TALLADEGA, Ala. — So many unknowns tend to arise in the course of 500 miles at Talladega Superspeedway, from field-thinning wrecks to strategy sidesteps to the occasional surprise winner. For this Sunday’s go-around, the shroud of uncertainty hits a little differently for NASCAR Cup Series teams and their crew chiefs.

A shake-up of the stage lengths has tilted the strategy table for Sunday’s Jack Link’s 500 (3 p.m. ET, FOX, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), throwing a question mark into the equation for the first of two Cup Series stops this season at the 2.66-mile track. As is always the case, navigating the aerodynamic draft will be key for the 40-car field, but so will devising the best game plan for a new-look race, keeping in mind the emphasis on manufacturer teamwork and solidarity here.

RELATED: Sunday’s starting lineup | At-track photos: Talladega

Previous Talladega events featured stage breaks that split the race roughly into thirds. In both races last year, Stage 1 ended at Lap 60, Stage 2 at Lap 120 and the final stage ran to the full distance of 188 laps. Sunday’s event, however, will go 98 laps before the first stage intermission, with two stages of 45 laps each to round it out.

NASCAR competition officials took the measure in an effort to stem the fuel-saving style of racing at a high-banked superspeedway designed for flat-out driving, setting up the likelihood of full-throttle action without the need to pit in Sunday’s second half. But the shift has also introduced new wrinkles to how teams might handle pit stops — how many and when?

“The way the stages are set up, the first stage has put in a potentially new style of fuel saving that we haven’t really seen before, but it really depends on what the masses do,” said Luke Lambert, crew chief for Carson Hocevar’s No. 77 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet. “It’s created some options for all the teams, so it’ll be interesting to see how people play it. The length of that first stage forces the teams to have more options than we typically have, which means that it’s going to be even more important that you know what the people you plan to work with are doing, and guys can commit. So I expect it to be a little bit more dynamic, though, just once people start showing their hand and seeing what others are doing.”

Some of those options include flipping the stage, a commonplace tactic for road-course events. Pitting early before a stage’s end can place teams up front when the rest of the field hits pit road during the break, but for teams hungry to make up deficits in the points, a better stage finish and the chance to gain ground in the standings may take priority.

“I think it’s new, right? It’s different,” said Richard Boswell, crew chief for Austin Dillon’s No. 3 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet. “I think there’s multiple different strategies that you can play, whether or not you’re going to one-stop it or two-stop it and try to short the stage. But for me, it’s really just about, we need to try and stack some points up, and if we can get points in the stages, then we’re going to. If we can’t, then we’re going to try and position ourselves like we would for a road course and short it, and try and start the next stage toward the front. So it’s going to be unique. I think we were talking about it this week, like, what do we think? Are guys going to run it like a road course? Are they going to run it out to try and score stage points? 50% think it’s this way, and 50% think it’s this way, so I think it could be very, very split.”

MORE: Cup Series standings | Weekend schedule: Talladega

The length of the opening stage creates an interesting proposition for teams opting for a two-stop or one-stop plan for the opening 98-lap portion. Matt McCall, Spire’s Cup Series competition director, said those options will mostly be predicated on how teams attack Stage 1. A hard-running lead pack that breaks out to a quick early tempo would hurt the more fuel-conscious teams’ hopes of a one-stop stage, but the chance of a race-altering caution period early on could also force audibles across the board.

“The opportunity is there for one stop, for sure,” McCall said. “I really think it dictates on how the pace of the race starts, and which manufacturer is up front will probably dictate how that plays out. I think there’ll probably be a little cat-and-mouse to figure that out within the first five or 10 laps, but there is opportunity for that to happen. I think it’s probably a little bit less, but also well aware if a caution falls in the middle of it, that’ll change everything.”

One thing that’s unlikely to change is the reliance on manufacturer teamwork. Automakers tend to pit together in groups at Talladega to keep their aerodynamic-draft alignment intact; the differences in fuel economy and pit-road execution are where the running order can be jumbled up.

