OnAir Personality: Jamie Little

FOX Sports Names Jamie Little Play-By-Play Announcer for 2021 ARCA MENARDS SERIES

Little Becomes First Female Play-by-Play TV Announcer for National Racing Series

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – First it was the Indianapolis 500. Then the DAYTONA 500. And in 2021, it’s the ARCA MENARDS SERIES play-by-play role, as FOX NASCAR’s Jamie Little makes broadcasting history by becoming the first woman named as the television voice of a national motorsports series. FOX Sports today announces Little will handle play-by-play duties for the series beginning with the season opener from Daytona in February.

Little, entering her 20th year of broadcasting in 2021, teams with analyst Phil Parsons and reporter Kate Osborne for FOX Sports’ slate of races on FS1. Her FOX NASCAR pit reporting duties, held since 2015, also will continue in 2021.

This move furthers a string of broadcasting “firsts” Little has accomplished. She was the first female pit reporter for the television broadcast of the Indianapolis 500 (2004), and in 2015, became the first female pit reporter to cover both the DAYTONA 500 and the INDIANAPOLIS 500 for network TV’s live, flag-to-flag race coverage. In addition, Little was the first female to cover a televised Supercross and motocross event, and was one of the first female reporters in X Games history.

“I am beyond excited and humbled to be offered this role for the ARCA Menards Series,” Little said. “Although I’ve always preferred to be viewed as a motorsports broadcaster and not solely as a female broadcaster, it is an honor to be the first in this role. I definitely don’t take for granted being the first at anything. I know it can open other opportunities for women in the future, and I hope the younger girls aspiring to cover racing see the sky is the limit.”

Little first got a taste of the play-by-play role at Michigan International Speedway in June 2018, filling in during two NASCAR XFINITY SERIES practice sessions on FS1. Since joining FOX Sports, Little also has covered pit road for the NASCAR CUP SERIES, NASCAR XFINITY SERIES and the NASCAR CAMPING WORLD TRUCK SERIES, among multiple other reporting and hosting responsibilities. Prior to FOX, Little spent 13 years at ESPN/ABC as a reporter for NASCAR (2007-’14), the IndyCar Series (2004-’14), Winter X Games and Summer X Games telecasts.

“We are excited for Jamie to be joining the ARCA MENARDS SERIES booth,” said Brad Zager, Executive Producer, EVP/Head of Production & Operations, FOX Sports. “She is such a valued member of FOX Sports’ racing coverage, and this is the natural next step for her, given her broadcasting skills and her passion for and knowledge of racing.”

FOX NASCAR Voices React to Pivotal 2021 NASCAR CUP SERIES Schedule

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – Following the groundbreaking release of the 2021 NASCAR CUP SERIES schedule today, FOX NASCAR executives and announcers share their perspectives on changes on the horizon for next season:

“NASCAR worked closely with industry partners including FOX Sports to create a schedule lineup that not only shakes things up but provides something to look forward to every single week. It’s a dynamic schedule with superspeedways, short tracks, intermediate tracks, road courses – and even a race on dirt – and the different disciplines will allow the drivers to showcase their talents. I’m sure it’s going to be entertaining and unpredictable, and I can’t wait until we kick things off at Daytona in February.”
–Jeff Gordon, NASCAR Hall of Famer and FOX NASCAR analyst

“I’m really excited about the 2021 FOX NASCAR schedule, and I appreciate all the hard work that went into these changes. The dirt surface at Bristol will be a strange, new experience for some and an old, home week for others (here’s looking at you, Stenhouse). It’s a very bold move putting NASCAR Cup cars on dirt for the first time in 50 years. We will have a chance to tell some great stories and use historic footage to depict how NASCAR racing was back in the day.

“The biggest challenge I see will be Circuit of the Americas. It’s a very difficult track to learn with lots of nuances. I’ve raced there in Historic Trans Am; there are some places you can gain time by venturing off-line, and there are many places where you can lose time. The decreasing radius esses, where each turn is a little slower than the one before, is a particularly sore spot. I’d suggest drivers start binge-watching past races of all kinds there, from Spec Miata to F1.

“I’m glad our ‘West Coast Swing’ stays intact and look forward to our return to Darlington. I’ll always hold a special thought for Martinsville, Dover and Sonoma, for the close quarter racing they produce, and for the atmosphere of being there. While we still have a 2020 champion to decide, I can’t wait to get back to Daytona, and get 2021 underway.”
–Mike Joy, FOX NASCAR play-by-play announcer

“The more I look at the schedule, the more I realize it’s exactly what so many fans have asked for, for a long time. Two fan favorites are superspeedways and road courses, and of the 36 points races, they compromise 10 of them.

“The biggest unknown is the Bristol dirt race, but I applaud all parties for stepping outside the box and trying something different. We have no idea if it will work or not, but if it does, we will have found something great. If it doesn’t, we can move on. As a crew chief, if everything I had tried on my race cars ended up positively, I would have won 230 races instead of 23.

“Selfishly, I’m thrilled for the Darlington race added during the FOX portion of the season. That’s certainly a race I have missed having. And moving the Indianapolis race from the oval to the road course is a little bittersweet for me – I was there in 1992 for the first NASCAR test – but it has run its course after all these years and hasn’t been a great race lately. We have to entertain the fans, and based on what I saw in the Xfinity race on the road course, I think they’re in for a treat.”
–Larry McReynolds, FOX NASCAR analyst

“Today’s announcement of the 2021 NASCAR Cup Series schedule is the result of unprecedented collaboration between NASCAR, tracks and broadcasters to deliver a bold and diverse lineup of events for race fans. After a season of unexpected and unprecedented challenges, we’re excited to deliver on the energy and anticipation around 2021, beginning with coverage of FOX Sports’ 18th Daytona 500 on February 14.”
–Bill Wanger, FOX Sports Executive Vice President, Head of Programming and Scheduling

“With the addition of new markets, new tracks, and even a new surface, NASCAR held true to its promise of shaking up the Cup schedule. The addition of three road courses (four including the Clash), the return to Nashville and Bristol on dirt makes for a diverse and challenging lineup. You will never appease everyone, but I appreciate NASCAR’s willingness to move outside the box and challenge itself and teams with new events.”
–Vince Welch, FOX NASCAR reporter and play-by-play announcer

“It’s easy to see there’s something for everyone with the 2021 Cup schedule. From top to bottom, it’s impressive, aggressive and impactful. The fun meter is pegged for the fan. I applaud NASCAR for blending all of the ‘wants/needs’ from everyone from fans to industry folks. Everyone may have a personal bias here or there, but for the good of the sport, this was an extreme winner.”
–Matt Yocum, FOX NASCAR reporter

“Tip of the cap to NASCAR for continuing to try new things and make changes. I love seeing COTA on the schedule. Austin is a wonderful, fun, young city that has grown to appreciate racing just outside their city. I love Road America. What a great town and fun, fast racetrack. I think people will embrace seeing Cup cars there, finally.

