Despite crash, Tyler Reddick takes home Autotrader 400 in double overtime
Feb 22, 2026; Hampton, Georgia, USA; NASCAR Cup Series driver Tyler Reddick rounds the track at EchoPark Speedway. Mandatory Credit: Mady Mertens-Imagn Images Tyler Reddick overcame a damaged car, double overtime and Chase Briscoe to win the high-speed, tight-drafting Autotrader 400 at EchoPark Speedway on Sunday in Hampton, Ga.
After the 10th caution in the first overtime for Carson Hocevar trying to go through the middle and wrecking Christopher Bell, leader Bubba Wallace went high, but that proved unsuccessful.
Reddick took the lead in his No. 45 23XI Racing and held on to beat Briscoe by 0.164 seconds for his second straight win, becoming the sixth NASCAR driver to claim two victories to start a season.
Ross Chastain, Hocevar and Daniel Suarez completed the top five as Toyota won for the second time in three races at Atlanta.
Reddick was involved in a wreck on Lap 160 that started with Denny Hamlin. The damage ripped off the right front fender of Reddick's Toyota.
The NASCAR Cup Series' second race started out with polesitter Reddick losing the top spot to Joey Logano but swapping the point with Logano's No. 22 Ford and the No. 6 of Brad Keselowski as the blue ovals showed speed early.
The hometown favorite and the sport's Most Popular Driver, Dawsonville, Ga.'s Chase Elliott gave the locals something to cheer about by moving to the lead at the end of Lap 51.
However, Austin Cindric won the opening 60-lap segment, taking the top bonus points and having Wallace, Kyle Larson, Byron and Elliott in hot pursuit.
The second caution occurred on Lap 81 when Josh Berry's Ford clipped Ty Gibbs' Toyota. That allowed the field to pit again and have enough fuel to get to the end of Stage 2.
Entering the race winless in 16 career starts at the 1.54-mile track south of Atlanta, Larson took off with the lead until Lap 103 when Riley Herbst, instrumental in helping Reddick win the Daytona 500, turned Austin Dillon's No. 3 to trigger a wreck that damaged the No. 47 of Ricky Stenhouse Jr., the 500's runner-up.
Running 13th, Kyle Busch, the winner of Saturday's truck race, had his No. 8 get away from him as he slid up the track. The single-car incident ended with his Chevrolet into the backstretch's inside wall.
Racing to finish Stage 2, Larson drove way down and pinched Shane van Gisbergen, and Larson's Chevy smacked the outside wall while coming to the segment's end.
Wallace edged Byron for the stage win, and Briscoe, Reddick and Elliott rounded out the top five.
--Field Level Media
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