Boswell says the alterations to the stage-length procedures shouldn’t have a dramatic impact on how manufacturers team up.

“I think it’s more of the same,” Boswell said. “Most of the time, the manufacturers, they pit together one because they’re the same manufacturers, but their fuel economy is the same as well, right? So they know how hard they’re pushing, they’re getting data from their teammates. They know when those guys have to pit, and quite frankly, it’s the best information we have to pit with the best people that we can, so I don’t expect that to change.”

Track: Talladega Superspeedway
Location: Talladega, Alabama
Track length: 2.66 miles
When: 3 p.m. ET
Where to tune in: FOX, HBO Max, FOX One, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio
Race purse: $11,233,037
Race distance: 188 laps | 500.08 miles
Stages: 98 | 143 | 188
Sunday’s starting lineupCup Series pit stall assignments

How many options do drivers have for long Stage 1 on Sunday?

TALLADEGA, Ala. — In a twist for Sunday’s Cup Series race at Talladega, the opening stage will be the longest of the 500-mile event.

Stage 1 will make up more than half the race, consisting of 98 laps that will open the door for a myriad of strategy options when it comes to pitting for fuel.

Recent events at Daytona and Talladega have seen the field defer to a hive-mind mentality of fuel saving while running in a tight-knit pack around the superspeedways. However, this weekend could see a different pace to the choreography and three-time Talladega winner Joey Logano was quite bullish about the multiple scenarios that could take place with the new race layout.

“A, B, C, D and E. That’s where we’re at at the moment,” Logano said of Sunday’s strategy playbook. “I’m looking forward to it. “I think Stage 1 is going to be — I hope it goes green because I want to see it play out. Everybody’s a different kind of race fan, right? Some people want to see the wide-open the whole time and draft. But I mean, this race, you’re gonna get a little bit of both. The two- versus one-stop (strategy). I mean, that’s a real discussion and a real decision everyone has to make. And what’s better? I don’t know if there’s a clear answer. You can’t do it on your own, right? So everyone getting on the same page, it’s very challenging, but I think it’s kind of fun.”

With an estimated fuel window around 45 laps, it will require some serious fuel saving to try to attempt to complete Stage 1 on one pit stop if there isn’t a caution or two early on.

Joe Gibbs Racing’s Chase Briscoe described a “cat-and-mouse game,” where those toward the rear of the field could risk the one stop versus those racing toward the front.

“It’s only the guys in the back that can really do the max save to do the one-stop thing,” Briscoe said. “That’s where it’s hard because this car, even when the whole field is going hard, the guys in the back can just naturally still save more and kind of keep up. I think there’s going to be somebody that gambles the one-stop thing. Obviously, you have to have a couple guys do it with you. But if it works out, you could really screw the field because you could lap them essentially depending on how the pace works out.”

MORE: Weekend schedule, TV info | At-track photos

One of the keys to success at Talladega is whether the active or reactive decision-making will make the difference in gaining the track position for the push to the Stage 1 finish and the subsequent segments, where a fuel stop is not expected due to Stage 2 and the final stage likely falling around 40 laps apiece.

Bubba Wallace, who scored his groundbreaking first-career Cup Series win at Talladega in the fall of 2021, has been vocal on not wanting to do the saving-fuel strategy and believes there will be a bit more “freedom” for the drivers to go all-out most of Sunday.

“At the end of the day, you put yourself in the best spot possible to capitalize on stage points and obviously the race win at the end,” Wallace said. “With the adjustments to stage lengths, it changes up our strategy a little bit, but I think it allows us to control our own destiny, which is kind of what we want. I am not the one to follow orders when it’s saving and doing all this stuff. I just want to go, but I understand the big picture. We gotta keep some fuel in the tank so that’s still gonna be the name of the game, but we’ll see.”