“The Busch Clash on the road course will be entertaining and different, and I think the fans will really enjoy mixing it up during the Daytona 500 festivities. I know I can’t wait to cover it. And Nashville — covering Xfinity there years ago, it was one of my favorite places to race and visit. It’s a wonderful town, filled with NASCAR fans and having NASCAR back in action there will be a huge hit.”
–Jamie Little, FOX NASCAR reporter

12-Year-Old Gospel Artist Keedron Bryant Performs National Anthem for Sunday’s NASCAR CUP SERIES Race from Atlanta Motor Speedway on FOX and FOX Deportes

Young Viral Sensation Performed “I Just Wanna Live” as Tribute to George Floyd


CHARLOTTE, N.C. – Keedron Bryant, the 12-year-old singer whose original song, “I Just Wanna Live,” went viral last week in the wake of the death of George Floyd, performs the national anthem via video from his home prior to Sunday’s NASCAR CUP SERIES race from Atlanta Motor Speedway (3:00 PM ET live on FOX, FOX Deportes and the FOX Sports app).

Bryant, a young gospel artist featured on NBC’s “Little Big Shots,” recorded the original song, written by his mother, Johnnetta, during daily devotional time at his Jacksonville, Fla., home to pay tribute to Floyd. It was shared on social media and news outlets, earning the acclaim of President Barack Obama and multiple celebrities for its message.

Bryant’s performance opens the sixth NASCAR CUP SERIES race back after a 10-week hiatus due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Following prerace ceremonies, the FOX NASCAR broadcast team of Jeff Gordon, Mike Joy and Larry McReynolds calls the race Sunday from the FOX NASCAR studios in Charlotte, with Jamie Little reporting from pit road at Atlanta Motor Speedway. FOX Deportes broadcasters, play-by-play announcer Tony Rivera and analyst Jessi Losada, are live from the FOX Deportes studios in Los Angeles. NASCAR RACE HUB airs at 2:30 PM ET on FOX immediately preceding race coverage.

About FOX Sports
FOX Sports is the umbrella entity representing FOX Corporation’s wide array of multi-platform US-based sports assets. Built with brands capable of reaching more than 100 million viewers in a single weekend, the business has ownership and interests in linear television networks, digital and mobile programming, broadband platforms, multiple web sites, joint-venture businesses and several licensing relationships. FOX Sports includes the sports television arm of the FOX Network; FS1, FS2, FOX Soccer Plus and FOX Deportes. FOX Sports’ digital properties include FOXSports.com and the FOX Sports App, which provides live streaming video of FOX Sports content, instant scores, stats and alerts to iOS and Android devices. Additionally, FOX Sports and social broadcasting platform Caffeine jointly own Caffeine Studios which creates exclusive eSports, sports and live entertainment content. Also included in FOX Sports’ portfolio are FOX’s interests in joint-venture business Big Ten Network, a licensing and commercial relationship with The Stars Group that created the FOX Bet sports betting platform and the FOX Bet Super 6 free-to-play game, as well as a licensing agreement that established the FOX Sports Radio Network.

–FOX SPORTS–

NASCAR RACE HUB Returns Monday-Thursday in Remote, Modified Format with Special Edition on Sunday

Special Edition of NASCAR RACE HUB Featuring Lindsay Czarniak’s Sit-Down Interview with Denny Hamlin Airs Sunday on FS1

FOX NFL Analyst Troy Aikman and Musical Legend Bob Weir Serve as Prerace Dignitaries for Sunday’s FOX NASCAR iRACING Event


CHARLOTTE, N.C. – NASCAR RACE HUB returns to the FS1 daily lineup on Monday, March 30, at 6:00 PM ET in a modified, remote format. The one-hour show airs Monday-Thursdays with host and analysts via Zoom from their homes.

Additionally, on each episode, Lindsay Czarniak interviews a driver and his family one-on-one via Zoom from their respective homes for a behind-the-scenes look at their lives and new routines without racing.

Three-time Daytona 500 winner Denny Hamlin, winner of the inaugural eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series race last Sunday at virtual Homestead-Miami Speedway, is Czarniak’s first guest in a special 30-minute edition of NASCAR RACE HUB airing Sunday, March 29, at 12:30 PM ET, immediately preceding the FOX NASCAR iRACING event from virtual Texas Motor Speedway (simulcast on FOX, FS1 and the FOX Sports app at 1:00 PM ET).

Czarniak’s guests next week include Hamlin (Monday), Martin Truex Jr. and Sherry Pollex (Tuesday), Erik Jones (Wednesday) and Kyle and Samantha Busch (Thursday).

The Monday 6:00 PM ET editions of NASCAR RACE HUB recap the previous day’s FOX NASCAR iRACING action, while the Tuesday-Thursday episodes feature specific themes ranging from 2020 season headlines and recaps to a countdown of the best drivers of all time. All FOX NASCAR on-air broadcasters contribute to Hub in the coming weeks.

