2.23.2026

Tyler Reddick Victorious in His Second Win in a Row

Tyler Reddick rallies from multicar wreck, rolls to second win in a row in overtime at EchoPark.

HAMPTON, Ga. — Tyler Reddick answered his Daytona 500 victory a week ago with a dramatic double overtime comeback win Sunday evening in the Autotrader 400 at EchoPark Speedway, marking the first time in nearly two decades a driver has won the first two races of the NASCAR Cup Series season.

Even though Reddick’s No. 45 23XI Racing Toyota’s right-front fender was damaged in an earlier incident, he was able to persevere, zigging and zagging and making a strong move to the front on the very last lap. He finished a mere 0.164 seconds ahead of Joe Gibbs Racing’s Chase Briscoe, a fellow Toyota driver who gave Reddick the crucial winning push to get ahead of his 23XI teammate Bubba Wallace and the Chevrolets of Carson Hocevar and Ross Chastain.

Reddick’s work makes him only the sixth driver in NASCAR history to win the opening two races of the year. NASCAR Hall of Famer Matt Kenseth was the last to do so in 2009.

Reddick, who started from the pole position after a rainout of Saturday’s qualifying and led a race-best 53 of the 271 laps, jumped out of his damaged Toyota Camry to retrieve the checkered flag. He paused to take a long look at the right-front damage – and missing fender – then smiled and wondered aloud how he pulled the victory off after being collected in a nine-car accident only 40 laps from the end of the scheduled distance.

“That’s crazy, how about that EchoPark Speedway?” the 30-year-old Californian yelled to the packed grandstands. “This place over the years, it just puts on some amazing racing. Handling matters here, but I don’t know, I guess determination outweighs handling.”

His team co-owner, NBA legend Michael Jordan, was equally as jubilant with Reddick’s rebound.

“Tyler did an unbelievable job, both teams did an unbelievable job,” Jordan said, also referring to Wallace, who led 46 laps but finished eighth in the final all-out push to the checkers.
“I wanted one of them to win, I feel bad for Bubba because he had an unbelievable day, but Tyler drove his ass off,” Jordan continued. “I’m very happy for Tyler and very happy for 23XI.
“The guys worked hard all summer, and they never gave up. This is the fruit of their labor, and for us to come out and win the first two races says a lot about our team.”

Reddick’s crew chief Billy Scott revealed post-race that the temperatures were so cold – 39 degrees at the checkered flag – that it was difficult to fully repair the car after the accident, and the team had to resort to heavy tape on the front end of Reddick’s damaged No. 45. Team co-owner and Joe Gibbs Racing driver Denny Hamlin said of Reddick’s car, “It looked like carnage city.”

Trackhouse Racing’s Chastain and Spire Motorsports teammates Hocevar and Daniel Suárez rounded out the top five behind Reddick and Briscoe.

In another phenomenal comeback story, Chastain’s Trackhouse teammate Shane van Gisbergen finished sixth – his best oval finish in his two years in the series – even after the former Australian Supercars Series champion was caught up in two of the yellow-flag incidents on the day.

Front Row Motorsports’ Zane Smith, Wallace, RFK Racing’s Ryan Preece and Team Penske’s Ryan Blaney rounded out the top 10 in a race where 12 cars finished within a second of the race winner. Nine of the race’s 14 leaders led double-digit laps.

It was all indicative of the competitive nature now expected and delivered by this high-banked 1.54-miler that races like the famed Daytona and Talladega superspeedways.

Drafting partners are important, and the young driver Hocevar said he just couldn’t entice anyone to draft with him late. So, he took off by himself, passing three cars in one daring move in the final lap of regulation to position himself up front. However, he made contact with 2025 race winner, Christopher Bell, on the first overtime restart, drawing the final caution.

That put Hocevar alongside Wallace on the front row for the final green flag. Wallace got the jump on the start and held the point until making a move high on the track that allowed Reddick to come from below and blow past them both.

With his Atlanta win, Reddick now leads his teammate Wallace by 40 points atop the championship standings.

“It’s really fun to be a part of 23XI right now,” Jordan said, grinning.
Holly Cain
NASCAR Wire Service