MORE: Sunday Setup

In the details …

A dozen active NASCAR Cup Series drivers have won at Talladega, but only seven have visited the track’s Victory Lane multiple times. Brad Keselowski leads the charge with six victories, tied with Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Jeff Gordon for the second-most all-time. In the midst of a 68-race winless streak, the RFK Racing co-owner and driver is looking for a seventh Talladega win that would put him behind only Dale Earnhardt (10) in total ‘Dega triumphs.

Here are the active drivers who join Keselowski as multi-time Talladega winners:

DriversWins
Brad Keselowski6
Joey Logano3
Ryan Blaney3
Kyle Busch2
Denny Hamlin2
Chase Elliott2
Ricky Stenhouse Jr.2

Speed reads

Race-day essentials:

• Talladega hub: Key information, pit-stall assignments, results | Read more
• Paint Scheme Preview: Dip into ‘Dega looks ahead of Cup, O’Reilly doubleheader | View gallery
Hauler Talk: Officials detail in-race communications with teams | Listen now
• Reddick’s run: Where does Tyler Reddick go from here in historic stretch? | Neil Paine’s analysis
• Power Rankings: Cup Series’ top 20 drivers after Kansas | This week’s ranks
• NASCAR Classics: Inside the video vault from Talladega | Watch now

Contributing: Zach Sturniolo | NASCAR.com

Two cars in the NASCAR Cup Series garage at Talladega Superspeedway failed pre-race technical inspection multiple times, resulting in penalties.

Both Kaulig Racing Chevrolets of Ty Dillon (No. 10) and AJ Allmendinger (No. 16) failed inspection twice before Sunday’s race in Alabama (3 p.m. ET, FOX, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), but all passed on a third time through. The teams were penalized with the loss of pit selection for the 188-lap event, and one crew member from each has been ejected.

RELATED: Starting lineup | At-track photos: Talladega

The ejected are as follows:

  • Troy Lankford Jr. (Car chief, No. 10 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet)
  • Jaron Antley (Car chief, No. 16 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet)

With Saturday’s qualifying session canceled due to weather, Sunday’s field was set per the NASCAR Rule Book. Allmendinger is set to roll off the grid in 28th, with Dillon in 35th. Austin Cindric is the defending winner of the Talladega spring race.

See where your favorite NASCAR Cup Series and NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series drivers will pit this weekend at Talladega Superspeedway.

NASCAR Cup Series

A graphic depicting the pit-road layout for the NASCAR Cup Series at Talladega Superspeedway.

NASCAR Cup Series Jack Link’s 500 at Talladega Superspeedway on Sunday (3 p.m. ET, FOX, FOX One, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

RELATED: Talladega weekend schedule | How to watch NASCAR on FOX

NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series

 

NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series Ag-Pro 300 at Talladega Superspeedway on Saturday (4 p.m. ET, The CW, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

RELATED: How to watch O’Reilly Auto Parts Series races on The CW

NASCAR heads to Talladega Superspeedway for an action-packed weekend on the high banks featuring the Cup Series and O’Reilly Auto Parts Series. Bookmark this page for everything you need — from qualifying order and practice speeds to results and more.

RELATED: Full weekend schedule | TV listings

NASCAR Cup Series

Race day: Sunday at 3 p.m. ET on FOX. The categories listed below will be filled out with links as the information becomes available.

Tires: Seven sets for the weekend (six new race sets, one set transferred from qualifying).

Entry List
Qualifying Order
Starting Lineup (QUALIFYING CANCELED, SET BY RULE BOOK)
Pit Stalls
Stage 1 Results
Stage 2 Results
Race Results

NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series

Race day: Saturday at 4 p.m. ET on The CW. The categories listed below will be filled out with links as the information becomes available.

Tires: Four sets for the weekend (three new race sets, one set transferred from qualifying). 

Entry List
Qualifying Order
Qualifying Results

Pit Stalls
Stage 1 Results
Stage 2 Results
Race Results

Tyler Reddick will be on the Busch Light Pole for Sunday’s Jack Link’s 500 at Talladega Superspeedway after rain washed out Saturday morning’s NASCAR Cup Series qualifying at the 2.66-mile Alabama track.