Below is the schedule for next week’s themed content and on-air broadcasters:

Monday – FOX NASCAR iRACING recap; Adam Alexander, Jamie McMurray and Regan Smith

Tuesday – NASCAR CUP SERIES season recap; Kaitlyn Vince, Larry McReynolds, Jeff Gordon, Matt Yocum and Joey Logano

Wednesday – NASCAR XFINITY SERIES season recap; Shannon Spake, Clint Bowyer and Jamie Little

Thursday – NASCAR TRUCK SERIES season recap; Vincie, Todd Bodine, Phil Parsons and Vince Welch

Also on Sunday, March 29, FOX Sports welcomes a couple of legends to prerace dignitary roles for the eNASCAR iRACING Pro Invitational Series race. FOX NFL analyst and Pro Football Hall of Famer Troy Aikman serves as the grand marshal, giving the command to start engines. GRAMMY-winning musical icon Bob Weir, a founding member of the legendary Grateful Dead, performs the national anthem prior to the start of the event.

FOX NASCAR at Atlanta Motor Speedway Quotes & Programming Schedule

MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES Live on FOX Sunday; NASCAR XFINITY & GANDER OUTDOORS TRUCK SERIES Doubleheader Live on FS1 Saturday from Atlanta
Seven-Time Champ Johnson Makes Analyst Debut Saturday in NASCAR XFINITY SERIES Race on FS1
New FS1 Fast Friday Programming Block Kicks off This Weekend at 3:00 PM ET

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — NASCAR heads to Atlanta Motor Speedway this weekend for the second race of the MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES season, on Sunday, Feb. 24 (2:00 PM ET on FOX), and a unique NASCAR XFINITY SERIES/NASCAR GANDER OUTDOORS TRUCK SERIES doubleheader on Saturday, Feb. 23 (2:00 PM ET & 4:30 PM ET on FS1).

To offer NASCAR fans a consistent start time for Friday programming in 2019, FOX Sports is featuring a multi-hour block of Fast Friday programming each race weekend, beginning Friday, Feb. 22 from Atlanta. Delivering highlights of the morning and early afternoon on-track activity, news and feature content, along with practice updates, Fast Friday begins each week at 3:00 PM ET and includes live coverage of MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES qualifying. All Friday MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES practice sessions taking place prior to the 3:00 PM ET window are offered via live streaming on NASCAR.com at https://www.nascar.com/live in 2019.

The following practices will be streamed live from Atlanta Motor Speedway on Friday on https://www.nascar.com/live
• MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES practice 1 (11:30 AM-1:00 PM ET)
• NASCAR XFINITY SERIES practice 1 (1:00-2:00 PM ET)
• NASCAR GANDER OUTDOORS TRUCK SERIES practice 1 (2:00-3:00 PM ET)

Anchoring Fast Friday for FOX NASCAR this weekend is new studio host Sara Walsh, making her on-air debut from the new virtual studio alongside analysts Jamie McMurray and Ricky Craven.

Below are programming information, the weekend’s on-air broadcaster roster and quotes from FOX NASCAR analyst Ricky Craven on the weekend ahead, as well as FOX NASCAR play-by-play announcer Adam Alexander on the addition of Kevin Harvick and Jimmie Johnson to the Xfinity Series booth at Atlanta:

MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES
• Date/Time: Sunday, Feb. 24 (2:00 PM ET)
• Network: FOX
• Announcers: Mike Joy, Hall of Famer and three-time champion Darrell Waltrip, Hall of Famer and four-time champ Jeff Gordon, race analyst Larry McReynolds
• Pit reporters: Jamie Little, Vince Welch and Matt Yocum
• Pre-race: NASCAR RACEDAY (1:30-2:00 PM ET on FOX); hosted by Shannon Spake with Larry McReynolds, Jamie McMurray and Regan Smith
• NASCAR RACEDAY (12:30-1:30 PM ET on FS1); hosted by Spake with McReynolds, McMurray and Smith
• Hosts: Spake and McMurray

NASCAR XFINITY SERIES
• Date/Time: Saturday, Feb. 23 (2:00 PM ET)
• Network: FS1
• Announcers: Adam Alexander, Kevin Harvick and guest driver analyst Jimmie Johnson
• Pit reporters: Jamie Little and Regan Smith
• Pre-race: NASCAR RACEDAY-XFINITY (1:30 PM ET on FS1); hosted by Shannon Spake and analysts Larry McReynolds and Jamie McMurray
• Hosts: Spake, McReynolds and McMurray

NASCAR GANDER OUTDOORS TRUCK SERIES
• Date/Time: Saturday, Feb. 23 (4:30 PM ET)
• Network: FS1
• Announcers: Vince Welch, Phil Parsons and Michael Waltrip
• Pit reporters: Hermie Sadler and Alan Cavanna
• Post-race: 6:30-7:00 PM (FS1)

FOX NASCAR QUOTES

FOX NASCAR analyst Ricky Craven says the new rules package has drivers and teams on their toes:
“For many years, Atlanta has been a driver favorite because of the ability to move around the race track to find a preferred groove or lane, as well as the added responsibility of managing your tire wear. But the debut of this new rules package has everyone back on their heels a bit. Sure, it is the same abrasive Atlanta track, but there’s now a high probability that how you approached this race in the past will not apply this weekend.”

Craven says the jury will be out on the new aero package for the first four races:
“The next four races, all at completely different disciplines of race tracks, will give us an indication of which direction we are headed with the new aero package. We can’t judge it, for better or worse, after just one or two races, though.”

FOX NASCAR play-by-play announcer Adam Alexander discusses the growth of FOX Sports’ initiative to put Cup drivers in the Xfinity booth and Jimmie Johnson’s analyst debut with Kevin Harvick on Saturday:
“I could have never imagined, when we introduced Cup Series drivers to the Xfinity Series booth a few years ago, that it would grow like this. We’ve had countless Cup regulars join us, and Kevin established early that this is something he wants to continue to be a part of. His great success on the track has translated nicely to the booth, and I know Jimmie’s will, as well. It will be fantastic to get those two together on Saturday, and I can’t wait to have a front-row seat for it.”

