DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Did Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin land on the moon in 1969?

Plenty of people assumed this question wasn’t really up for debate, until Golden State Warriors star Steph Curry said in December that he didn’t think the moon landing was real. Curry then back tracked and said he was joking — perhaps just looking to score an invitation to visit NASA, which he did.

But Curry’s controversial moon take/joke still ignited debates about whether or not the original moon landing was faked and staged instead.

So during media day for the Daytona 500 Wednesday, For The Win decided to ask a handful of NASCAR drivers whether they believe the 1969 moon landing was real or not. And, like with so many other things, they didn’t all agree.

Was the 1969 moon landing was real?

Martin Truex Jr., 38, No. 19 Toyota: Of course. Somebody thinks it’s a lie now, right? I’m pretty sure we did. No, I’m positive. It’s legit. It’s not fake news.

Jimmie Johnson, 43, No. 48 Chevrolet: Absolutely, we landed on the moon.

Joey Logano, 28, No. 22 Ford: Of course we landed on the moon. How would you fake it?

Kyle Busch, 33, No. 18 Toyota: I don’t think we landed on the moon in 1969. Technology was not there, there’s no way. We’ve been there by now, but I don’t think we were there in ’69.

People say they see aliens too. Are there aliens? Have you ever seen a spaceship? Can’t say that I have, but people believe it. Does Area 51 exist? I wanna believe it does, but I’ve never seen it. I have no proof.

Chase Elliott, 23, No. 9 Chevrolet: I do believe we went to the moon. And the Earth is not flat.

Brad Keselowski, 35, No. 2 Ford: To pull that off with the technology they had in 1969 seems so inconceivable to me. But then again, the only thing that seems more inconceivable than pulling that off is pulling off a conspiracy from 1969 until now.

That’s really the question. What is more plausible, that the government pulled off a 50-year conspiracy or that the government paid a buttload of money to get the best people in the world to fly a rocket to the moon? I’m going to say the conspiracy is more unbelievable. I believe that we went. But I have moments (where I’m undecided).

What did my teammates say? Blaney doesn’t believe! It’s a younger generation thing.

Ryan Blaney, 25, No. 12 Ford: I believe we’ve been to the moon, but I don’t think we landed there when we said we did. I just don’t think so.

FTW: Logano wondered how would you fake that.

Blaney: Easy to fake that. You get a studio. It’s pretty easy. I know it was 1969, but you could figure it out. They have studios, they know how to make movies, but I don’t know. No one will ever know if we actually did or not, except for Mr. Buzz Aldrin.

Kurt Busch, 40, No. 1 Chevrolet: I think we did, yes. My (late) grandma had the newspaper from the Chicago Tribune from 1969. I framed it, and it’s up in one of my spare bedrooms. I thought it was cool. it was found in one of her boxes of old newspapers. …

I found that one to be the most important or significant. Not saying we landed on the moon — no I’m just kidding!

Clint Bowyer, 39, No. 14 Ford: I just watched a movie about that, and I really liked it. I think all of us should know more about that than we (do) and I definitely know I should know more. I’m unfortunately learning the things I should have been learning when I was younger and should have been paying attention to when I was in school through movies and things like that.

But I’m glad they put them out every now and then. That was a pretty neat movie that opened my eyes to a lot of things that happened in that era and that specific thing. So I think they did (land on the moon).

Kyle Larson, 26, No. 42 Chevrolet: Sure, we landed on the moon. But I don’t know. There’s a lot of stuff that I guess there’s conspiracies on, but I’m not educated enough to give an answer.

Although FTW was not able ask driver Ryan Newman his thoughts on the moon landing, the now-41-year-old No. 6 Ford driver once said in 2010 (while the U.S. Army was one of his primary sponsors):

“I’m pretty sure (the original moon landing) was fake. I watched the documentary on it, and it’s pretty easy to believe. The flag was standing straight out when there’s no wind up there. When they step on the surface, there should have been a big cloud because there’s no atmosphere.”

Overall though, most NASCAR drivers we polled this week do believe that the moon landing in 1969 was, in fact, real.