As a result of the lineup being set per the NASCAR Rule Book, Casey Mears in the No. 62 Beard Motorsports Chevrolet did not qualify for Sunday’s main event (3 p.m. ET, FOX, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

RELATED: Cup standings | Tyler Reddick driver page

This will be the fourth time this season that Reddick has led the field to the green flag in his No. 45 23XI Racing Toyota. He won the race in each of the four previous attempts, most recently last weekend at Kansas Speedway.

“I think we’ll pretty much approach the race the same,” Reddick said after winning the pole. “Yes, it would be nice if we could win a stage this year, but we found ways to win races, so that’s good, too. Yeah, I think for us, nothing major, no major changes. We’re going to have a great pit stall, all the things that kind of come with getting the pole position.”

Reddick has won five of the first nine races this season and holds a 105-point lead over second place Denny Hamlin in the standings. For his career, Reddick has 13 Cup Series wins, including one in the spring of 2024 at Talladega.

PositionCarDriver
145Tyler Reddick
25Kyle Larson
311Denny Hamlin
423Bubba Wallace
519Chase Briscoe
66Brad Keselowski
724William Byron
89Chase Elliott
954Ty Gibbs
1017Chris Buescher
1160Ryan Preece
1277Carson Hocevar
132Austin Cindric
1420Christopher Bell
1512Ryan Blaney
167Daniel Suárez
1735Riley Herbst
183Austin Dillon
1934Todd Gilliland
2048Alex Bowman
2143Erik Jones
2247Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
2342John Hunter Nemechek
241Ross Chastain
2522Joey Logano
2621Josh Berry
2741Cole Custer
2816AJ Allmendinger
294Noah Gragson
3038Zane Smith
3171Michael McDowell
3288Connor Zilisch
3397Shane van Gisbergen
348Kyle Busch
3510Ty Dillon
3651Cody Ware
3733Jesse Love (i)
3866Chad Finchum (i)
3944Joey Gase (i)
4078Daniel Dye (i)

(i) = Ineligible for driver points in the series.

TALLADEGA, Ala. — NASCAR announced a series of key leadership moves Saturday morning, naming Steve O’Donnell as its Chief Executive Officer and tapping Ben Kennedy as Chief Operating Officer.

Jim France will step away from the CEO role he has held since 2018, but remain as NASCAR Chairman. The move makes O’Donnell the first chief executive outside of the France family in the organization’s 78-year history.

It’s the second major appointment in nearly a year for O’Donnell, who has spent 30-plus years in guiding NASCAR’s marketing and later competition departments, and was named president on March 31, 2025. From the lounge of the NASCAR officials’ hauler, parked in the Talladega Superspeedway garage for this weekend’s races, O’Donnell expressed his gratitude to Jim France, Lesa France Kennedy and the board of executives for the opportunity, but he also said he plans to take a measured approach early on as he rounds into the role with long-term growth as a priority.

“I think it would be a bit presumptuous of me to come in right away and say, ‘here’s the plan,’ ” O’Donnell told NASCAR.com. “What I’m going to do is go out and do a lot of listening, especially the first 90 days. We’ve got so many talented people in the industry — team owners, drivers, track, sponsors, even our own internal personnel that I want to go have some conversations with about what do they see and what are the opportunities? I think the great news is, we’ve got an unbelievable foundation, right? We’ve got a great broadcast deal. We’ve got charters in place, a strong schedule. So all those nuts and bolts are there, and it’s really taking that and looking at how do we make NASCAR an absolute must-have sport in the future.”

MORE: Drivers weigh in on NASCAR’s moves

O’Donnell says he’s seen plenty in his tenure as president, from a challenging offseason to the well-received adoption of a new version of The Chase as a postseason format. The 57-year-old executive says he’s tried to embrace the new developments as opportunities, learning from them and encouraging the sport’s stakeholders to work together. That unifying message has come with O’Donnell’s hope for “getting a little bit more fun back in the sport” — a feeling that he hopes trickles down from drivers to fans.