FOX NASCAR AT ATLANTA MOTOR SPEEDWAY PROGRAMMING SCHEDULE
(All times live/Eastern unless otherwise indicated & subject to change)

Friday, Feb. 22
MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES practice 1 (11:30 AM-1:00 PM ET) (NASCAR.com/live)
NASCAR XFINITY SERIES practice 1 (1:00-2:00 PM ET) (NASCAR.com/live)
NASCAR GANDER OUTDOORS TRUCK SERIES practice 1 (2:00-3:00 PM ET) (NASCAR.com/live)
NASCAR XFINITY SERIES final practice (3:00-4:00 PM) (FS1)
NASCAR GANDER OUTDOORS TRUCK SERIES final practice (4:00-5:00 PM) (FS1)
MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES qualifying (5:00-6:30 PM) (FS1)

Saturday, Feb. 23
NASCAR XFINITY SERIES qualifying (9:30-10:30 AM) (FS1)
NASCAR GANDER OUTDOORS TRUCK SERIES qualifying (10:30 AM-12:00 PM) (FS1)
MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES final practice (12:00-1:30 PM) (FS1)
NASCAR RACEDAY-XFINITY (1:30-2:00 PM) (FS1)
NASCAR XFINITY SERIES Racing (2:00-4:30 PM) (FS1)
NASCAR GANDER OUTDOORS TRUCK SERIES Racing (4:30-6:30 PM) (FS1)
NASCAR GANDER OUTDOORS TRUCK SERIES post-race (6:30-7:00 PM) (FS1)

Sunday, Feb. 24
NASCAR RACEDAY (12:30-1:30 PM) (FS1)
NASCAR RACEDAY (1:30-2:00 PM) (FOX)
MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES Racing (2:00-6:00 PM) (FOX)

About FOX Sports
FOX Sports is the umbrella entity representing 21st Century FOX’s wide array of multi-platform US-based sports assets. Built with brands capable of reaching more than 100 million viewers in a single weekend, FOX Sports includes ownership and interests in linear television networks, digital and mobile programming, broadband platforms, multiple web sites, joint-venture businesses and several licensing partnerships. FOX Sports includes the sports television arm of the FOX Broadcasting Company; FS1, FS2; FOX Sports Regional Networks, their affiliated regional web sites and national programming; FOX Soccer Plus; FOX Deportes and FOX College Sports. In addition, FOX Sports also encompasses FOX Sports Digital, including FOXSports.com and the FOX Sports app. Also included in the Group are FOX’s interests in joint-venture businesses Big Ten Network and BTN 2Go, as well as a licensing agreement that established the FOX Sports Radio Network.

–FOX SPORTS–

FOX NASCAR at Atlanta Motor Speedway Quotes & Programming Schedule

MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES Live on FOX Sunday; NASCAR XFINITY & GANDER OUTDOORS TRUCK SERIES Doubleheader Live on FS1 Saturday from Atlanta
Seven-Time Champ Johnson Makes Analyst Debut Saturday in NASCAR XFINITY SERIES Race on FS1
New FS1 Fast Friday Programming Block Kicks off This Weekend at 3:00 PM ET

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — NASCAR heads to Atlanta Motor Speedway this weekend for the second race of the MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES season, on Sunday, Feb. 24 (2:00 PM ET on FOX), and a unique NASCAR XFINITY SERIES/NASCAR GANDER OUTDOORS TRUCK SERIES doubleheader on Saturday, Feb. 23 (2:00 PM ET & 4:30 PM ET on FS1).

To offer NASCAR fans a consistent start time for Friday programming in 2019, FOX Sports is featuring a multi-hour block of Fast Friday programming each race weekend, beginning Friday, Feb. 22 from Atlanta. Delivering highlights of the morning and early afternoon on-track activity, news and feature content, along with practice updates, Fast Friday begins each week at 3:00 PM ET and includes live coverage of MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES qualifying. All Friday MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES practice sessions taking place prior to the 3:00 PM ET window are offered via live streaming on NASCAR.com at https://www.nascar.com/live in 2019.

The following practices will be streamed live from Atlanta Motor Speedway on Friday on https://www.nascar.com/live
• MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES practice 1 (11:30 AM-1:00 PM ET)
• NASCAR XFINITY SERIES practice 1 (1:00-2:00 PM ET)
• NASCAR GANDER OUTDOORS TRUCK SERIES practice 1 (2:00-3:00 PM ET)

Anchoring Fast Friday for FOX NASCAR this weekend is new studio host Sara Walsh, making her on-air debut from the new virtual studio alongside analysts Jamie McMurray and Ricky Craven.

Below are programming information, the weekend’s on-air broadcaster roster and quotes from FOX NASCAR analyst Ricky Craven on the weekend ahead, as well as FOX NASCAR play-by-play announcer Adam Alexander on the addition of Kevin Harvick and Jimmie Johnson to the Xfinity Series booth at Atlanta:

MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES
• Date/Time: Sunday, Feb. 24 (2:00 PM ET)
• Network: FOX
• Announcers: Mike Joy, Hall of Famer and three-time champion Darrell Waltrip, Hall of Famer and four-time champ Jeff Gordon, race analyst Larry McReynolds
• Pit reporters: Jamie Little, Vince Welch and Matt Yocum
• Pre-race: NASCAR RACEDAY (1:30-2:00 PM ET on FOX); hosted by Shannon Spake with Larry McReynolds, Jamie McMurray and Regan Smith
• NASCAR RACEDAY (12:30-1:30 PM ET on FS1); hosted by Spake with McReynolds, McMurray and Smith
• Hosts: Spake and McMurray

NASCAR XFINITY SERIES
• Date/Time: Saturday, Feb. 23 (2:00 PM ET)
• Network: FS1
• Announcers: Adam Alexander, Kevin Harvick and guest driver analyst Jimmie Johnson
• Pit reporters: Jamie Little and Regan Smith
• Pre-race: NASCAR RACEDAY-XFINITY (1:30 PM ET on FS1); hosted by Shannon Spake and analysts Larry McReynolds and Jamie McMurray
• Hosts: Spake, McReynolds and McMurray

NASCAR GANDER OUTDOORS TRUCK SERIES
• Date/Time: Saturday, Feb. 23 (4:30 PM ET)
• Network: FS1
• Announcers: Vince Welch, Phil Parsons and Michael Waltrip
• Pit reporters: Hermie Sadler and Alan Cavanna
• Post-race: 6:30-7:00 PM (FS1)

FOX NASCAR QUOTES

FOX NASCAR analyst Ricky Craven says the new rules package has drivers and teams on their toes:
“For many years, Atlanta has been a driver favorite because of the ability to move around the race track to find a preferred groove or lane, as well as the added responsibility of managing your tire wear. But the debut of this new rules package has everyone back on their heels a bit. Sure, it is the same abrasive Atlanta track, but there’s now a high probability that how you approached this race in the past will not apply this weekend.”

