TALLADEGA, Ala. — Tyler Reddick arrived from Talladega Superspeedway’s Victory Lane with his voice a gravelly mess. The hoot-and-holler celebrating — both in front of the fans in the towering grandstand in Sunday’s late-afternoon sun and with his team in the winner’s circle — had made him hoarse, and he volunteered an apology for the audio quality in his opening post-race remarks.

That’s not the reason he clammed up when pressed to reveal the tipping point that set the Toyota alliance’s final-stage strategy into effect.

“No comment,” Reddick said. “Sorry. I’m not going to talk about it.”

He didn’t, and with good reason. Why shed light on a gambit that could come in handy in the three superspeedway-style races that remain on the NASCAR Cup Series schedule this year, including two in the playoffs. It’s not as if basketball legend Michael Jordan, his 23XI Racing team co-owner and a willing on-site celebrant at Talladega, was prone to offering up vivid descriptions of what was said in the team huddle before a game-winning shot during his heyday.

Reddick powered his No. 45 Jordan-themed ride to a victory in Sunday’s GEICO 500 that broke Toyota’s 0-for-14 streak on tracks where the aerodynamic draft is king. He deftly navigated past the tussle between Ford teammates Michael McDowell and Brad Keselowski in the final stretch, a clash that left the Mustang Dark Horse 0-for-10 to start the season.

RELATED: Reddick takes Talladega | Official results

The die was cast, however, for a positive Toyota outcome before the field ever got to the white-flag lap, going all the way back to the team meetings that automakers regularly have before Talladega, where the brand alliances and teamwork run deep. After a relatively calm first two stages, Toyota got a jump on the other makes for the closing stretch when the seven remaining Camry XSEs — Christopher Bell’s No. 20 had exited in an earlier mishap — made their final pit stop for fuel in formation with 36 laps to go.

From there, the Toyota group abandoned the gas-saving tactic that was in vogue for much of the day for the main pack, planning an all-out run to the end and a cycle back to the front. The FOX Sports booth quickly picked up on the disparity in pace, noting “that pack’s in trouble” and in need of a Plan B.

No sooner had those words cleared analyst Kevin Harvick’s lips came what seemed to be Toyota’s undoing. The entangling of the cars of Bubba Wallace and Erik Jones caused a major crash just three laps later that also eliminated Toyota driver Denny Hamlin and severely damaged the Camry of John Hunter Nemechek. The boost in Toyota’s numbers this season — from six to eight with Legacy Motor Club joining the fold — had been cut by more than half.

“It looked promising there, so it would have been really interesting for it to play out and see,” said Billy Scott, Reddick’s crew chief. “We thought we were in a good spot anyway with leading our pack. We got formed up really nice. We had all of our cars together. Things were really shaping up to have that play out the way we intended. Great execution on all the Toyota drivers. So we were thinking it was going to be the same result, that we were going to cycle to the lead, but the unfortunate wreck that took so many of them out just kind of sealed it.”

Brad Keselowski leads on the low side with Tyler Reddick's No. 45 to his outside at Talladega Superspeedway.
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR.com

The Toyota camp got its cycle back to the front, but with only Joe Gibbs Racing teammates Martin Truex Jr. and Ty Gibbs left to collaborate with 23XI’s Reddick the rest of the way. “We played the strategy in the third stage the way we wanted it to when it fell apart. We just worked it from there,” said Tyler Gibbs, Toyota Racing Development’s general manager. “We stayed out. We knew that we’d have the lead when we stayed out on the pit stops, and track position just put us in a spot to win. Again, it gets to be chaos there at the end.”

The mayhem snarled what was a stout challenge to Toyota’s ploy from Ford. McDowell’s No. 34 Front Row Motorsports Mustang had lived up to its name as a front-row starter in all three drafting-track races this year, and it had a leading view of the low lane with Keselowski and Stewart-Haas Racing Ford driver Noah Gragson behind him on the final lap, with a Reddick-Truex tandem hooked together up top.

McDowell’s attempts to block Keselowski’s advances went awry, and their crossing of paths cost both them and Ford a chance at the win when Reddick scooted through the melee.

“As the leader Ford, I wish the Ford pushed me to the win so that way Ford could’ve gotten a win, but I don’t think anybody in second doesn’t make that move, right?” No. 34 crew chief Travis Peterson told NASCAR.com. “Everybody wants to win, and it’s been a while for Brad and he needs that win, too, just like we do. So, it sucks, but we were strong. Just didn’t play out our way.”

MORE: At-track photos: Talladega | Cup Series standings

The yield from the varying strategies was a postseason-clinching victory for Reddick, who seemed surprised to now have a superspeedway win to match his three on road courses and his two on intermediate-sized tracks. Talladega might seem an unlikely point of emphasis with just two dates on the calendar and its fickle nature, but the magnitude loomed large after a hard-fought 500 miles.