Though the current season is just a quarter of the way through heading into Sunday’s Jack Link’s 500 (3 p.m. ET, FOX, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) at Talladega, O’Donnell says he senses some of those initiatives taking hold as he looks forward.

“There’s certainly things we can always improve on, but for me, I look at this season as the start of that foundation, of kind of that next generation of NASCAR, and that foundation is really solid,” O’Donnell said. “So I think it gives us the opportunity right now to go talk about the future. From time to time, we get stuck in kind of the day to day, and I think we all recognize right now that we have a really good thing that we can build on, but let’s talk about what does it look like five years from now and make those changes, because it’s going to take time. We’re going to need everyone to be aligned, and so now’s the time to say, all right, we’ve got a good thing going here in the first quarter. Let’s get through this year, let’s not take anything for granted, but let’s really think about where we want to be in 2030 and beyond.”

France took the helm on an interim basis in the middle of the 2018 season from his nephew, Brian, and was installed as chairman and CEO full-time the next year. It has been an eventful tenure, one that included guiding the sport through the global COVID-19 pandemic, negotiating a blockbuster new deal for media rights, making an agreement final on team charters after a drawn-out legal dispute and expanding the sport into dynamic new circuits and markets.

The 81-year-old’s management style has been regarded as quiet and unassuming, but with assured strength out of the public eye. At the heart of it has been France’s passion for a wide variety of motorsports — from stock cars to sports cars to motorcycle competition — and the racer mindset that’s been both a lifelong trait and a steadying hand.

“Jim came in at a time when this sport really needed it,” O’Donnell said, “and I can speak for myself on the competition side that we were struggling a little bit in terms of having someone who understood that aspect of the sport, could be a voice to help maybe back up some of the things we wanted to do, and Jim was just credibility right away. When he came in and spent the time at the track, he was always there and had conversations. He would certainly challenge you on certain decisions you made, but incredibly supportive of everything we did, and I think his goal coming in was to get the right people in place, get a great television partnership in place, get through the charters, and then really have the people to see the sport continue to grow.

“He’s still going to be involved, obviously, but for me, personally, he’s a guy who behind the scenes always listens, but always knew what was going on and does not get nearly enough credit for everything he puts into the sport.”

O’Donnell said France’s scaling-back of his executive duties was a matter of well-suited timing.

“I think when you look at it, it was more always the plan of, ‘Here’s what he wanted to get accomplished,’ and part of that was also, do we have the leadership team that can continue to bring us to where he saw things going?” O’Donnell said. “Ben’s really stepped up as well, and I think he looked at this and said hey, now’s a good time for me to continue to be part of the sport, but also spend time with my family, and also be involved in the sport and IMSA and everything else. He’s got a ton of interest, but I think it was just perfect timing across the board for us.”

Kennedy shifts into his latest role after serving as NASCAR executive vice president and chief venue & racing innovation officer. Though just 34 years old, Kennedy has a rich history with the sport dating through his youth to his driving days in the Craftsman Truck Series, a circuit he later managed. In the years since, he’s been a key figure in creating new strategies and initiatives, especially with launching the debuts of bold, new events on the racing schedule.

O’Donnell said he anticipates Kennedy’s role to expand further into the competition world and that his reach will grow to include more parts of the racing industry. He added that Kennedy has already been a reliable asset both to him and the company, confirming what he’d gathered from his earliest impressions of him as a manager.

“I think when you look at Ben, he’s done everything,” O’Donnell said. “He’s grown up in the sport, he’s driven, he owns race teams, he’s worked at tracks, but when he first started working for us, worked with me in competition and we put him in charge of the Truck Series, and I think anyone wondered, like, how’s he going to do? And we said one of the biggest challenges we have is the relationship with owners, and we need to go out and talk to them. In three days, he had talked to every single truck owner, had a plan, and it told me right away that this guy’s all-in, and he cares, and he has great style, and he’s continued to do that.”

