019
Fall
2019
Spring
Atlanta Vegas Homestead Daytona
2021
Daytona
Fall '20
Daytona
Spring '20
Denny Hamlin $12,500 7 1 20 12 19 34 6 4 13 6 10 13
Joey Logano $13,000 9 2 9 4 8 8 13 11 14 7 8 9
Martin Truex Jr. $10,000 20 3 13 24 31 10 9 7 5 27 12 22
William Byron $7,700 18 4 11 12 15 12 7 6 4 27 13 32
Alex Bowman $8,500 16 5 18 11 22 9 5 11 10 33 15 14
Christopher Bell $9,000 22 6 39 15 -- -- 21 9 19 11 15 19
Ryan Blaney $13,500 10 7 15 6 9 9 3 6 18 29 13 12
Chase Elliott $11,700 10 8 20 22 11 10 20 12 13 8 16 11
Kyle Busch $9,700 16 9 19 14 8 10 7 12 15 5 8 17
Brad Keselowski $14,000 12 10 8 8 10 10 20 4 8 12 19 11
Austin Dillon $8,200 28 11 20 22 12 13 9 16 11 6 24 16
Kyle Larson $7,500 14 12 -- -- 24 12 1 3 5 9 -- 23
Matt DiBenedetto $7,300 28 13 10 16 14 16 9 11 20 32 12 16
Aric Almirola $12,000 16 14 28 20 14 8 19 27 21 32 25 16
Kurt Busch $10,500 25 15 21 12 11 12 27 14 7 25 16 17
Kevin Harvick $9,200 18 16 17 15 12 38 19 18 9 6 22 20
Ricky Stenhouse Jr. $11,000 20 17 38 10 11 8 14 15 16 15 17 11
Ross Chastain $4,500 66 18 -- -- 32 27 19 22 18 12 29 15
Daniel Suarez $3,500 66 19 24 27 14 16 15 22 21 34 17 --
Tyler Reddick $9,500 33 20 15 13 -- -- 30 20 18 26 16 18
Chris Buescher $6,800 50 21 8 15 18 19 10 18 10 30 18 13
Erik Jones $7,000 50 22 10 23 21 13 25 17 26 38 15 23
Michael McDowell $5,500 50 23 30 21 18 38 20 18 13 14 15 23
Bubba Wallace $6,500 25 24 13 15 28 38 17 32 21 12 15 26
Chase Briscoe $6,000 80 25 -- -- -- -- 25 24 26 22 -- --
Corey LaJoie $4,000 100 26 32 26 25 22 28 28 31 14 25 26
Cole Custer $7,500 66 27 21 12 -- -- 17 25 14 13 19 24
Ryan Newman $8,700 33 28 10 26 22 19 14 20 12 36 19 13
Ryan Preece $8,000 50 29 11 18 26 21 25 19 25 9 25 21
Anthony Alfredo $3,000 200 30 -- -- -- -- 28 23 28 31 -- --
B.J. McLeod $2,000 500 31 -- 31 -- -- 35 30 36 20 -- 34
Quin Houff $2,500 250 32 24 35 -- -- 32 34 34 28 32 33
Cody Ware $2,500 500 33 23 -- -- 31 33 33 33 22 -- --
Justin Haley $3,500 100 34 27 -- -- 22 31 29 29 -- -- 26
Joey Gase $2,500 500 35 26 36 34 -- 36 35 -- 20 37 34
Josh Bilicki $3,000 500 36 -- -- -- -- 38 36 34 22 39 --
J.J. Yeley $2,000 200 37 -- 39 -- -- -- -- -- -- 40 --
Kaz Grala $5,000 150 38 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 22 -- --
Harrison Burton $3,000 150 39 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
Timmy Hill $2,000 500 40 24 36 -- -- 37 37 38 -- 35 26


The key here is to start at the bottom of the chart and work your way toward the front, digging into drivers who seem interesting along the way. One driver who won't stand out based on the sheet but is very in play is Kaz Grala ($5,000).

Grala is making just his third Cup Series start, this time driving for Kaulig Racing. Kaulig has only three Cup Series starts, but they're a competitive organization in the Xfinity Series. They did churn out a top-10 finish with AJ Allmendinger at the Daytona road course, and Justin Haley ($3,500) finished 13th with them in the 2020 Daytona 500. They've got the speed necessary to get a top-10 finish.

Grala also has talent on these tracks. In three Daytona races in the Xfinity or Camping World Truck Series, he has a win and three top-fives. He was also top-10 at Talladega in a truck last year. For $5,000 and starting in 38th, Grala makes abundant sense.

The range from 20th to 29th is littered with drivers who have flashed on this track type in the recent past. Ryan Newman ($8,700), Ryan Preece ($8,000), Chris Buescher ($6,800), and Corey LaJoie ($4,000) all have at least three top-10 finishes in eight pack tracks since the Cup Series ditched restrictor plates, Michael McDowell ($5,500) won this year's Daytona 500, Tyler Reddick ($9,500) and Erik Jones ($7,000) have recent pack-racing wins (in either the Cup Series or Xfinity Series), and Bubba Wallace ($6,500) has a pair of top-fives at Daytona. Based on what last year showed us, this is a great range to pepper for your core plays, even though it will lead to leaving gobs of salary on the table.