The ninth round of the 2026 NASCAR Cup season was a surprising one, partly due to how clean it was. There were no incidents until a single-car spin on the penultimate lap completely changed the complexion of the finish.

And the finish itself was incredible, with Reddick once again prevailing after a last-lap pass on Kyle Larson, and Denny Hamlin losing out after dominating half the race.

Advertisement

Here’s a look back at some of the biggest winners and losers from Kansas Speedway:

Watch: Jordan after Reddick win: ‘This kid is on fire’

What else can we say? Reddick was in the wall and running out of gas one moment, and the next, he was blowing past several cars in an overtime restart and taking his fifth win of the year. All four 23XI cars finished the top 15, and Reddick has won five of nine races run so far — a feat not accomplished since 1987 with Dale Earnhardt. Michael Jordan was elated, and even he seemed to be in shock by the driver of the No. 45 after his Kansas triumph.

Advertisement

Read Also:

“This kid is on fire” – Michael Jordan praises Reddick after NASCAR Kansas win

Tyler Reddick is doing Dale Earnhardt things after Kansas Cup win

LOSER: Denny Hamlin’s good day that could have been great

Watch: Hamlin sour after Kansas loss: ‘It’s about winning’

Hamlin leaves Kansas second in the standings after a top five finish, so it sounds like he should be happy. But clearly from his post-race interview, he was not. Hamlin led 131 laps — nearly half the race. He also was mere seconds from securing the win at the white flag when the one and only natural caution of the race flew. But that wasn’t game over. Hamlin then had a messy overtime restart with Larson getting to his inside and shuffling him back. He slid up into Reddick and inadvertently derailed his teammate Bell’s race, before going on to finish fourth. When we’re talking about a driver who is keenly focused on his race win total, Sunday was a bust for the driver of the No. 11.

Advertisement

Read Also:

How the NASCAR Cup race at Kansas was won and lost

WINNER: Chase Briscoe and his overtime charge

Tyler Reddick, 23XI Racing

Tyler Reddick, 23XI Racing

Tyler Reddick, 23XI Racing

While most of the leaders opted for two right-sides, Briscoe took four fresh Goodyears and led the way for the strategy from 11th in the lone overtime restart. He put that car exactly where he needed to, charging all the way up to third by the time the checkered flag flew. And had he cleared Hamlin through Turn 2 on the white flag lap, Briscoe could have even challenged for the win. Nonetheless, he drove an impressive final two laps to get all the way into a ‘podium’ spot.

Advertisement

LOSER: Cody Ware makes himself the story while running last

Read the full article here

Leave A Reply