“I mean, they all count, right? And so any one of these can get you into the playoffs, and any one of these can get you the bonus points that help you move on, and all of those things. So it’s important like every other race,” Gibbs said. “I think we’re finding that these are pretty exciting races as we watch the manufacturers set different strategies. Ford had an excellent strategy at Daytona and we watched that play out. It didn’t work out for them in the end. Here, we had the right strategy, and again, barring what happened in Turn 3, we put ourselves in a position in which we probably are leading both of those lines late here, and so it just it’s kind of interesting to watch. Again, it’s less team by team and it’s more what are the strategies we can work on to foil the others, and I think that makes it exciting.”

Reddick reaped the rewards. That, he could talk about.

“As a Toyota driver and the other Toyota drivers, we’re committed to each other,” Reddick said. “Whatever the strategy may look like, whatever the plan is, we’re all on board with one another. It ended up working out for some of us, but that’s just what we’re about. We’re about being on the same page and working together.”

In another thriller of a finish at Talladega Superspeedway on Sunday, Tyler Reddick became the seventh different winner of the 2024 Cup Series season to provisionally lock into the playoffs. Brad Keselowski scored a second consecutive runner-up finish while Noah Gragson earned a career-best result of third.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos

In front of co-owner Michael Jordan, 23XI Racing was able to nab the checkered flag while a handful of surprises appeared inside the top 10.

Here are six drivers — trending in different directions — who saw big swings Sunday at Talladega.

THREE UP ⬆️

1. Brad Keselowski, No. 6 RFK Racing Ford

Brad Keselowski looks on
Sean Gardner | Getty Images

Started: 22nd

Finished: 2nd

What happened: Leading on two different occasions and finishing eighth in Stage 1, Keselowski hung up front in the final 30 laps, pushing McDowell until the two made contact, sending the No. 34 spinning in the tri-oval on the final lap. The No. 6 Ford stayed straight to the checkered flag but was passed by Reddick for the victory. It’s the second straight runner-up finish for Keselowski as he inches closer to his first win since 2021.

What’s next: Dover awaits next Sunday and could be another chance for a big points day. Last season, Keselowski finished eighth at the Monster Mile and led eight laps.

2. Noah Gragson, No. 10 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford

Noah Gragson climbs from his car
Brittney Wilbur | NASCAR.com

Started: 36th

Finished: 3rd

What happened: Noah Gragson put up his career-best result in the Cup Series with a third-place finish Sunday. The No. 10 was up front for a good chunk of the race, putting his hot rod in the lead on five different occasions.

What’s next: While once an eight-time victor during the 2022 Xfinity Series season, Gragson has had a quietly decent start to 2024, which includes top-20 results in the last four races. The second-year veteran is slowly but surely working his way back up the standings after the points penalty from Atlanta. SHR has been strong on tracks a mile or smaller, so expect another good run for Gragson next Sunday at Dover.

3. Daniel Hemric, No. 31 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet

Daniel Hemric gives a peace sign
Meg Oliphant | Getty Images

Started: 19th

Finished: 9th

What happened: A much-needed result for Hemric and Kaulig Racing as a whole as Hemric walked away from Talladega with his first top 10 of the season. The No. 31 Chevrolet also showed race-contending speed all day long as he led three different times for eight laps before a multi-car pileup at the finish saw Hemric escape through and score the ninth-place tally.

What’s next: This has been a down year for Kaulig as the No. 16 Chevy has moved to a rotation of drivers while Hemric is stuck 29th in the Cup standings through 10 races on the year. Strong finishes are important for building momentum for later races, so while Hemric’s best shot at the playoffs will come in August at Daytona, there’s hope for high-quality results as the summer portion of the season rapidly approaches.

THREE DOWN ⬇️

1. Christopher Bell, No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota

Christopher Bell crash at Talladega
James Gilbert | Getty Images

Started: 10th

Finished: 38th

What happened: Bell started toward the front of Sunday’s race and collected four points after Stage 1, but early in the final stage, a stack-up among the field ended with Justin Haley’s No. 51 Ford careening into the No. 20 Toyota. The wreck ended Bell’s day in last place among the 38-car field.

What’s next: Bell owns a win at Phoenix to provisionally lock himself into the playoffs, but consistency hasn’t been there for the No. 20 team since that victory. The team scored top 10s at Bristol, COTA and Richmond, but Bell has two finishes outside the top 30 in the last three races. Toyota was strong at Dover last year and Bell has consecutive top 10s at the Monster Mile in the Next Gen era. Next weekend would be a great time for the No. 20 crew to get back on track.

