Tyler Reddick Turns Darlington into a One-Man Survival Documentary
On the hottest race day of the season, Reddick turned off his cooling systems, fought electrical issues and still drove away from the field late.
On the hottest race day of the season, Reddick turned off his cooling systems, fought electrical issues and still drove away from the field late.
The top two drivers in the NASCAR Cup Series standings will start 1-2 at Darlington Raceway on Sunday—but not before pole winner Tyler Reddick scraped the Turn 4 wall on his no-holds-barred qualifying lap.
Superspeedways, road courses and a Phoenix dogfight have scrambled the standings early—and Ryan Blaney’s comeback win added another glorious layer of chaos…
Three wins in three races has put Tyler Reddick firmly at the center of the NASCAR spotlight — something the 23XI Racing driver admits can make even a successful week feel hectic.
Three races into the 2026 season, Tyler Reddick has already accomplished something no NASCAR driver has done before — and the rest of the field has noticed.
Tyler Reddick arrives at Phoenix Raceway for Sunday’s Straight Talk Wireless 500 feeling confident and hopeful…
Three straight wins to open a NASCAR season is the sort of thing that lives in barroom hypotheticals and video games—until Tyler Reddick actually goes out and does it.
In a sport built to stop streaks, Tyler Reddick just shrugged and opened the season with three straight wins — and wrote his name in NASCAR history while he was at it.
Fresh off a win at EchoPark, Reddick is already two-for-two to start the year. Nobody in modern Cup history has gone three straight out of the gate. That carrot just got a lot closer.
Tyler Reddick didn’t just win at Atlanta’s EchoPark Speedway. He showed up on pole, led the most laps, and left the rest of the field wondering if 2026 is already spoken for.