Craven says the jury will be out on the new aero package for the first four races:
“The next four races, all at completely different disciplines of race tracks, will give us an indication of which direction we are headed with the new aero package. We can’t judge it, for better or worse, after just one or two races, though.”

FOX NASCAR play-by-play announcer Adam Alexander discusses the growth of FOX Sports’ initiative to put Cup drivers in the Xfinity booth and Jimmie Johnson’s analyst debut with Kevin Harvick on Saturday:
“I could have never imagined, when we introduced Cup Series drivers to the Xfinity Series booth a few years ago, that it would grow like this. We’ve had countless Cup regulars join us, and Kevin established early that this is something he wants to continue to be a part of. His great success on the track has translated nicely to the booth, and I know Jimmie’s will, as well. It will be fantastic to get those two together on Saturday, and I can’t wait to have a front-row seat for it.”

FOX NASCAR AT ATLANTA MOTOR SPEEDWAY PROGRAMMING SCHEDULE
(All times live/Eastern unless otherwise indicated & subject to change)

Friday, Feb. 22
MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES practice 1 (11:30 AM-1:00 PM ET) (NASCAR.com/live)
NASCAR XFINITY SERIES practice 1 (1:00-2:00 PM ET) (NASCAR.com/live)
NASCAR GANDER OUTDOORS TRUCK SERIES practice 1 (2:00-3:00 PM ET) (NASCAR.com/live)
NASCAR XFINITY SERIES final practice (3:00-4:00 PM) (FS1)
NASCAR GANDER OUTDOORS TRUCK SERIES final practice (4:00-5:00 PM) (FS1)
MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES qualifying (5:00-6:30 PM) (FS1)

Saturday, Feb. 23
NASCAR XFINITY SERIES qualifying (9:30-10:30 AM) (FS1)
NASCAR GANDER OUTDOORS TRUCK SERIES qualifying (10:30 AM-12:00 PM) (FS1)
MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES final practice (12:00-1:30 PM) (FS1)
NASCAR RACEDAY-XFINITY (1:30-2:00 PM) (FS1)
NASCAR XFINITY SERIES Racing (2:00-4:30 PM) (FS1)
NASCAR GANDER OUTDOORS TRUCK SERIES Racing (4:30-6:30 PM) (FS1)
NASCAR GANDER OUTDOORS TRUCK SERIES post-race (6:30-7:00 PM) (FS1)

Sunday, Feb. 24
NASCAR RACEDAY (12:30-1:30 PM) (FS1)
NASCAR RACEDAY (1:30-2:00 PM) (FOX)
MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES Racing (2:00-6:00 PM) (FOX)

About FOX Sports
FOX Sports is the umbrella entity representing 21st Century FOX’s wide array of multi-platform US-based sports assets. Built with brands capable of reaching more than 100 million viewers in a single weekend, FOX Sports includes ownership and interests in linear television networks, digital and mobile programming, broadband platforms, multiple web sites, joint-venture businesses and several licensing partnerships. FOX Sports includes the sports television arm of the FOX Broadcasting Company; FS1, FS2; FOX Sports Regional Networks, their affiliated regional web sites and national programming; FOX Soccer Plus; FOX Deportes and FOX College Sports. In addition, FOX Sports also encompasses FOX Sports Digital, including FOXSports.com and the FOX Sports app. Also included in the Group are FOX’s interests in joint-venture businesses Big Ten Network and BTN 2Go, as well as a licensing agreement that established the FOX Sports Radio Network.

–FOX SPORTS–

FOX NASCAR On-Air Team Delivers Combined 200 Years of Daytona 500 Broadcast Experience

Spake Elevated to Network Race Coverage Host; Vincie Moves from Pit Road to Anchor Chair

Defending NASCAR Champion Joey Logano Serves as Analyst for NASCAR XFINITY SERIES Race at Daytona

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – FOX Sports embarks on its 19th season of NASCAR coverage at Daytona Speedweeks in February with unparalleled expertise broadcasting the DAYTONA 500 in front of and behind the camera.

DAYTONA 500
Led by veteran play-by-play announcer Mike Joy, broadcasting his 40th DAYTONA 500 for live television or radio, the FOX NASCAR on-air team brings a collective 200 years of experience covering the “Great American Race.” Joining Joy in the FOX NASCAR booth is the Hall of Fame duo of three-time NASCAR Cup Series champion Darrell Waltrip, broadcasting his 16th DAYTONA 500, and four-time champion and 2019 Hall of Fame inductee Jeff Gordon, covering his fourth in the FOX Sports booth. Gordon is a three-time DAYTONA 500 champion, and Waltrip won the 1989 running.

Longtime race analyst and two-time DAYTONA 500-winning crew chief Larry McReynolds, back with FOX for his 16th Daytona Speedweeks as a broadcaster, continues to partner with Joy, Waltrip and Gordon, delivering unmatched insight from the brand-new state-of-the-art, multi-purpose virtual studio set housed in the FOX Sports studios in Charlotte.

FOX Sports’ pit road reporting team of Matt Yocum (19th DAYTONA 500), Jamie Little (fifth), Vince Welch (fifth) and Regan Smith (second) are poised to deliver behind-the-scenes stories from pit road, as well as up-to-the-minute updates as the race unfolds.