2. Chris Buescher, No. 17 RFK Racing Ford

Chris Buescher looks on
Sean Gardner | Getty Images

Started: 8th

Finished: 25th

What happened: Buescher led on four different occasions Sunday at Talladega, but it never felt like he was in true contention for the victory, unlike his RFK co-owner. The No. 17 lost connection with Keselowski in the final portion of the race and wasn’t able to make up ground when the checkered flag flew.

What’s next: With Chase Elliott and Daniel Suárez as new faces in the playoffs compared to 2023, Buescher is going to need another strong summer like last year to solidify his position. Currently 16th in driver points, Buescher is the first driver outside the provisional playoff field with Suárez 18th in points but in the postseason field with his Atlanta win. Both RFK cars finished in the top 10 at the Monster Mile last year, so next Sunday should be a strong day for Buescher.

3. Ty Gibbs, No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota

Ty Gibbs climbs in his car
Sean Gardner | Getty Images

Started: 15th

Finished: 22nd

What happened: Gibbs was in line for a great outing at Talladega until jumping up to the third lane going for the win in the closing laps and falling to the back. The effort to take the lead was for naught as the high line deteriorated before the bell lap. Gibbs was then involved in the multi-car pileup as the field crossed the start-finish line to take the checkered flag.

What’s next: After such a hot start to the season with five top 10s in the first six races, Gibbs hasn’t found that same success since his last of that stretch at COTA. His best finish over the last four weeks was a 13th-place showing at Texas. While eighth in Cup points, this is a pivotal moment in Gibbs’ sophomore campaign. The 20-year-old will have to mentally lock in over the next few weeks at tough tracks like Dover, Darlington and Charlotte to stay within the playoff picture.

TALLADEGA, Ala. — Michael Jordan’s presence at a NASCAR Cup Series is always significant. In Victory Lane? Overpowering.

Jordan was finally able to celebrate a victory with the 23XI Racing team he co-owns after Tyler Reddick held on to win Sunday’s GEICO 500 at Talladega Superspeedway, donning the white and black Jordan Brand colors across his No. 45 Toyota Camry XSE.

MORE: Official results | At-track photos

A six-time NBA champion, Jordan co-owns the team with Joe Gibbs Racing driver Denny Hamlin, who exited Sunday’s event at Lap 156 in a crash that included Bubba Wallace, 23XI’s other driver and a two-time winner. But the legendary hooper was never in attendance for any of the team’s five prior victories. The sixth time was the charm.

“Denny keeps saying I was bad luck when I come to the track, and today we proved him wrong,” Jordan joked with FOX Sports. “Actually, he did a good job by wrecking so we can get up front. That was actually pretty good. But I think Tyler did a good job. Unfortunately, Bubba couldn’t finish. But the whole team did a good job. And look, 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. And to my wife and my kids and everybody: Yeah, we did it!”

Immediately after the checkered flag, Jordan was standing on pit road in the No. 45 team’s pit stall, holding Reddick’s 4-year-old son, Beau, with a smile as wide as the day is long while Jordan praised the Reddick that sat behind the wheel.

“He did a great job,” Jordan told Beau of Reddick’s drive. “We going to celebrate?”

“Yeah!” Beau responded, with Jordan erupting in laughter.

Jordan’s joy overflowed, relishing in the opportunity to truly celebrate the triumph in person. And with basketball’s postseason fired into full spring, those emotions of Jordan’s past came to the forefront Sunday.

“This, to me, is like an NBA playoff game,” Jordan said. “I am so ecstatic, obviously for the fans who support the sport itself. And we’ve been working hard, trying to get ourselves up to compete against all the top guys in this sport. But we’ve done a heck of a job just to be where we are. And for us to win a big race like this, I mean, it means so much to me and for the effort that the team has done.”

Reddick laughed upon learning Beau got to celebrate with MJ on pit road, especially since Jordan is no stranger to the toddler.

“He knows who Michael Jordan is,” Reddick said. “Any time I have a pair of Jordans on or he does, I always ask the question: Whose shoes are these? He says Michael Jordan’s shoes. So yeah, I think in the moment, it means a lot, right? But as he gets older and everything, too, looking back on that, that’s gonna be really, really cool.”

MORE: Tyler Reddick’s post-race reaction

Crew chief Billy Scott was in the pit box as Jordan celebrated with Beau, team president Steve Lauletta and Reddick’s fiancée, Alexa DeLeon. He was beaming with nearly as much pride as MJ, soaking in the moment.

