Running fifth off the 2.66-mile superspeedway's
final turn, Reddick kept his No. 45 Camry on the high side as
the front group roared toward the stripe.
Meanwhile up front, leader Michael McDowell came down to block
second-place racer Brad Keselowski.
McDowell was turned up to the frontstretch wall after contact
and Keselowski slowed, allowing Reddick to keep his foot in the
gas and zoom on to his first win this season as the field slid
and crashed behind him.
Reddick beat Keselowski by 0.208 seconds for his sixth career
win and first at Talladega.
"That was chaos -- that's Talladega for you," said Reddick, who
led 13 laps. "I've got 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 those pushes, we don't
win this race."
23XI Racing's Jordan enjoyed Reddick's victory and was glad to
see it in person.
"This is the first time I've been here (to see a win)," said
Jordan, a six-time NBA champion and five-time league MVP. "This
to me is like an NBA playoff game. ... I'm all in. (NASCAR)
replaces a lot of the competitiveness I had in basketball."
It was the 33rd last-lap pass for a win in the superspeedway's
high-speed, dramatic history.
"Noah (Gragson) gave me a great push and I went to make a move
on Michael," Keselowski said. "He covered it and I went back the
other way. I got another great push from Noah and there was
nowhere to go when Michael came back down."
It was also Toyota's first win at the Alabama superspeedway
since 2021.
The final top-finishers were Gragson, Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and
Alex Bowman.
The Fords of McDowell, Chase Briscoe and Justin Haley took turns
leading early in Stage 1, but Truex's No. 19 Toyota paced the
group most of the way.
Austin Cindric's No. 2 Ford edged Chase Elliott by 0.004 seconds
for his second stage win of 2024.
Kyle Larson, who started last under penalty and lost a lap due
to it, ran side-by-side with Joey Logano after the white flag in
Stage 2, but Logano received a huge push from teammate Cindric
to beat him and Austin Dillon to the checkers, earning the
winless Logano his first stage win in 24 races.
With 56 laps to go, the first incident for cause occurred when
the cars of Christopher Bell and Haley were part of a spin on
the backstretch. Chase Elliott, the winner last week at Texas,
narrowly squeezed past the minor melee.
A worse incident happened with just over 30 laps left when four
of the six Toyotas on a promising strategy of pitting early
wrecked in Turn 3.
Denny Hamlin, Bubba Wallace, John Hunter Nemechek and Erik Jones
all were knocked out of the event.
--Field Level Media
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