By McReynolds’ side in the virtual studio for DAYTONA 500 coverage is new network coverage host Shannon Spake, covering her 13th DAYTONA 500, and analysts Ricky Craven and Bobby Labonte. Spake broadens her skill set in 2019, hosting FOX NASCAR’s coverage of all MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES and NASCAR XFINITY SERIES races. She also anchors NASCAR RACEDAY, FOX Sports’ prerace show for the Cup Series, and NASCAR RACEDAY-XFINITY, its prerace show for the Xfinity Series.

Also in the Charlotte virtual studio for the DAYTONA 500 are FOX NASCAR analysts Ricky Craven and Bobby Labonte. Spake and FOX NASCAR host Adam Alexander anchor DAYTONA 500 Qualifying and THE CLASH AT DAYTONA studio shows with analysts Michael Waltrip and Smith.

Longtime FOX NASCAR host Chris Myers helps shoulder the load for Daytona 500 prerace programming for the 17th time, as do Alexander and analyst Michael Waltrip (eighth).

FOX NASCAR lead race producer Barry Landis, coordinating producer Richie Zyontz and director Artie Kempner return for their 16th DAYTONA 500 and 19th NASCAR season with FOX. Bill Richards, EVP, Production and Coordinating Studio Producer, FOX Sports, works his 16th DAYTONA 500 and 19th season.

NASCAR XFINITY SERIES & “Drivers Only” Broadcast
The NASCAR XFINITY SERIES returns to FOX Sports for the fifth consecutive season, with Alexander again handling play-by-play duties alongside analyst Michael Waltrip and a rotation of prominent Cup Series drivers to be announced in the near future. At Daytona, defending Cup Series champion Joey Logano calls the NXS season opener with Alexander and Waltrip.

Little, Yocum and Smith cover stories and updates on pit road. Additionally, FOX Sports brings back its “Drivers Only” NASCAR XFINITY SERIES broadcast, with a driver lineup to be announced in the near future. Pam Miller returns as lead race producer for all NASCAR XFINITY SERIES events on FOX Sports, with Kempner directing.

NASCAR GANDER OUTDOORS TRUCK SERIES
FOX Sports offers exclusive coverage of the entire NASCAR GANDER OUTDOORS TRUCK SERIES season for the 18th consecutive year with Welch on the call alongside analysts Phil Parsons and Michael Waltrip. Hermie Sadler, Alan Cavanna, marking his first full season on pit road, and Jamie Howe deliver pit reports from Daytona.

Kaitlyn Vincie steps up with a move from pit road to the prerace anchor chair, hosting NASCAR RACEDAY-NGOTS prior to each NASCAR GANDER OUTDOORS TRUCK SERIES race, alongside Jeff Hammond and two-time series champion Todd Bodine.

FOX NASCAR race producer Mark Smith returns for his eighth Truck Series season in 2019, while director Roger Vincent is back for his 12th.

A final announcement regarding the full NASCAR RACE HUB and NASCAR RACE HUB: WEEKEND EDITION on-air team, including additional new hires, is forthcoming next week.

FOX NASCAR has won 18 Sports Emmy Awards since its inaugural year of coverage in 2001, including four for Outstanding Live Sports Series, seven for Live Event Audio/Sound and five for Live Technical Team Remote.

FOX Sports’ Jamie Little in Overdrive for Daytona 500

Veteran Broadcaster Covering Three Different Racing Series’ Season Openers

Charlotte, N.C. — Veteran FOX NASCAR pit reporter Jamie Little shifts into overdrive this weekend at Daytona International Speedway for the 60th running of the Daytona 500, live on FOX on Sunday, Feb. 18 (2:30 PM ET).

Little, covering her fourth “Great American Race” for FOX Sports, is coming off a grueling pit reporting schedule just a couple of weeks ago in the Rolex 24 at Daytona, which opened the 2018 IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship season. Prior to that, she hosted FOX Sports’ coverage of the kickoff of the Monster Energy AMA Supercross season, achieving a racing trifecta just six weeks into the New Year.

Little, entering her 17th year as a broadcaster, has covered everything from the Indianapolis 500 to the Winter X Games. She was the first female pit reporter for the television broadcast of the Indianapolis 500 (2004), and in 2015, became the first female pit reporter to cover both the Daytona 500 and the Indianapolis 500 for network TV’s live, flag-to-flag race coverage.

Below, as she turns her thoughts to NASCAR’s season opener, Little offers her perspective on the upcoming season, her on-air schedule, Danica Patrick’s retirement and more. For more information on Little, CLICK HERE.

You were assigned the season openers for three uniquely different racing disciplines with Supercross, the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship and NASCAR. From a host and reporter’s perspective, how do the challenges differ in covering each of the three?

Little: “There definitely is a difference when it comes to hosting versus reporting. I host our Supercross coverage, so I have a script I stick to with ad-libs here and there, depending on how the races unfold. A host is essentially a traffic control cop. When it comes to on-air talent roles, reporting is the most difficult, in my opinion. It’s my job to dig up the stories pertinent to and entertaining for fans watching at home. I’m self-produced, meaning what I say on the air comes from what I have learned on my own. There’s a lot of responsibility with this role. When you cover different forms of motorsports, such as me covering the Rolex 24, there’s a whole new lineup of drivers and teams. This job is all about relationships, and the Rolex 24 is a race I have very little experience doing. Thankfully when you’re on the air, people often recognize you and know your work and credibility. That helps a lot when it comes to covering new events and forms of motorsport. But this week is about the Daytona 500, and covering that race is a blast. Although it’s so familiar to me and I know most people in the garage, it’s the first race of the year, and so many things are different and new. It’s definitely challenging and a bit of an adrenaline rush to come on the air with our biggest race as the first one of the year.”

Which race or series do you most look forward to and why?

Little: “I get excited for the first race of the Supercross season every year for so many reasons, including how much fun I have doing it. That’s where I began my career, so it’s a bit of a homecoming for me. It was my love and passion for dirt bike racing that led me to where I am. The first race of the year is like Christmas. It has been a long off-season across all forms of racing, and this one officially kicks it off. Before I moved over to FOX in 2015, I covered the Indianapolis 500 for 11 years, which was an honor and privilege. When I came to FOX, I got to cover the Daytona 500 for the first time. I look forward to Daytona every year now for the same reasons as Supercross. It’s also the biggest audience we have all year, so it’s extremely important to be on my ‘A’ game and deliver the best stories and interviews.”

