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NASCAR at Talladega results: Tyler Reddick capitalizes on Michael McDowell's wreck to win the GEICO 500

LINCOLN, Ala. -- Tyler Reddick capitalized on an ill-timed block by Michael McDowell to win the GEICO 500 at Talladega, taking the lead as McDowell spun in front of the pack trying to protect the lead from Brad Keselowski coming to the checkered flag. It's Reddick's first win of the 2024 season, his first at Talladega, and the sixth win of his Cup career.

Despite the outside line he was leading breaking up on the last lap, the way to victory opened for Tyler Reddick when McDowell threw aggressive blocks on Keselowski, swinging high and then swinging low before spinning off Keselowski's bumper. As McDowell's spin triggered The Big One, Reddick snuck to Keselowski's outside and flatfooted the final yards back to the checkered flag as the carnage -- including Corey LaJoie crossing the finish line on his side -- behind him unfolded.

GEICO 500 unofficial results

1 - #45 - Tyler Reddick
2 - #6 - Brad Keselowski
3 - #10 - Noah Gragson
4 - #47 - Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
5 - #48 - Alex Bowman
6 - #62 - Anthony Alfredo
7 - #24 - William Byron
8 - #38 - Todd Gilliland
9 - #31 - Daniel Hemric
10 - #21 - Harrison Burton

Reddick found himself up front late thanks to a strategy play by the Toyotas, which seemed to be completely botched when several of them got together and crashed as they were running in a draft by themselves. Reddick credited the drafting help he received from the remaining Toyota drivers, Martin Truex Jr. and Ty Gibbs, with putting him in a position to win coming off the final corner.

"That was chaos! That's Talladega for you," Reddick told Fox Sports. "I've got to give a lot of credit to Ty Gibbs and Martin Truex. It was just us Toyotas left and they pushed me with everything they had. Huge credit to Martin and Ty. Without those pushes we don't win this race."

Reddick drove the Jordan Brand Toyota to Victory Lane with a special guest in tow, as NBA and sports icon and 23XI Racing co-owner Michael Jordan was in attendance for a win by one of his cars for the first time.

Jordan, who grew up a race fan in Wilmington, N.C. and even had strong ties to legendary car owner Hoss Ellington, made a point that he chose to come to Talladega and support his team even as the NBA playoffs have now begun -- even going as far as to compare the feeling of winning a NASCAR race to an NBA playoff game.

"[Team co-owner Denny Hamlin] keeps saying I was bad luck when I come to the track. And today we proved him wrong," Jordan joked to Fox Sports. "... I think Tyler did a good job. Unfortunately Bubba [Wallace] couldn't finish, but the whole team did a good job. I'm very happy to be here to see it.

"Everybody tells me when we win we can have a good celebration, but this is the first time I've been here [for it]. ... I'm all in. I love it. It replaces a lot of the competitiveness that I had in basketball. But this is even worse because I have no control. If I was playing basketball I have total control, but I have no control so I live vicariously through the drivers, crew chiefs and everybody. I'm very happy for 23XI. 110 percent."

Reddick's win marks the sixth in team history, two of which have come at Talladega.

Toyota turmoil

Aggressive fuel conservation strategies became a major part of the race in February's Daytona 500, and the same thing would play out again as NASCAR made its second trip of the year to a superspeedway. Long green flag runs of racing Sunday featured the lead pack slowing their own pace down by multiple seconds in an effort to try and gain track position by spending as little time on pit road as possible.

As the race progressed, topping off on fuel became a popular move, and it was one the Toyota drivers employed when they dropped out of the lead pack to hit the pits for fuel to the finish with 37 laps to go. Their strategy would have allowed them to run flat out in a single-file line, which would have allowed them to make significant time on the lead pack and would have put them at the head of the field at the end of the final cycle of stops.

It would have worked, and should have worked. But it all went awry when an accordion effect sent Erik Jones head on into the Turn 3 wall, triggering a crash that took out Bubba Wallace, John Hunter Nemechek and Denny Hamlin.

