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Ask any NASCAR fan, “Why did you start following the sport?” The thunderous roar of the stock car taking rapid turns around the oval is going to be their primary motivation. There’s this thing about an automobile. It talks to you, it screams at you, and it questions you. So when we visit the tracks to watch our favorite drivers reaching inhuman speeds, these sweet sounds are what keep us connected so deeply to the sport. But the world doesn’t truly understand it always.

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They call it a mere sport for entertainment. But you and I both know that the severity of a crash or the excitement of a win can never be truly expressed by narration from a third party. Fortunately for NASCAR fans, this grim issue might come to an end soon. And if everything goes as planned, we can connect to the sport better, watching it on our favorite devices at an advanced level.

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Peacock, which streams the races handled by NBC for NASCAR, is bringing a new feature dedicated to the fans of the sport. Now, the viewers will be able to mute announcers and change crowd noise levels during their broadcasts. This will help the viewers to cancel whatever distracts them to focus more on the specific atmosphere they want to create while streaming.

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As of now, this feature will be limited to streaming only. All of this comes under the platform’s upgrade to new Dolby sound products recently.

If you regularly follow motorsports and have multiple subscriptions, chances are that you are already aware of this feature. The F1TV app allows viewers to stream according to their choice and select the audio they want. What it means is, viewers can choose to follow the onboard of a specific driver and watch them throughout the race, muting the main race commentary.

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It helps the community in two ways. First, it brings the viewers closer to the race and event, even though they may not make it to the track, by giving them the ‘true’ atmosphere and sounds of the race.

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Secondly, it makes the sport more popular and encourages the viewers to continue or upgrade the subscription service if they like the feature and broadcast quality.

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What Peacock has done is implement the same feature in a different manner. The key idea remains the same, only the technology and the scenes method have changed.

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While the exact implementation of this during the NASCAR event is yet to be explained, we can expect the streaming platform to allow us to focus more on the sounds of the track and the car itself.

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It is a major victory for the fans who haven’t been exactly happy with NASCAR’s coverage. There are multiple issues that keep NASCAR fans from purchasing tickets to a race. A large group of NASCAR followers prefers to listen to the race instead of the broadcast commentary or announcers, due to the mess-ups that happen from time to time.

For them, this new feature is a chance to feel included. It stops them from feeling alienated from the audience, lucky enough to attend on track.

Talking about NASCAR on NBC, it would be a good idea to stay up to date with the races that are being streamed on Peacock.

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Peacock TV 2026 Schedule: Which NASCAR races will be streamed on Peacock TV

Competing with the vast array of streaming and broadcast partners, Peacock TV will stream some NBC races during the 2026 season. NBC/USA Network will handle the broadcast of the last 14 races on the 2026 schedule. However, Peacock TV will only stream the four races out of the 14. The very race streamed by Peacock TV is the Coke Zero Sugar 400.

The Coke Zero Sugar 400 is the final race of the NASCAR Regular season. Fans should expect to see the regular-season champion crowned during the event when NASCAR returns to Daytona International Speedway.

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It is quite unfortunate that the viewers won’t be able to use the new audio muting feature sooner. However, for the Coke Sugar 400, the popularity of Daytona International Speedway is a rare opportunity for NBC and Peacock TV. If their new audio feature works as planned, they can cement their status as one of the most profitable NASCAR broadcast partners.

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The final three races that are being handled by NBC are: the Yellawood 500 at Talladega, the Xfinity 500 at Martinsville, and the NASCAR Cup Series Championship Race at the Homestead-Miami Speedway.

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What are your expectations about this new streaming feature? Do you think it is going to tip the fans in favor of NBC and Peacock TV?

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Written by

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Rohan Singh

306 Articles

Rohan Singh is a NASCAR Writer at Essentially Sports who is accustomed to conveying his passion for motorsports to a large audience. He has previously created driver and event pages for NASCAR legends like Dale Earnhardt, Jimmie Johnson and the Crown Jewel events of the sport like the Daytona 500 and Brickyard 400. As a writer, Rohan uses his understanding of the technical concepts of engineering to deconstruct the complex and highly technological motorsports vertical for his audience. He fell in love with motorsports in 2013, watching Sebastian Vettel claim his crown in India, and since then, he has been pursuing motorsports as his lifelong goal. Armed with the technical know-how and engineering expertise of a Mechanical Engineering degree, and pairing it with his journalistic experience of more than 600 articles in motorsports, Rohan likes to reel in his audience by simplifying the technicalities of the sport and authoring content which appeals to them as a dedicated motorsports fan himself.

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Suyashdeep Sason

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