“Honored that we got the first win with him being here today,” Scott said. “And glad he was able to be here for one and doesn’t think it’s a curse to come or something because there’s certainly been some ones that could’ve gone the other way. And just to see his excitement, it’s interesting. He is a study of the sport. I was talking to him before the race and he watches every Truck race, every Xfinity race, every Cup race, just trying to learn and understand what we’re going through and figure out how he can help from the owner side. It’s impressive. And just to see the excitement on his face, that’s what I enjoyed.”

TALLADEGA, Ala. — Erik Jones was evaluated and released from a local hospital late Sunday night after a crash during the NASCAR Cup Series race at Talladega Superspeedway.

Jones was in a group of fellow Toyota drivers when a tangle in the 2.66-mile track’s third turn sent his No. 43 Legacy Motor Club Camry nose-first into the outside retaining wall, ending his race at Lap 156 of 188 in Sunday’s GEICO 500. He finished 35th in the 38-car field.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos: Talladega

Jones was initially evaluated and released from Talladega’s infield care center. NASCAR officials said he later returned and was transported to a local hospital for further evaluation.

Shortly before midnight CT, Legacy Motor Club confirmed Jones was released from a Birmingham hospital at approximately 11:30 p.m. CT and was heading home to North Carolina. The team confirmed Jones was evaluated but no other details were made available Sunday night.

“I’m sore, it just really stretched it out a lot,” Jones said when asked about his back after his release from the infield medical center post-crash. “So it’ll be a long week just trying to get recovered and get to feeling better for next week, but all right.”

MORE: Wallace, Hamlin also collected in crash

Jones is in his fourth year driving the No. 43, which has been run under the banner of Richard Petty Motorsports, Petty GMS and now Legacy M.C. since he took the ride in 2021. The 27-year-old driver is a three-time Cup Series winner, with victories at Daytona (2018) and Darlington (2019, 2022).

NASCAR officials indicated after post-race inspection that the No. 43 Toyota would be transported back to the NASCAR Research & Development Center for further evaluation.

TALLADEGA, Ala. — Tyler Reddick prevailed in a typically frantic Talladega Superspeedway run to the checkered flag Sunday in the GEICO 500 NASCAR Cup Series race, narrowly avoiding a multi-car crash in the closing 400 yards and coming from third place out of Turn 4 to earn the win by 0.208 seconds when race leader Michael McDowell crashed trying to block competitors approaching the finish line. Reddick maneuvered around in the high lane to motor through to his first victory of the year and sixth of his career.

The 28-year-old Californian climbed the grandstand fence, pumping his fist to the screaming, adoring crowd while one of his 23XI Racing team owners, NBA legend Michael Jordan celebrated on pit lane, taking Reddick’s young son Beau in his arms and grinning from ear-to-ear. This was the first time Jordan had been at track when his team won a race.

“Man, it’s incredible,’’ said Reddick, who led 13 laps on the afternoon. “Everyone on this 45 Toyota Camry worked really hard today. Didn’t really work out in that third stage for us, but we were able to fight and defend our track position.

“Was that crazy guys?’’ he yelled toward the cheering grandstands. “A lot of chaos. That’s Talladega for you.’’

“I just have to give a lot of credit to Ty Gibbs and Martin Truex [Jr.], it was just us Toyotas left and they pushed me with everything they had. Without Martin and Ty and those pushes we don’t win this race.’’

RELATED: Official results | At-track photos

The final few laps pitted a low line of Fords — the manufacturer trying to earn its first win of 2024 — and a high line led by the Toyotas. McDowell, the 2021 Daytona 500 winner, anticipated a huge run from the cars behind, but conceded later that he was just a little late making the block.

The contact when he pulled down to Roush Fenway Keselowski driver Brad Keselowski sent McDowell’s car off track. Keselowski was still able to recover and finish second — his second straight runner-up finish this season. Afterward, McDowell apologized to Keselowski for essentially costing the former series champion a win with the move.

“We did a good job keeping those Mustang Dark Horses up front,’’ said McDowell, who led a race-best 36 laps. “He [Keselowski] did everything right. He pushed me. I was able to get in front of him the first time, but when I came back down I barely wasn’t clear. I’ll have to watch the replay. I hate it. I hate it we didn’t make it to the finish line. We had such a fast Mustang today. … just came up short and took a lot of guys out and I apologize.’’

The race ending was in stark contrast to the early portion of the event. For the first time since NASCAR instituted stage racing in 2017, there were no caution periods through the opening two stages (other than the scheduled stage breaks).

McDowell won the pole position and as promised all weekend, was set to race strategically not forcing his No. 34 Front Row Motorsports Ford to the front all day but instead when it needed to be there. There was a lot of hope that Ford would secure its first win of the year Sunday and two of the Mustangs — driven by Austin Cindric (Stage 1) and Joey Logano (Stage 2) — swept the stage victories early in the race.