NASCAR remains a family business, one that’s had firm leadership from “Big” Bill Sr., to Bill Jr., to Brian to Jim. For those counting, that’s a line of CEO succession that now goes France, France, France, France, O’Donnell. “Incredibly humbling,” is how O’Donnell puts it, and though he’s still trying to grasp the magnitude of the moment, his vision for the sport’s future stays true.

“It’s something that I want to make sure that this sport is left in a better place than when I started, and the work is certainly not done,” O’Donnell says. “I think we’ve got a huge opportunity to build upon the foundation.”

TALLADEGA, Ala. — Dance partners must be in lockstep with every movement, in sync for Saturday’s O’Reilly Auto Parts Series race at Talladega Superspeedway (4 p.m. ET, The CW, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). For Richard Childress Racing teammates Austin Hill and Jesse Love to accomplish that in the draft, they needed to settle their differences from last weekend at Kansas Speedway.

During Stage 1 of last Saturday’s race at Kansas, Love pinched the No. 21 RCR Chevrolet in Turn 4, causing Hill to whip loose and spin. Subsequent contact from William Sawalich ended Hill’s just 37 circuits into the 200-lap race.

Initially, Love considered the incident just “racing really hard,” but after meeting with his teammate during the week, Love found a new perspective on the moment.

RELATED: O’Reilly Series standings | Talladega schedule

“The week went really great,” Love said during a Friday media availability at Talladega. “I actually learned a lot talking to him. I kind of gained a whole new respect for Austin. He really sat down and explained some things to me that I really listened to, and quite honestly, I needed to come out on the better end of this and learn from it. I made a mistake with how I reacted to us racing, and I could have done one of two things, right? Either do nothing about it and let it fester, or take ownership of it. Obviously, I have to make it right by him, but most importantly, learn from him, learn from the people around me and be better because of it.”

Dumbfounded” by the incident exiting the Kansas infield care center, Hill stressed the importance of putting aside differences while working in the same shop, no matter which track was next on the circuit.

“We could have been going to Texas next week instead of it being Talladega, and we definitely needed to work it out and have a conversation just to see where his mindset was, where my mindset was and just kind of understand each other where we were at on things,” Hill explained. “I’m not gonna sit here and beat a dead horse. It was a positive conversation.”

The two drivers have proven to be the best on superspeedways in recent years. Hill is the all-time wins leader on drafting tracks in the O’Reilly Series (11) while Love owns victories at both Daytona International Speedway and Talladega.

Even with Love and Hill running well together in the draft, Hill added that he’s felt he can win on his own, whether Love is in the picture as a drafting partner or not.

“I think we definitely need each other, but without sounding too arrogant, there’s been a lot of races that I’ve been able to win here or at Daytona, and feel like I didn’t have any help, maybe because Jesse had damage, or he was wrecked out, or whatever, and I had to go do it on my own,” Hill said. “It does make it a lot easier, though, when you have the 2 car around you just because he has a lot of speed in his car and I have a lot of speed in my 21 car. Hopefully, him and I can be around each other all day, work together, and then last lap, we just both go for it and see who gets it done.”

Kansas was a learning moment for two of the O’Reilly Series’ most assertive competitors, and with points at a premium in The Chase format, racing well together is vital for both in their respective championship pursuits.

“Honestly, I learned a lot from me and Austin’s conversation,” Love said. “But I don’t think that I can use the cop out of ‘we were just racing hard.’ There was a mistake and a mindset on my part that was wrong, and that’s what I learned from it.”

“To me, actions speak louder than the words,” Hill said. “The words that were said were correct and we had an awesome conversation. Now, we just got to go do it on the race track and show everyone that we can be good teammates with each other.”

jesse love and austin hill at echopark speedway
Sean Gardner | Getty Images

When Dale Earnhardt Jr. pushed Jimmie Johnson to a victory at Talladega Superspeedway in 2011, he certainly didn’t realize the perks that came with it.

