NASCAR in Iowa: Weekend schedule, watch info, favorites for Iowa Corn 350

NASCAR in Iowa: Weekend schedule, watch info, favorites for Iowa Corn 350 originally appeared on NBC Sports Chicago

NASCAR on NBC is back.

Starting this weekend in Newton, Iowa, the remaining 20 races of the 2024 season will air on NBC or USA Network. The coverage starts off with a complete unknown, too, as the Cup Series visits Iowa Speedway for the first time ever.

The oval short track is just under a mile, and has held races for NASCAR’s lower series from 2009 to 2019. Now, Iowa Speedway is getting a chance at the big leagues.

Who is racing in Iowa? What’s the schedule for TV and streaming? And what drivers could contend for the win on Sunday? Here’s everything you need to know for the Iowa Corn 350 this weekend:

Thirty-six drivers will race at Iowa – the 34 full-timers, plus two others.

Kaz Grala will pilot the No. 15 for Rick Ware Racing as he continues his part-time effort. Then there’s AJ Allmendinger, who will make his sixth start of the season for Kaulig Racing.

Here’s the full entry list for Iowa:

Car number

Driver

Team

Sponsor

1

Ross Chastain

Trackhouse Racing

Busch Light

2

Austin Cindric

Team Penske

Menards

3

Austin Dillon

Richard Childress Racing

Bass Pro Shops

4

Josh Berry

Stewart-Haas Racing

Overstock

5

Kyle Larson

Hendrick Motorsports

HendrickCars.com

6

Brad Keselowski

RFK Racing

King’s Hawaiian

7

Corey LaJoie

Spire Motorsports

Gainbridge

8

Kyle Busch

Richard Childress Racing

Zone

9

Chase Elliott

Hendrick Motorsports

NAPA Auto Parts

10

Noah Gragson

Stewart-Haas Racing

Bass Pro Shops

11

Denny Hamlin

Joe Gibbs Racing

Interstate Batteries

12

Ryan Blaney

Team Penske

Advance Auto Parts

14

Chase Briscoe

Stewart-Haas Racing

Mahindra Tractors

15

Kaz Grala

Rick Ware Racing

Remixers.com/Xemex

16

AJ Allmendinger

Kaulig Racing

Action Industries

17

Chris Buescher

RFK Racing

Fastenal

19

Martin Truex Jr.

Joe Gibbs Racing

Reser’s Fine Foods

20

Christopher Bell

Joe Gibbs Racing

Rheem

21

Harrison Burton

Wood Brothers Racing

Menards

22

Joey Logano

Team Penske

Shell/Pennzoil

23

Bubba Wallace

23XI Racing

McDonald’s

24

William Byron

Hendrick Motorsports

Liberty University

31

Daniel Hemric

Kaulig Racing

Cirkul

34

Michael McDowell

Front Row Motorsports

Love’s Travel Stops

38

Todd Gilliland

Front Row Motorsports

Ruedebusch

41

Ryan Preece

Stewart-Haas Racing

Morton Buildings

42

John Hunter Nemechek

Legacy Motor Club

Dollar Tree

43

Erik Jones

Legacy Motor Club

Family Dollar

45

Tyler Reddick

23XI Racing

McDonald’s

47

Ricky Stenhouse Jr.

JTG Daugherty Racing

Kroger/NOS Energy

48

Alex Bowman

Hendrick Motorsports

Ally

51

Justin Haley

Rick Ware Racing

MotoRad

54

Ty Gibbs

Joe Gibbs Racing

Monster Energy

71

Zane Smith

Spire Motorsports

Focused Health

77

Carson Hocevar

Spire Motorsports

Premier Security

99

Daniel Suarez

Trackhouse Racing

Kubota Tractors

The Iowa Corn 350 is set for Sunday, June 16 at 7 p.m. ET.

Before the race on Sunday, there will be practice and qualifying sessions. All 36 drivers will get an hour of practice on Friday.

Then, the field will compete in two-round qualifying on Saturday. Here’s how it works:

The 36 drivers will be split into two groups (found here).

Each driver will make two laps in the first round, with the five fastest cars on single-lap speed in each group advancing.

In the final round, the remaining drivers each get two laps to set the top 10 starting order, with positions 11 through 36 set based on first round times.

Rick Allen (play-by-play), Jeff Burton (analyst), Steve Letarte (analyst) and Brad Daugherty (analyst) will be on the call for NBC all weekend. Marty Snider, Dave Burns and Kim Coon will serve as pit reporters while NASCAR Hall of Fame driver Dale Jarrett will be a specialty reporter and studio analyst for pre- and post-race coverage.

Here’s the full TV and streaming schedule:

Friday, June 14 (USA Network and streaming)

Practice: 5:30 p.m. ET, USA Network, NBC Sports app

Saturday, June 15 (USA Network and streaming)

Qualifying: 1 p.m. ET, USA Network, NBC Sports app

Sunday, June 16 (USA Network and streaming)

Countdown to Green: 6:30 p.m. ET, USA Network, NBC Sports app

Iowa Corn 350: 7 p.m. ET, USA Network, NBC Sports app

NASCAR Post-Race: 10:30 p.m. ET, USA Network, NBC Sports app

Well, there’s no race history here. This is the inaugural Iowa Corn 350 and the first Cup Series event ever held at the track. There are, however, plenty of past Iowa winners in the field.

Ryan Blaney, Erik Jones and William Byron have victories in both the second-tier Xfinity Series and third-tier Truck Series. Brad Keselowski and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. lead the way in Xfinity Series statistics, with three Iowa wins apiece.

Here are all the past Iowa winners racing on Sunday:

XFINITY SERIES

Brad Keselowski (2009, 2013, 2014)

Kyle Busch (2010)

Ricky Stenhouse Jr. (2011, 2011, 2012)

Chris Buescher (2015)

Ryan Blaney (2015)

Erik Jones (2016)

William Byron (2017)

Ryan Preece (2017)

Christopher Bell (2018, 2019)

Chase Briscoe (2019)

TRUCK SERIES

Austin Dillon (2010)

Ryan Blaney (2012)

Erik Jones (2014, 2015)

William Byron (2016)

John Hunter Nemechek (2017)

This is a total shot in the dark given the lack of history at Iowa.

But there are three questions you can answer to make your picks this weekend, in this order of importance:

1. Who has been quick on short tracks this season?

Iowa will be the sixth race this season held on a track that is one mile or shorter. In those first five events, Hamlin has three wins (Bristol, Richmond, Dover), Bell has one win (Phoenix) and Byron has one win (Martinsville).

All of the Toyota drivers for Joe Gibbs Racing (Hamlin, Bell, Truex, Gibbs) and 23XI Racing (Reddick, Wallace) have been especially fast at this track type, but Hendrick Motorsports’ Chevys (Byron, Larson, Elliott) claimed the top three spots at Martinsville.

2. Who has tested at Iowa Speedway?

NASCAR held a tire test at Iowa last month with one representative for each manufacturer: Bell for Toyota, Larson for Chevy and Keselowski for Ford.

While it might not seem like much, getting a full day of laps at a new track could be an invaluable experience. Drivers will only have an hour to practice on Friday, but these three will go in with a better idea of what to expect.

3. Who won at Iowa Speedway in the lower series?

Least importantly, you can look at the aforementioned past winners to determine who might run well on Sunday. It doesn’t deserve as much consideration as the previous two questions, though. In the lower series, drivers with bigger teams have a massive advantage. So, don’t put as much stock into this one, but don’t completely ignore it.

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