But as is so often the case, a late-race restart — with 27 laps remaining — set the tone for the finish with McDowell leading the bottom line and Fords stacked up behind him. Reddick led the high line with Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota driver Martin Truex Jr. behind him. McDowell and Reddick exchanged the lead 10 times in that final 27-lap stretch to the trophy — indicative of a day when there were 23 race leaders and 73 lead changes, including New Zealander Shane van Gisbergen’s first NASCAR Cup Series laps out front on an oval (three laps).

SHOP: Buy Tyler Reddick gear

It was an exhaustive and exhilarating afternoon depending on what side of the finishing order you came out on. All the drivers — including several collected in the multicar race-ending crash — confirmed they were OK.

“Well, [team co-owner] Denny [Hamlin] keeps saying I’m bad luck,’’ Jordan said, ”And today we proved him wrong.

“The whole team did a good job,’’ he continued. “I’m very happy to be here to see it. Everybody always tells me when we win we have a good celebration, but this is the first time I’ve been here [for a win].

“As you know this is NBA playoffs right now and to me, this is like an NBA playoff game. I am so ecstatic for the fans who support the sport itself. You know we’ve been working hard trying to get ourselves to compete against all the top guys in this sport. And we’ve done a heckuva job just to be where we are and for us to win and win a big race like this, it means so much to me and the effort the team has put in.

“I’m all-in. It replaces a lot of competitiveness I had in basketball, but this is even worse because I have no control. If I was playing basketball, I’d have total control, but I have no control and live vicariously through the drivers and crew chiefs. I’m very happy for 23 XI — 110 percent.’’

Hamlin, who finished 37th after being collected in a crash, smiled upon hearing Jordan’s elation and Beau Reddick’s celebration with the legend.

“Beau has no idea (yet) of the significance of that moment,” Hamlin said.

RELATED: Three Up, Three Down after Talladega

Stewart-Haas Racing’s Noah Gragson finished a career-best third, followed by JTG Daugherty’s Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and Hendrick Motorsports’ Alex Bowman.

Anthony Alfredo, who led four laps, finished a career-best sixth place for Beard Motorsports. Hendrick Motorsports’ William Byron was seventh, followed by Front Row Motorsports’ Todd Gilliland, Spire Motorsports’ Justin Haley and the Wood Brothers’ Harrison Burton.

Despite a 20th-place finish Sunday, Hendrick Motorsports’ Kyle Larson leads the NASCAR Cup Series championship standings by 16 points over Truex, who was 11th Sunday.

The NASCAR Cup Series moves to Dover Motor Speedway for next Sunday’s Würth 400 (2 p.m. ET, FS1, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Truex is the defending race winner.

NOTE: Post-race inspection was completed in the Cup Series garage without issue, confirming Tyler Reddick as the winner. The Nos. 17 and 48 will be taken back to the R&D Center for wind tunnel testing. The No. 43 will return to the R&D Center for further evaluation.

TALLADEGA, Ala. — A multicar crash at Talladega Superspeedway eliminated half of Toyota’s fleet from Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series race.

While drafting in a seven-car pack made exclusively of Camrys, Erik Jones was sent spinning nose-first into the SAFER barrier in Turn 3 at Lap 156 after slight contact from behind by Bubba Wallace. The crash also collected Jones’ Legacy Motor Club teammate John Hunter Nemechek as well as Denny Hamlin, a Joe Gibbs Racing driver and co-owner of Wallace’s 23XI Racing Toyota.

RELATED: Race results | Talladega photos

The seven Toyotas had just pitted at Lap 151, earlier than the other manufacturers’ cars in an effort to leap-frog the Fords and Chevrolets. But errant pushes thwarted that particular plan, sending four of their vehicles to the garage instead.

“We were all pushing really hard to keep our line going,” Wallace told FOX Sports. “We had a plan and just didn’t execute it as well as we should. Hate it for our Leidos team. Look forward to running these places and then you just get trapped in somebody else’s mess, but I hate it. It doesn’t make us look good at all. But all in all, we’ll just reset and go to Dover. We’ve got a long way to go. We’re fine. Just frustrating.”

Hamlin believed the Toyotas had plenty of speed and strong enough fuel mileage to last in the final 37-lap run to the checkered flag. That proved true with Tyler Reddick’s charge to a wild victory, but ultimately without five other Toyotas. Christopher Bell, another JGR competitor, crashed out at Lap 133.

“I thought we were plenty fast enough …” Hamlin said. “As soon as everyone pitted it, we were gonna cycle to the front, is what the goal was.”

All drivers were evaluated and released from the infield care center. However, Jones later returned to the care center and was transported to a local hospital for further evaluation.