"Obviously we were pushing and shoving to try and make time with our strategy. I got pretty sideways getting into [Turn] 3 and tried to gather it up, and then ended up really hard into the wall," Jones told Fox Sports. "It's unfortunate. I hate it for my team and my guys."

"We were all pushing really hard to keep our line going. We had a plan and just didn't execute it as well as we should," Wallace, who made the initial contact with Jones, told Fox Sports. "Hate it for our Leidos team. Look forward to running these places and then you just get trapped in somebody else's mess. I hate it. It doesn't make us look good at all."

Following the accident, there was some initial concern as Jones reported back pain to safety workers, but he was able to climb from his car and was checked and released from the infield care center, though he was admittedly quite sore. Per Legacy Motor Club, Jones later returned to the care center and has since been transported to a local hospital for further evaluation.

Bad blocks

In the deciding moment of the race, two droughts had been set to potentially come to an end. Ford was in position to get its first win of the 2024 season, while Brad Keselowski was in position to end a three-year winless streak as he made his move on Michael McDowell for the win. Likewise, a third career victory and a potential third playoff berth in four years was on the line for McDowell, who started from the pole and led the most laps (36).

That all went awry when McDowell blocked once but was not able to block twice. As he swung his car down to the inside of the track to block Keselowski as he cut low, he ended up sliding across Keselowski's nose and sliding around, leaving him to lament what went wrong as well as what could have been.

"[Keselowski] did everything right. He pushed me out, I drove back to him, and I was able to get in front of him that very first time. But when I came back down just barely, barely wasn't clear," McDowell told Fox Sports. "... I hate it that we didn't make it to the finish line. We had such a fast Mustang today. It's unfortunate, it's been a rough few weeks. But it's the last lap at Talladega. Going for it trying to get a win and just came up short and hate that I took a lot of guys with me."

"I backed up, Noah [Gragson] gave me a great push and I went to make a move on Michael. And he covered it and I went back the other way, I got another push from Noah and just nowhere to go when Michael came back down," Keselowski told Fox Sports. "I hate that for him, he's a good guy ... Just kind of the way this stuff goes, right?"

McDowell's spin gave Keselowski the lead momentarily, but the contact broke his momentum just enough that it allowed Reddick to drive past him and beat him back to the finish line, yet again frustrating Keselowski's efforts to end what it now a 108-race winless drought dating back to the spring Talladega race in 2021.

"It's a solid day, but not the one we wanted. ... Good finishes are important, but we want wins," Keselowski said. "And we could really taste it today. It just didn't happen."