What did your schedule look like for the Rolex 24, even when you weren’t on the air? When did you sleep?

Little: “It’s incredible to cover a 24-hour race. It’s a lot of work and excitement. On Saturday (the day it began), I was at the track by 8 a.m. I did prep, had meetings and organized my notes and stats and arranged my pre-race interviews. The race coverage began six hours later at 2 p.m. I then consistently repeated being on the air for two hours at a time until 1 a.m. I went back to the hotel, ate, showered and slept for four hours and then I was up again at 6 a.m. and at the track by 7:30. I was back on air from 9 a.m-3 p.m. with a couple hours’ break. By the time I flew home, I had slept four hours in a 42-hour span. That makes the days of having a newborn sound all too familiar! It was tiring but very rewarding. And our ratings were up over 20%, which made it so worth the sleep deprivation.”

Danica Patrick makes her final NASCAR start this weekend in the Daytona 500. You have covered her since her early IndyCar Series days. How would you characterize her impact on NASCAR? On young women?

Little: “She is so polarizing and always has been since 2005, her first year in IndyCar and the year she became the first woman to lead laps at the Indy 500. She has influenced women of all ages, race fans or not. I believe there are more girls racing now because of her. For her to race at the top level of NASCAR every week alongside the men is incredible. In what other sport do men and women compete against each other on the same playing field? I think her impact on the sport won’t truly be felt until years down the road. There have been so few before her who’ve made it to this level. I only hope there’s many more after her who do.”

How far away do you think NASCAR is from seeing the next Danica Patrick?

Little: “It’s hard to say. I see a few girls out there now who could make it as far as Danica as far as talent and desire, but unless they get an opportunity with a good team and a solid sponsor to back them, we may not see the next Danica for decades. Plus, being good in a go-kart is one thing. Being good and competitive in a 3,300-lb stock car is another.”

How much does your own dirt bike background help you when covering Supercross? By the same token, do you feel you can relate better to IMSA or NASCAR?

Little: “When I first made the switch from covering two wheels to four wheels, my mentality was ‘it’s all a racing mentality, just different vehicle and rules.’ For sure, riding dirt bikes helped my understanding of how they worked and how the riders ‘felt.’ I did the same thing when I began covering IndyCar and NASCAR. I put myself through about five different driving/racing schools. I actually got my racing license in California to race open-wheel Formula cars. I loved it. The only racing I did was for the Toyota Pro Celebity race in Long Beach. I went through three days of schooling and ended up winning the race! I beat a NASCAR Camping World Truck Series champion to the line for overall, becoming just the second woman in 32 years to win the race. Ironically, that same day, Danica Patrick won her one and only race in IndyCar in Japan. That was one of the coolest moments of my life. Those experiences truly help me in my job. And the ‘street cred’ with drivers isn’t too bad either!”

Who is your pick to win the Daytona 500?

Little: “It’s hard to pick since we haven’t seen these drivers on-track yet, but I’m going out on a limb to say Jimmie Johnson will win. Chevrolet is unveiling a new Camaro model this year, and I have a feeling they will come with a vengeance. Plus, with all of the ‘young driver’ coverage, I could see him winning it just to make a statement about the veteran guys.”

What is the biggest story you will be watching in the 2018 NASCAR season?

Little: “The new Chevy Camaro and how it performs is one. Can Toyota pick up where they left off, winning a third of the races and the championship (in 2017)? How will the rookies do and who will win first? And the over-the-wall pit crews have been cut from six to five members. Teams will be getting creative, which could lead to some injuries, mistakes and longer pit stops. Whoever figures out the choreography and executes the smoothest and fastest will be a major contender this year.”

After covering Danica Patrick since her IndyCar days, you will sit down with her just a couple of days prior to her final NASCAR start. What do you most want to ask her?

Little: “I’d love to know a few things from Danica, most specifically how she envisions herself and her brand beyond ‘race car driver’ and what does she hope people most remember about her and what she did in the sport.”

FOX Sports Powers into Daytona 500, Kicking Off 18th Season of NASCAR Coverage

Nearly 100 Hours of Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series, NASCAR XFINITY and Camping World Truck Series Speedweeks Coverage Culminates with Feb. 18 DAYTONA 500 on FOX
2012 Champ Keselowski Serves as FS1 Analyst for NASCAR XFINITY SERIES Season Opener

CHARLOTTE, NC – FOX Sports powers into its 18th consecutive season of NASCAR coverage, beginning with Daytona Speedweeks, which culminates with the 60th running of the iconic DAYTONA 500 from Daytona International Speedway on Sunday, Feb. 18 (2:30 PM ET). Live coverage begins at 1:00 PM ET with FOX NASCAR SUNDAY, preceded by NASCAR RACEDAY at 11:00 AM ET, also on FOX.

FOX NASCAR’s presentation of Daytona Speedweeks, highlighted by FOX Sports’ 15th DAYTONA 500, features nearly 100 hours of multi-platform programming.

DAYTONA 500
For its 15th DAYTONA 500, FOX NASCAR offers with seven NASCAR premier series championships’ worth of analysis and insight from Hall of Famer and three-time champ Darrell Waltrip alongside four-time champion Jeff Gordon, with veteran play-by-play announcer Mike Joy, covering his 43rd DAYTONA 500, and DAYTONA 500-winning crew chief Larry McReynolds with race analysis. This year’s running of the “Great American Race” marks the 20th anniversary of McReynolds leading Dale Earnhardt to his elusive DAYTONA 500 victory in 1998 atop the pit box for Richard Childress Racing.

Delivering stories and updates from pit road are pit reporters Jamie Little, FOX NASCAR newcomer and NASCAR driver Regan Smith, Vince Welch and Matt Yocum. Chris Myers hosts FOX NASCAR SUNDAY and the network’s coverage from the famed Hollywood Hotel mobile studio alongside Michael Waltrip, Darrell Waltrip and Gordon. Joy, McReynolds, Myers, Darrell Waltrip and Yocum were members of the original FOX NASCAR on-air team that debuted at Daytona in 2001.

