Tyler Reddick storms to OT victory
at Michigan
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[August 20, 2024]
Tyler Reddick capped a few tough emotional days with a strong
performance in a Monday makeup.
Reddick roared away from William Byron in the second overtime and
broke Ford's stranglehold on Michigan International Raceway, winning
the NASCAR Cup Series' postponed FireKeepers Casino 400 in Brooklyn,
Mich.
After Martin Truex Jr. brought out the sixth caution with six laps
left, leader Reddick and the rest of the top 10 stayed out for the
first of the two-lap dashes.
Restarting on the top lane, Reddick and Byron were side-by-side when
Ross Chastain, running 11th, spun on the backstretch to set up a
second shootout. However, Byron led Reddick in the final scoring
loop.
That made Reddick start the second OT below Byron. Reddick's No. 45
23XI Racing Toyota got a great launch, pulled away from Byron and
held off the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet by 0.168 seconds
for his seventh career win.
The victory, Reddick's second this season, broke Ford's nine-race
MIS winning streak, which dated to Kyle Larson's victory in a
Chevrolet in 2017.
It was Toyota's first win at MIS since Matt Kenseth was victorious
in 2015.
"Great teammate, fantastic push by Ty Gibbs -- the Toyota family
tries to take care of each other," said Reddick of his manufacturer
mate after leading 16 laps in his first career Michigan win. "But I
can't help but sit here in Victory Lane and think of Scott
Bloomquist, man. Huge mentor to me and an incredible role model and
legend of dirt racing and motorsports."
A dirt racing superstar, Bloomquist, 60, was killed Friday when his
vintage airplane crashed near his home in Mooresburg, Tennessee.
"The last couple of days have been tough. This really helps it. This
win should go for him and his family and friends and all that meant
a lot to him," Reddick said.
Byron said the final restart would stick with him.
"I'll relive that restart and what lane to choose," said Byron after
his eighth top-five finish. "Always as the leader you want to take
the top, but I've (been) beat twice by the bottom. But he had a
better car than us."
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Aug 19, 2024; Brooklyn, Michigan, USA; NASCAR Cup Series driver
Tyler Reddick (45) does a burnout after winning the Fire Keepers 400
at Michigan International Speedway. Mandatory Credit: Mike Dinovo-USA
TODAY Sports
Gibbs, Kyle Busch and Michigan native Brad
Keselowski completed the top five.
Ryan Blaney won Stage 1 at Lap 45 on a drizzling Sunday afternoon.
After a second rain delay, NASCAR could not get the 200-lap race
restarted in the state's scenic Irish Hills and postponed the 24th
event on the Cup schedule until Monday morning. The start of
Sunday's race was delayed by more than two hours.
With 12 laps to go in Stage 2 following a round of pit stops on
Monday, caution flew for three separate incidents on the track
involving Joey Logano, AJ Allmendinger and Todd Gilliland.
Bigger trouble struck with four laps to go on the restart as a wreck
ensued when Larson got loose by himself off Turn 4 and started an
eight-car melee that involved playoff pursuers Bubba Wallace and
Chris Buescher. Larson's No. 5 Chevrolet came to rest with a buckled
hood on the frontstretch infield.
Under caution, Busch claimed Stage 2 for his first segment win and
first for Richard Childress Racing so far.
On the race's fifth caution, Corey LaJoie tapped Noah Gragson's No.
10 Ford, resulting in a spectacular crash down the backstretch for
LaJoie. His No. 7 Chevrolet slid sideways, became airborne, skidded
on its roof for a good distance and violently tumbled on the grass
below Turn 3.
--Field Level Media
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