TALLADEGA, Ala. — The No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet of Kyle Larson will serve a pass-through penalty after the start of Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Talladega Superspeedway for an infraction found before Saturday morning’s qualifying session at Talladega Superspeedway.

Larson was not allowed to participate in Busch Light Pole qualifying after officials found unapproved adjustments made to the roof-rail section of the No. 5 Chevrolet as it was pushed to the qualifying grid. The car was pulled from the qualifying order and returned to the garage, and Larson is set to start last in Sunday’s GEICO 500 (3 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

RELATED: Starting lineup | At-track photos

NASCAR officials initially indicated that any further penalties would be announced this coming week, but amended that Sunday morning to treat the violation as an at-track penalty. In addition to Larson’s pass down pit road after the green flag, competition officials ejected No. 5 car chief Jesse Saunders.

The team declined comment.

Larson, the leader in the Cup Series standings, had won three consecutive pole positions (Richmond, Martinsville, Texas) entering Sunday’s 500-miler.

TALLADEGA, Ala. — Kyle Busch returns to Talladega Superspeedway this week as the defending winner. He could use another dose of victory this year.

A two-time NASCAR Cup Series champion, Busch enters the 2.66-mile behemoth of a race track in the midst of a 30-race winless streak that dates back to June 2023, where he scored win No. 63 of his career at World Wide Technology Raceway. Busch was 0.007 seconds away from winning at Atlanta Motor Speedway back in March, but he’s finished 20th or worse in four of the seven races since that third-place Atlanta finish.

MORE: Talladega starting lineup | Weekend schedule

Still, two of his last four starts have resulted in top-10 finishes — ninth at both Circuit of The Americas and Texas Motor Speedway. With Richard Childress Racing’s knack for excelling at superspeedways, Busch is optimistic about hitting the high banks of Talladega on Sunday afternoon (3 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

“Just come out here and try to do it again,” said Busch, who starts fourth this week. “The guys at RCR and ECR have done a great job. We build really good superspeedway cars, and it’s fun when you get to come out to Daytona, Talladega and Atlanta and know that you’ve got a shot to win.”

Busch currently sits tied for 15th in the regular-season points standings with Joey Logano, another two-time Cup champion. He is not yet focused on points, though, with 17 races remaining in the run-up to the playoffs. Instead, he’s setting sights on simply building better and more consistent performance with his No. 8 team at RCR.

“I mean, points will take care of themselves,” Busch said. “If you run better and run well and can get stage points and get good finishes, then they’ll take care of themselves. So we obviously haven’t been doing that lately and I presume we’re lower than we want to be. But, you know, that’s just the nature of what we got right now.”

To produce those results, Busch knows he needs to be closer to the front of the pack. His average running position of 16.77 ranks 14th across the series, with his three top 10s tied with Logano and Denny Hamlin for 15th-best. Incremental gains from Talladega and behind will only help the No. 8 team build momentum heading toward the postseason.

Kyle Busch qualifies for the NASCAR Cup Series race at Talladega Superspeedway.
Brittney Wilbur | NASCAR.com

That, of course, bodes well after last week’s ninth-place effort at Texas. Busch hovered outside the top 20 for much of the event (evidenced by a 28th-best average running position of 23.29), crashing in practice, starting from the rear and contacting Carson Hocevar at Lap 114, which sent the rookie spinning. Yet he and the team maximized the day to come back and ultimately score a top 10.

“I mean, good finishes obviously help, right? Like getting things going in the right direction,” said Busch, a two-time winner at Talladega. “But ultimately, we had a pit strategy deal there where a caution came out, we cycled ahead, and we got some position. But that was everybody, right? I mean, Larson went to the back and he really didn’t do a whole lot. I know the 33 (Austin Hill) and I were racing for 35th at one point early, and then they got track position and they held it, you know? So that’s just the name of the game right now with these cars. You’ve got to execute and be up front and not make any mistakes yourself. Rely on others to make mistakes.”

There is also something to be said for having a positive mindset when climbing into the cockpit of one of these NASCAR Cup Series machines. Busch has found some of those bright sides in midweek dirt racing, which included a recent stop at Millbridge Speedway in Salisbury, North Carolina, where he raced dirt micro sprints the same night his 8-year-old son, Brexton, hit the track.

“The dirt stuff is fun,” the elder Busch said. “Yeah, it’s just a little kind of kick-back, have fun. I like to go to the race, and if I’m going to be there all night, I might as well get behind the wheel and just keep my senses fresh a little bit and not get old.”

Can any habits — good or bad — stem from those dirt races?

“A little bit,” he said. “I mean, you get beat by the kids and (then) you’re washed up and you can’t do it anymore. So that always sucks. But hell, I get that a lot on Sundays too.”

