Raise your hand if you had Michael Jordan becoming the face of NASCAR.

Not sure about the shelf life of this new role for the basketball god and global brand, but for now, he’s here to preach the stock-car sermon, and if there’s any hesitation among the sport’s marketeers, they should take a deep breath and embrace the opportunity.

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Tyler Reddick won the Daytona 500 and will get his due. But in the afterglow of the 68th Daytona 500, he’ll have a co-star on the highlight reels.

NASCAR Chairman and CEO Jim France was among those in Victory Lane congratulating Michael Jordan.

“Well, it’s big for the sport,” said Denny Hamlin, who splits his duties as one of Jordan’s two co-owners and a future Hall of Fame racer. “He’s the most popular athlete in the world; I don’t think there’s any disputing that. And he loves the sport.”

Just two months ago, Jordan was part of NASCAR’s worst nightmare. He wasn’t just the co-owner of one of the two teams suing NASCAR in antitrust court, but basically the face of the plaintiffs.

Parties settled before the case could go to jury, and while it was largely assumed Jordan’s side came out on the better side of the settlement, details remain out of public view.

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There was no hiding Sunday’s winners — Tyler Reddick, obviously, but also his 23XI race team and the most public of faces associated with the team.

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