The DAYTONA 500 is streamed live in both English and Spanish through FOX Sports GO, the critically acclaimed app that provides live streaming video of FOX Sports content at home or on-the-go. All FOX NASCAR programming is live streamed on FOX Sports GO. FOX Deportes, the No. 1 Spanish-language sports network in the U.S., offers live coverage of the DAYTONA 500.

FOX Sports’ Daytona Speedweeks coverage kicks off Saturday, Feb. 10 on FS1 with MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES PRACTICE for THE CLASH AT DAYTONA (10:30 AM ET). Off-the-track, FS1 offers live coverage of DAYTONA 500 MEDIA DAY on Wednesday, Feb. 14 (12:00-2:00 PM ET), as well as a recap of the day’s happenings on an expanded edition of NASCAR RACE HUB at 5:00 PM ET.

THE CLASH AT DAYTONA
THE CLASH AT DAYTONA, the first NASCAR event of the season, moves back to an afternoon start time in 2018, airing live on FS1 on Sunday, Feb. 11 (3:00 PM ET). Joy, Darrell Waltrip and Gordon call the 75-lap, non-points race with McReynolds and pit reporters Little, Welch and Yocum. Myers and Michael Waltrip host the network’s coverage from the Hollywood Hotel.

DAYTONA 500 QUALIFYING
DAYTONA 500 QUALIFYING is broadcast live on FOX on Sunday, Feb. 11 (12:00 PM ET), setting the prestigious first and second starting positions for the DAYTONA 500, as well as the starting order for the CAN-AM DUEL AT DAYTONA.

CAN-AM DUEL AT DAYTONA
The complete DAYTONA 500 starting order is determined following the CAN-AM DUEL AT DAYTONA, live on FS1 on Thursday, Feb. 15 (7:00 PM ET). The pair of qualifying races is run under the lights with Joy, Darrell Waltrip and Gordon on the call, with race analysis by McReynolds and pit reporting by Little, Smith, Welch and Yocum. Myers and Michael Waltrip host.

NASCAR XFINITY SERIES
FOX Sports kicks off its fourth year of NASCAR XFINITY SERIES coverage from Daytona on Saturday, Feb. 17 with the season opener at 2:30 PM ET. Adam Alexander calls the action alongside Michael Waltrip and 2012 MONSTER ENERY NASCAR CUP SERIES champion Brad Keselowski with pit reporting by Little, Smith and Yocum. NASCAR RACEDAY – XFINITY, FS1’s XFINITY Series pre-race show, hosted by Shannon Spake and McReynolds, previews the action at 2:00 PM ET.

NASCAR CAMPING WORLD TRUCK SERIES
In its 16th year of exclusive coverage on FOX Sports, the NASCAR CAMPING WORLD TRUCK SERIES opens its season on Friday, Feb. 16 (7:30 PM ET) on FS1, with complete pre-race coverage beginning with NASCAR RACEDAY: NCWTS at 7:00 PM ET. Vince Welch has the call alongside Phil Parsons and Michael Waltrip. Hermie Sadler and Alan Cavanna cover pit road. John Roberts hosts NCWTS SETUP with analysis from two-time series champion Todd Bodine and Jeff Hammond and reporting by Sadler and Cavanna.

NASCAR RACEDAY
Before FOX coverage of the DAYTONA 500 begins on Sunday, Feb. 18, NASCAR RACEDAY (11:00 AM ET) is broadcast moves from FS1 to FOX for the first time. John Roberts hosts with analysis from Jeff Hammond and Bobby Labonte from the Charlotte studio with at-track reporting from Cavanna and Kenny Wallace. NASCAR RACEDAY also airs immediately preceding THE CLASH AT DAYTONA and the CAN-AM DUEL on FS1.

NASCAR RACE HUB
FS1’s NASCAR RACE HUB, NASCAR’s most-watched daily news and update show, which enjoyed a 15% total viewership increase (166,000 vs. 144,000) in 2017 vs. 2016, airs Monday through Thursdays at 6:00 PM ET during the NASCAR season and is hosted by Alexander and Spake. Returning analysts include Jeff Hammond, Jeff Gordon, Michael Waltrip, Brad Keselowski, Joey Logano, Chad Knaus, Regan Smith, Todd Bodine, David Ragan, Drew Blickensderfer, Austin Dillon, AJ Allmendinger, Bobby Labonte and Casey Mears. Alan Cavanna and Kenny Wallace offer live reports from the track during Daytona Speedweeks. On the weekends, the show continues with NASCAR RACE HUB WEEKEND EDITION, hosted by Roberts.

NASCAR RACE CLASSIC SPECIALS
In addition, FOX Sports has several NASCAR specials planned during Daytona Speedweeks. Immediately following the Friday, Feb. 16 NASCAR CAMPING WORLD TRUCK SERIES race, FS1 premieres NASCAR RACE CLASSIC: THE 1998 DAYTONA 500, a condensed version of the original race broadcast highlighting Dale Earnhardt Sr.’s elusive win. On Thursday, Feb. 15, FS1 debuts NASCAR RACE CLASSIC: 1988 DAYTONA 500 (10:00 PM ET) following the CAN-AM DUEL AT DAYTONA live broadcast. These premieres are complemented by a special encore presentation of the third “Beyond the Wheel” short film series at 6:00 PM ET preceding Friday’s race.

ARCA RACING SERIES
Catch even more live on-track action as the ARCA RACING SERIES season opener airs live on FS1 on Saturday, Feb. 10 (4:00 PM ET). Kevin Lee calls the race with analysis from Phil Parsons and pit reporting by Jim Tretow and Dillon Welch (FOX broadcaster Vince Welch’s son).

For more media information relating to FOX Sports’ coverage of Daytona Speedweeks, visit FOX SPORTS PRESS PASS and follow @FOXSportsPR on Twitter. For the latest NASCAR news and information, please visit www.FOXSports.com and follow @NASCARonFOX on Twitter.