TALLADEGA, Ala. — Any hard-luck feelings among the back half of the top five in Saturday’s NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Talladega Superspeedway were drowned out by hugs up and down that section of pit road. Promising rookie Jesse Love from the speedway powerhouse of Richard Childress Racing wound up in Victory Lane, but the celebration from multiple underdogs was no less vibrant.

Anthony Alfredo, Leland Honeyman Jr. and Brennan Poole — third through fifth place in that order — emerged to find welcoming embrace by their delighted crew, family and friends after Saturday’s rough-and-tumble Ag-Pro 300. Alfredo matched a career-best finish from nearly four years ago, Honeyman established a new high-water mark for his Xfinity career just 17 starts in, and Poole snagged his first top five in a year.

RELATED: Official results | At-track photos: Talladega

Ryan Sieg also rounded out the cheers for the upset specials with an eventful 17th-place result that claimed the $100,000 Dash 4 Cash prize as the top finishing driver among the eligible quartet. His payday was a boost for his family-owned team, helping to slightly soften the sting from an ultra-narrow loss by 0.002 seconds to Sam Mayer last week at Texas Motor Speedway.

Love had the strongest car in the field once RCR teammate Austin Hill was eliminated by a crash that set up a string of overtime attempts. But his challenges came from a host of punchers making the most of their survival instincts and their spots near the front of the field.

Alfredo was tops among them across the start/finish line, recovering with remarkable moxie after his No. 5 Our Motorsports Chevrolet sustained significant damage in the multicar crash that snared Hill. The right-front crumpling didn’t keep him from making a veered-out move through the tri-oval on the final lap, forcing the action into a four-wide frenzy.

The third-place result marked Alfredo’s best finish of the season and of his second tour with the Chris Our-owned team.

“That race is the epitome of our season, right?” Alfredo said from pit road. “We just have never given up, even when things aren’t looking so good. We just stay in the fight till the end, and we had another shot to win the race. We were in a perfect position before that accident happened in front of us, but we came back and had another one. So just beyond thankful to be here. Blessed to have the opportunity to do what I love for a living with great people. We’re punching above our weight this year, and we’ll just keep exceeding expectations. That’s what we’re here to do. We want to be a playoff team, we know we can do it and finishes like these certainly help.

“It stinks being that close in a way because of how important a win is, but just the guys we’ve been racing all year, we have to be beyond proud of that.”

Leland Honeyman Jr. stands next to his car after the NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Talladega.
Brittney Wilbur | NASCAR.com

Honeyman was also beaming after bettering his previous career-best finish, an 11th-place run at Phoenix Raceway earlier this year. His first full national series season coincides with his Young’s Motorsports team’s expansion into the Xfinity Series; the longtime Craftsman Truck Series operation scored its only two wins here at Talladega with Spencer Boyd in 2019 and Tate Fogleman two years later.

“Finishing in the top five for us is very big as a team standpoint,” Honeyman said. “Prize money is more, it helps us get further ahead, and that’s what we want to keep doing is picking off all these top fives and top 10s as we can. Our goal every week is to finish inside the top 20, and I think we exceeded that very much so today.”

Poole seemed to pose the biggest threat to Love’s victory hopes, building momentum with his No. 44 Alpha Prime Racing Chevrolet as the field barreled through Turn 4 for the final time. He actually inched ahead of Love’s No. 2 Chevy in the high groove, but couldn’t keep the pace in the last stretch to the stripe.

Saturday’s outcome was the latest brush with an Xfinity win at Talladega, where the journeyman flirted with victory in a further-review finish in 2016.

“It’s just one of those deals where it’s just so close,” Poole said. “I mean, leading the race off of Turn 4, I feel like this place owes me one. Again, I’ve been so close to winning one of these races, and I want to win one so bad. This year, we’ve had a heck of a year. I mean, we’re running on a quarter of the budget of what most of these teams are, and I know we were 16th in points headed in here this weekend, and we’re really close to being a top-12 car.”

Sieg outlasted fellow Dash 4 Cash qualifiers AJ Allmendinger, Justin Allgaier and Mayer. The latter two — both JR Motorsports drivers — were eliminated by early crashes, one of which also damaged Allmendinger’s No. 16 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet. That left Sieg sitting in a prime spot to pocket the $100,000 bonus, until he scraped the outside retaining wall and made an unscheduled stop for a flat right-front tire with 23 laps left in regulation.

The last caution period finally put his No. 39 RSS Racing Chevy back on the lead lap, and his marching orders from the team over the radio for the final two-lap stint was simple: “Race everyone in front of you.” He ended up two spots ahead of a flagging Allmendinger, which perhaps helped soothe some of the heartache from last week’s photo finish.