Race results rundown

  • Officially, NASCAR timing and scoring counted 72 lead changes among 23 different drivers during Sunday's race. That marks the second Talladega race in a row that has featured 70 or more lead changes, and it's the most lead changes in any Cup race at the track since a record-tying 88 lead changes in the spring of 2011.
  • Two drivers in the top 10 earned career-best finishes, with Noah Gragson crossing the line third and Anthony Alfredo, driving part-time in Cup for Beard Motorsports, coming home sixth. For Alfredo, who led four laps, his run capped off a weekend that also saw him finish third in Saturday's Xfinity Series race.
  • Several other drivers also broke long droughts from their last top-10 finish to the end of Sunday's race. Daniel Hemric's ninth-place finish marked his first top 10 since Fontana in 2022, while Harrison Burton's 10th-place finish marked his first since Pocono last July.
  • Ricky Stenhouse Jr. put his skills as a superspeedway racer to good use, earning his second top-10 finish of the year and setting a new season-best finish in fourth. It's also Stenhouse's first top five since he finished fourth in the Bristol Dirt Race in 2023.
  • If anything, Corey LaJoie should earn points for style the way he finished the race. LaJoie's car was knocked upside down and underneath Josh Berry's car, and then slid on its side along the outside wall and past the start/finish line before flipping over and coming to rest on its wheels. LaJoie was credited with finishing 18th, the same spot Clint Bowyer was credited with when he crossed the finish line upside down in the 2007 Daytona 500.
  • Cody Ware made his season debut in his family's No. 15 Ford, marking his first race back after he was suspended for much of the 2023 season following domestic assault charges he was later cleared of. Ware spent the bulk of the day in the lead pack and even drove up inside the top five before finishing 24th after being swept up in the wreck at the finish.
  • Shane van Gisbergen acquainted himself well in his first Cup race on an oval, as the former V8 Supercars champion and last year's winner at Chicago led three laps and nearly led a third lane of cars at the very top of the track towards the lead in the final laps before falling back to 28th. Van Gisbergen also led one lap in Saturday's Xfinity Series race.
  • After leading only a single lap in his Cup career entering Sunday, John Hunter Nemechek spent a total of 20 laps out front. That's the most laps a Nemechek has led in a Cup race since 2005, when father Joe Nemechek led 30 laps after starting from the pole in the August race at Michigan. Nemechek would finish 33rd after being eliminated in the crash among the Toyotas.
  • The early portion of Sunday's race featured a driver/owner out front, as B.J. McLeod drove to the front and led five laps -- the most he's ever led in a single race -- in the Live Fast Motorsports No. 78 that he owns and that did not have any primary sponsor. McLeod was leading the top lane when his car lost fuel pressure, putting him in a hole that he was unable to recover from as he finished one lap down in 37th.

Next race

It's off to The Monster Mile for the NASCAR Cup Series as they make their annual trip to Dover Motor Speedway for the Wurth 400 next Sunday at 2 p.m. ET on FS1.

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Live updates
 
Pinned

The outside line breaks up, and it's between McDowell and Keselowski! Keselowski moves high to try and end his winless streak! McDowell blocks! THEY CRASH! Tyler Reddick makes it through and he's going to WIN at Talladega as they wreck BIG behind him!

1 - #45 - Tyler Reddick
2 - #6 - Brad Keselowski
3 - #10 - Noah Gragson
4 - #47 - Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
5 - #48 - Alex Bowman
6 - #62 - Anthony Alfredo
7 - #24 - William Byron
8 - #38 - Todd Gilliland
9 - #31 - Daniel Hemric
10 - #21 - Harrison Burton

 

Two-by-two throughout the lead pack. The third lane has yet to develop, but it looks like Ryan Preece is trying to make something happen up there.

McDowell continues to lead and continues to try and blunt the momentum of the outside line led by Tyler Reddick.

 
@NASCARONFOX via Twitter
 

McDowell now gets the lead again and is trying to control both lines. He moves up high to cover Reddick, then down low to cover Keselowski.

McDowell's been third at Talladega in the past, and today's polesitter is looking for his third career Cup win.

 
@NASCARONFOX via Twitter
 

That caution allowed the rest of the field to come to pit road and top off on fuel to the end. Tyler Reddick, Martin Truex Jr. and Ty Gibbs, the three Toyotas who weren't involved in that crash, are the race leaders and are lined up on the outside line for the restart up against McDowell, Keselowski, Gragson and Berry with 27 laps to go.

Erik Jones, who complained of back pain after that crash, was able to climb out of his car and has been checked and released from the infield care center

 
@NASCAR via Twitter
 
@NASCAR via Twitter
 
@NASCARONFOX via Twitter
 
@NASCARONFOX via Twitter
 

Erik Jones took the worst of that by far. He took a vicious head-on collision with the outside wall and is requesting assistance from the medical team complaining of back pain.

 

The group of Toyotas that pitted is now led by Tyler Reddick with drafting help from Erik Jones. Since they've now topped off on fuel, they'll be able to run as hard as they want.

AND THEY RUN TOO HARD! Erik Jones gets turned HARD into the outside wall, and Bubba Wallace and John Hunter Nemechek get collected as does Denny Hamlin! Caution is out and that's a complete disaster for the Toyota group.

