The past week has been emotional for NASCAR drivers and fans, as the sport suddenly lost a legend, Kyle Busch. Our NASCAR experts, Jeff Gluck and Jordan Bianchi, were among those saddened and wrote extensively of Busch and what he’s meant to the sport.In Nashville (specifically, Lebanon), Tennessee, Busch will continue to be on the minds of his peers as they try their hands at the circuit’s longest concrete oval.Tyler Reddick is the favorite, Ryan Blaney is last year’s champ, but Bianchi and Gluck think Denny Hamlin or Carson Hocevar is likely to see victory lane.As always, Gluck and Bianchi answer our most pressing questions and make predictions about the upcoming race.The Cracker Barrel 400 at Nashville Superspeedway is Sunday at 7 p.m. on Prime Video and HBO Max.Race winner odds for the Cracker Barrel 400Obviously, the news of Kyle Busch’s sudden death shook the sports world, and you each have written on it. Sunday’s winner at the Coca-Cola 600, Daniel Suárez (a former teammate of Busch), dedicated the win to him. What did Busch mean to NASCAR and what is his legacy?Jeff: Busch was one of NASCAR’s most prominent figures over the last two decades, and one of the few whose name was recognizable beyond the stock car racing bubble. That he’s been on the cover of People Magazine this week and covered extensively by every conceivable news outlet is proof of his reach. NASCAR simply doesn’t have a lot of drivers like that, especially these days. Given Busch’s story was unfinished, as was his post-career future — mentoring son Brexton and possibly joining the TV booth as an analyst — it’s an incalculable loss to the sport. In terms of the legacy he leaves behind? As NASCAR’s biggest overall winner, for one thing; if Brexton ends up choosing to follow in his dad’s footsteps, that could be part of Busch’s legacy as well.Jordan: He was a transcendent superstar in a sport that doesn’t have many of those. He was NASCAR’s most prolific winner and a superbly gifted driver, one of NASCAR’s most talented of all time. He was also a husband and a father to two young children. His loss leaves an incredibly big void that will likely never be completely filled.The Nashville Superspeedway is the longest concrete oval on the circuit at 1.33 miles. How does this impact the strategy and are there any cars better suited for the track?Jeff: Concrete tracks are always sort of weird in NASCAR, and there’s probably a reason only three (Bristol, Dover and Nashville) are on the schedule. That said, I’m not sure there’s a pattern with today’s drivers like there was back when “Concrete Carl” Edwards seemed to own these types of places. This track should favor drivers who are typically good on 1.5-mile intermediate tracks — Denny Hamlin, Kyle Larson, Chase Elliott, Christopher Bell, Ryan Blaney. Essentially, the usual suspects, for the most part.Jordan: Although a concrete track, Nashville races similarly to an intermediate, and that means how Sunday night’s race unfolds should be in line with what we’ve seen on such tracks. And if last week’s race at Charlotte — another intermediate — was any indication, then expect the Toyotas to be fast.