“It’s huge for our small team and sponsorship’s hard to come by, and this just makes everything that much easier,” said Sieg, “so hopefully I get some of it.”

Ryan Sieg smiles in front the Dash 4 Cash banner after winning the bonus after the NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Talladega.
Brittney Wilbur | NASCAR.com

TALLADEGA, Ala. — Jesse Love earned his first career NASCAR Xfinity Series victory Saturday in a typically wild double-overtime finish in the Ag-Pro 300 at Talladega Superspeedway — crossing the line by a slight 0.141-seconds ahead of Riley Herbst.

In many ways, it was victorious redemption for the 19-year-old Californian, who earlier this season was leading the race in overtime at Atlanta Motor Speedway only to run out of fuel before the checkered flag. Love’s win in the No. 2 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet makes him only the seventh driver to score his maiden win at the 2.66-mile Talladega Superspeedway.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos

“Just a great group of guys [on my team] and it’s been such a journey to get to this point,’’ a grinning Love said before thanking a litany of people that helped him in his young career to date.

“I had PTSD flashbacks from Atlanta,’’ Love acknowledged, adding: “I love Talladega. I love the speedway and I love the fans.”

Love certainly earned this first win — starting on the outside of the front row next to his veteran RCR teammate Austin Hill, winning his fourth stage of the season (Stage 1) and leading 28 of the 124 laps. He ran top five for most of the afternoon and when he needed to go on that final restart, he went, jumping to the lead at the overtime green flag and holding off the field when it mattered most.

His RCR teammate Hill, the polesitter, led a race-best 41 laps and was out front with two laps remaining in regulation when he was hit from behind by Parker Kligerman. The incident sent Hill’s car into the wall and ultimately collected nine cars, including many that had been running toward the front much of the afternoon — putting the race into overtime.

On the ensuing overtime restart, Kligerman was eliminated in a four-car crash at the front as various cars started running out of gas. Love lined up on the front row for the final restart among eight drivers racing for their career first wins.

Herbst’s runner-up finish in the Stewart-Haas Racing Ford was his best showing of the year. Our Motorsports’ Anthony Alfredo finished third, followed by Young’s Motorsports rookie Leland Honeyman Jr. and Alpha Prime Racing’s Brennan Poole. Alfredo tied his career best mark and Honeyman had a career-best finish.

Jesse Love takes the checkered flag to win the NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Talladega.
James Gilbert | Getty Images

Joe Gibbs Racing’s Sheldon Creed, Alpha Prime Racing’s Caesar Bacarella, Viking Motorsports’s Matt DiBenedetto, Jordan Anderson Racing’s Jeb Burton (the 2023 Talladega winner) and Stewart-Haas Racing’s Cole Custer rounded out the top 10.

There were 34 lead changes among 16 drivers in a typically Talladega afternoon.

Ryan Sieg, who lost to Sam Mayer last week at Texas Motor Speedway in a photo finish by 0.002-seconds, won the Dash 4 Cash $100,000 bonus.

An 11-car accident on Lap 65 proved critical to several race frontrunners as well as Dash 4 Cash eligible drivers.

MORE: ‘Big One’ strikes in Final Stage | Allgaier spins, crashes early

Herbst hit Justin Allgaier’s No. 7 JR Motorsports Chevy with only two laps left in the opening stage – both vying for a top 10 and some early stage points. It eliminated Allgaier from contention. Mayer was eliminated in a later multi-car crash and that left an intriguing battle between Sieg, who had to make a green flag late race pit stop because of a flat tire and AJ Allmendinger, whose car was damaged in a crash.

Sieg and Allmendinger lined up 19th and 20th — respectively — on the second overtime re-start and Sieg was able to pull away, finishing 17th with Allmendinger 19th.

“This is huge for our team,’’ Sieg said. “It was a rough one. I thought I threw it away, but were lucky enough to get the caution at the end and come back and beat the 16. So it all worked out and is pretty extraordinary for our small team.”

Not only does he win the Dash 4 Cash paycheck, but Sieg will compete against Love, Herbst and Alfredo next week at Dover for the final race of the incentive program.

Joe Gibbs Racing’s Chandler Smith, who finished 25th, still holds a 14-point lead over Custer atop the championship standings.

The NASCAR Xfinity Series moves to the 1-mile Dover Motor Speedway next week for Saturday’s BetRivers 200 (1:30 p.m. ET, FS1, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Ryan Truex is the defending race winner.

NOTE: Post-race inspection in the Xfinity Series garage was completed without issue, confirming Jesse Love as the winner. The Nos. 8 and 81 will be taken to Concord, North Carolina for wind tunnel testing.