 

We've got takers to pit road with 37 laps to go! Michael McDowell's team was trying to force the rest of the lead pack to pit, and a lot of the Toyotas -- Wallace, Jones, Reddick, Nemechek, Truex, Hamlin etc. -- oblige.

We'll see if that now forces the rest of the lead pack's hand. As of now, no takers to pit road the next time by.

 
@NASCARONFOX via Twitter
 

Michael McDowell has turned into the Pied Piper. He's leading the field along the outside line up next to the wall in single-file formation as the pack has started to break up. Just past 40 laps to go now.

 

Daniel Hemric took the top spot momentarily after the restart, but now it's polesitter Michael McDowell who has gotten the front and is trying to control the front of the pack. He's leading a group of five Fords and a Chevrolet with Front Row Motorsports teammate Todd Gilliland behind him along with Brad Keselowski, Kyle Busch, Cody Ware and Noah Gragson.

 

Here come the nine leaders to pit road with 51 laps to go, and they're bringing a bunch of others with them to top off on fuel. Looks like the top seven or so stayed out and will be the leaders at the restart with 49 to go.

Front of the field will be Berry, Gragson, Hemric, and Burton, all four of whom have never won a Cup Series race. They're joined by Shane van Gisbergen and Corey LaJoie at the green flag.

 
@NASCAR via Twitter
 
@NASCAR via Twitter
 

This caution is going to put everyone in their window to make it to the end on fuel, and it looks like all the leaders will take full advantage of it. Chastain brings virtually everyone on the lead lap down.

Joey Logano gains three spots to win the race off pit road over Berry, Gragson, Cindric and Busch. Looks like nine cars stayed out led by Anthony Alfredo and they may pit the next few laps around.

Issuing a correction on Justin Haley: He just needed a push back to his pit box, but he's now three laps down and out of contention. Christopher Bell is out of the race.

 
@NASCARONFOX via Twitter
 
@NASCAR via Twitter
 

Trouble at the back of the lead pack! Chase Elliott turned Justin Haley into Christopher Bell, and Chase Briscoe also slides through it! Caution is out for the first major accident of the day.

It looks like Bell's car is done and so is Haley's. That occurred as Chastain and Gragson were battling each other for the lead.

 

Ross Chastain gets pushed to the lead in a tandem draft by Kyle Busch. You'll see more and more of that as we get into the late stages of this race.

It looks like now he's going to try and cover both lanes. Gragson on the bottom and Logano up top. Now he opts to stick with drafting help from Gragson as Logano surges up alongside him on the outside.

 

Okay, so -- Anthony Alfredo came to pit road from the lead to top off, as did all but 9 or so cars. Joey Logano is the race leader over Ross Chastain, Austin Cindric, Kyle Busch and Austin Dillon.

Green flag with 62 laps to go, and a huge line of cars on the inside after everyone who topped off had to go to the tail end of the longest line per NASCAR rules.

 
@NASCAR via Twitter
 

Joey Logano holds the lead off pit road during stops under caution. However, he isn't in the lead at the moment: That's Anthony Alfredo, who evidently pitted at Lap 121. Trying to see what that's about, but the broadcast mentioned that Alfredo's team -- which runs select races but focuses on fast cars for the superspeedways, told him they wanted to see their car at the front, strategy be damned.

 
@NASCAR via Twitter
 
@NASCARONFOX via Twitter
 
@NASCAR via Twitter
 

A deadlock in the race to the stage end until coming off Turn 4, as Logano gets a surge to lad them back to the stage win. That's two stage wins for Penske Fords today.

1 - #22 - Joey Logano
2 - #2 - Austin Cindric
3 - #5 - Kyle Larson
4 - #3 - Austin Dillon
5 - #1 - Ross Chastain
6 - #45 - Tyler Reddick
7 - #17 - Chris Buescher
8 - #41 - Ryan Preece
9 - #9 - Chase Elliott
10 - #10 - Noah Gragson

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