On the final lap of the Aaron’s 499, the Hendrick Motorsports teammates were paired up tandem-style for a finish that went into the record books. Johnson and Earnhardt ran fifth and sixth coming out of Turn 4, when suddenly, the racing icons got a massive run through the tri-oval. They dove to the bottom underneath Richard Childress Racing’s Clint Bowyer and Kevin Harvick on the top, and fellow Hendrick drivers Jeff Gordon and Mark Martin in the middle.

RELATED: Talladega weekend schedule | Hendrick Motorsports website

With Earnhardt pushing as hard as he could, he and Johnson had just enough momentum for the No. 48 driver to reach the checkered flag 0.002 seconds before Bowyer could, tying Kurt Busch and Ricky Craven (Darlington, 2003) for the closest finish in NASCAR Cup Series history at the time.

“Junior and I get disconnected [entering Turn 3], we had such a run, I didn’t know where to go with the run,” Johnson explained. “Fortunately, we get reconnected, and just wondering where’s an opening going to come from. And [the other four cars] start racing each other on the high side and give us that lane on the bottom, and I have no idea if we’re going to get there. But Junior’s pushing, pushing, pushing.

“That was just such a wild form of racing. We were working on different iterations and how we communicate with the car that’s pushing with you, how the spotters work. Of course, through Hendrick cars, we were trying to team up … we had an agreement that coming to the checkered, if we’re nose-to-tail, we’re going to race but in a pack like that, and the goal was to get a Hendrick car to Victory Lane.”

While Johnson basked in the winning sun, he credited the win to Earnhardt, who crossed the line fourth.

“The evolution of the way Dale Jr. thinks about things – I felt like we had the best scenario with our spotters, the way they were giving us information, the way we could communicate to one another, and we really perfected this style of racing,” Johnson explained. “I give all the credit, most of the credit, to Junior, and just the way he was thinking was out of the norm.”

Before Johnson drove to Victory Lane, he sought out Earnhardt and gave him the checkered flag. And as another gift, he sent a large sum of beer to the Earnhardt residence.

“I think it was 50 cases of beer to his house in thanks,” Johnson chuckled. “I will accept these, but let’s not consider that the fee. He wanted me to push him to a win.”

Sunday’s annual springtime battle at Talladega is scheduled for 3 p.m. ET (FOX, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

When the Cup Series heads to Talladega Superspeedway, fantasy players can really have their pick of the litter. The best superspeedway competitors often find their way to the front, but it doesn’t mean they are guaranteed to finish there. It allows you to think outside the box and put drivers in your lineup who might not be there on a frequent basis. It also saves some of the frontrunners for other venues you know they will be strong at.

Returning to Fastlane this year is my weekly NASCAR 36 for 36 pick, where you can come play along. It’s a season-long points battle introduced in 2024 where strategy is the primary emphasis. With 36 chartered cars and 36 races on the 2026 schedule, players can choose each car once for the duration of the season.

RELATED: NASCAR Fantasy Live hub | Play 36 for 36 

MUST START

Driver: Tyler Reddick, No. 45 23XI Racing Toyota
Selections remaining: 7
Comment: Reddick has been off to a scorching start in 2026, becoming just the fourth driver to win five of the opening nine races in a single season. He kickstarted the campaign with consecutive drafting-track triumphs, and he could become the first driver since Dale Earnhardt in 1990 to win three straight drafting races.

Driver: Brad Keselowski, No. 6 RFK Racing Ford
Selections remaining: 8
Comment: With six Talladega victories, Keselowski is the best driver of his generation to compete at the 2.66-mile venue. Since his last victory here five years ago, the 2012 champion has three runner-up finishes in the last nine races.

Driver: Bubba Wallace, No. 23 23XI Racing Toyota
Selections remaining: 7
Comment: Wallace nearly secured his second Talladega victory last fall, leading at the white flag. He enters the weekend with three straight top-10 finishes here. He leads the series with nine top-10 finishes at drafting tracks since the start of 2024.

