CLEVELAND, Ohio -- NASCAR's summer surge is now on, but the politics that go with it continue as well. Sunday's AAA 400 Drive For Autism in Dover will have just as much conversation about

as news on the track.

The race is scheduled for 1 p.m. Sunday on FS1, with qualifying Friday at 3:50 p.m., also on FS1. You can get live scoring and updates all weekend at NASCAR's Race Center and live streaming is available at FOX Sports GO.

NASCAR has never had a problem changing rules, even in the midst of the season. In the past this was overcome just by the sheer force of the driver personalities overriding whatever was done in the ivory tower.

Question: How many fans can name the top three drivers currently in the NASCAR Standings? (Martin Truex, Kyle Larson and Brad Keselowski). Or who won the latest NASCAR race (Austin Dillon).

As NASCAR becomes more and more faceless with the retirement and planned retirement of top drivers, relative to its past these constant rule changes now become at least an irritant for the fans.

In fact, as NASCAR looks to attract new and younger fans, it would help to find a set of rules that work, then live with them for awhile.

Here's NASCAR's slate for the weekend:

AAA 400 DRIVE FOR AUTISM

Site: Dover, Delaware.

Schedule: Friday, practice, 10:30 (FS2), qualifying, 3:50 p.m. (FS1); Saturday, practice, 9 a.m. (FS1), practice, 11:30 a.m., (FS1); Sunday, race, 1 p.m., FS1.

Track: Dover International Speedway (oval, 1 mile).

Race distance: 400 miles, 400 laps.

Last year: Matt Kenseth, starting 10th, won the spring Dover event.

Last race: Austin Dillon won in Charlotte, his first victory in 2017.

Fast facts: Dillon became the 28th different driver to win a race in all three of NASCAR's major series, joining the likes of Kurt and Kyle Busch, Carl Edwards and Denny Hamlin. ...Martin Truex Jr. now leads in points and has six stage wins, twice as many as his nearest competitor. ...Though Joe Gibbs Racing remains winless in 2017, all four of its drivers finished in the top 11 in Charlotte.

Next race: Axalta presents the Pocono 400, June 11, Pocono Raceway, Long Pond, Pennsylvania

XFINITY

ONE MAIN FINANCIAL 200

Site: Dover, Delaware.

Schedule: Friday, practice, 10:30 a.m., (FS2), practice, 1:30 p.m., (FS1); Saturday, qualifying, 10:05 a.m., (FS1), race, 1 p.m., FS1.

Track: Dover International Speedway (oval, 1 mile).

Race distance: 200 miles, 200 laps.

Last year: Erik Jones led 76 of 120 laps, holding off Darrell Wallace Jr.

Last race: Ryan Blaney picked up his first series win of the season.

Fast facts: Blaney passed Kevin Harvick on a restart 198 laps into last week's 200-lap race. Harvick finished 0.244 seconds behind Blaney, and Dillon was third. ...Christopher Bell's fourth-place finish might have been the most impressive of the race, considering he spun out on lap 3. ...Justin Allgaier has pulled within six points of Elliott Sadler for the series lead.

Next race: Pocono Green 250, June 10, Pocono Raceway.

CAMPING WORLD TRUCK

BAY HARBOR 200

Site: Dover, Delaware.

Schedule: Thursday, practice, 2 p.m., practice, 4 p.m.; Friday, qualifying, 2:35 p.m., (FS1), race, 5:30, FS1.

Track: Dover International Speedway (oval, 1 mile).

Race distance: 200 miles, 200 laps.

Last year: Matt Crafton picked up his first of two consecutive victories.

Last race: Kyle Busch won his second straight trucks race in Charlotte.

Fast facts: Kevin Bellicourt, the crew chief for No. 24 team from GMS Racing, was suspended for one race and fined $5,000 after the truck failed a post-race height requirement inspection following the Charlotte race. Driver Justin Haley lost 10 points, falling from 18th to 22nd in the standings. ...Johnny Sauter, with four top-five finishes in five events, heads to Dover with a 15-point lead in the standings.

Next race: Gateway 200, June 17, Gateway Motorsports Park, Madison, Illinois.

(The Associated Press contributed)