Brad Keselowski on the grid during practice for the NASCAR Cup Series race at Kansas Speedway on April 18, 2026 in Kansas City, Kansas.
David Jensen | Getty Images

DRIVERS TO AVOID

Driver: Kyle Busch, No. 8 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet
Selections remaining: 10
Comment: Don’t kick a man when he’s down, but Talladega has been a tough place for Busch historically. One of his three victories with RCR came here in 2023. But in the other five visits to Alabama driving the No. 8 car, he’s placed 19th or worse each time.

Driver: Chris Buescher, No. 17 RFK Racing Ford
Selections remaining: 9
Comment: Among some of Buescher’s competitors, he is regarded as one of the best superspeedway drivers currently in the field. However, his Talladega numbers leave a lot to be desired. He has a trio of top-10 finishes in 21 attempts, with just one finish better than 17th (third) in eight Next Gen starts.

Kyle Busch during practice for the NASCAR Cup race on April 11, 2026, at Bristol Motor Speedway in Bristol, Tennessee.
Matt Kelley | Getty Images

SLEEPERS OF THE WEEK

Driver: Todd Gilliland, No. 34 Front Row Motorsports Ford
Selections remaining: 9
Comment: With four top-10 finishes in eight Talladega starts, Gilliland has been sneaky good here since debuting in Cup. He nearly captured the checkered flag last fall, finishing runner-up to Chase Briscoe. His 13.1 average finish ranks second best of any track on the circuit (Indianapolis Motor Speedway).

Driver: Zane Smith, No. 38 Front Row Motorsports Ford
Selections remaining: 10
Comment: Keeping it in the Front Row family, Smith has been “Steady Eddie” recently at drafting tracks. The No. 38 car won the first stage of the season in the Daytona 500 and crossed the finish line in sixth. Overall, he has four top-10 finishes in the last five drafting races.

Todd Gilliland signs autographs for NASCAR fans before the NASCAR Cup Series race at Daytona International Speedway on February 14, 2026 in Daytona Beach, Florida.
Patrick McDermott | Getty Images

FEATURED MATCHUPS

Daniel Suárez vs. Ryan Preece
Pick: Preece
Comment: Suárez’s recent resume of four finishes of 10th or better in the last seven Talladega races is noteworthy. However, the Ford camp tends to have a plan and stick with it at superspeedways. Preece nearly won this race last year but was later disqualified in post-race inspection.

Tyler Reddick vs. Ryan Blaney
Pick: Reddick
Comment: Three Talladega victories for Blaney is hard to bet against, but it seems foolish to disregard any matchup Reddick is part of. He tallied the most points at superspeedways in 2025, and he has a 40-point buffer through two races in 2026.

Austin Cindric vs. Joey Logano
Pick: Cindric
Comment: Logano has led laps in 20 straight drafting-style races, the longest streak of all time. But the finishes are not up to par, with one top 10 in the last 13 Talladega races (eight straight outside the top 15). Cindric won here last April and is arguably the best superspeedway competitor of the Next Gen era.

Bubba Wallace vs. Chris Buescher
Pick: Wallace
Comment: From above, you can tell where I’m leaning here. Wallace has top 10s in five of the last seven superspeedway events to Buescher’s three top 10s in the last five tries. The No. 17 car was swept up in accidents during both Talladega races in 2025 while Wallace had top 10s in each.

MY LINEUP

Starting five: Tyler Reddick, Brad Keselowski, Bubba Wallace, Austin Cindric, Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
Garage pick: Todd Gilliland

36 FOR 36

Pick: Ty Dillon, No. 10 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet
Comment: Races at superspeedways are a prime opportunity to take a driver off the beaten path. Through 14 Talladega starts, Dillon has an average finish of 16.9, his best among all tracks. He finished a career-best third here in 2020 with Germain Racing.