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Winners, losers after the NASCAR Cup playoff race at Talladega

A look at the winners and losers from Sunday’s Cup race at Talladega Superspeedway.

winner

Ricky Stenhouse Jr. – With his victory at Talladega, he ended a 65-race winning streak. Stenhouse has won races in back-to-back seasons for the first time in his Cup career. He improved in the points from 27th to 24th place.

Stenhouse knew Talladega was one of us winning.

Ricky Stenhouse Jr. knew Talladega was “one of us” to win and did just that, while also looking forward to supporting Hurricane Helene relief efforts after a “special” win.

Fans who like parity – Ricky Stenhouse Jr. became the 18th different winner of the season. The record for most different winners in a season in the modern era is 19, which occurred in 2001 and 2022.

Fans Who Like Parity, Part 2 – Ricky Stenhouse Jr. became the ninth different winner this season to end a winning streak of 42 or more races. This is more than ever before in a season. Others who broke long winning streaks this season: Brad Keselowski (110 races), Chase Briscoe (93), Austin Cindric (85), Alex Bowman (80), Austin Dillon (68), Daniel Suarez (57), Joey Logano ( 49). ) and Chase Elliott (42). Harrison Burton scored his first Cup win in his 98th career start.

Fans Who Like Parity, Part 3 – Ricky Stenhouse Jr. became the ninth different winner in the last nine races at Talladega – the longest streak in the track’s history. Those other winners were Denny Hamlin, Brad Keselowski, Bubba Wallace, Ross Chastain, Chase Elliott, Kyle Busch, Ryan Blaney, Tyler Reddick and Stenhouse.

Kyle Larson – His fourth-place finish ended a streak of 14 consecutive draft races in which he had failed to finish in the top ten.

Larson takes second place in the top five at a superspeedway

Kyle Larson achieved his second career top five at a superspeedway after finishing fourth at Talladega and feels he showed his team’s ability today to deliver on a track that is anything but friendly was to achieve a great result.

Erik Jones – He took fifth place as the best of the season. It was his first top-10 finish since eighth place in the season-opening Daytona 500.

Justin Haley – He finished a season-best seventh place. It was his second race since returning to Spire Motorsports.

Denny Hamlin – He was in 32nd place and was expected to be below the cutline before the 23-car accident that sent the race into overtime. Hamlin finished 10th and is fourth in points – 30 points above the cutline – heading into this weekend’s elimination race at the Charlotte Roval.

Highlights: Cup Series playoff race at Talladega

Watch highlights from the NASCAR Cup Series YellaWood 500 at Talladega Superspeedway.

loser

Michael McDowell — The pole sitter was collected in a crash and finished 37th. He has won five poles at draft tracks this season and his average finish in those races is 25.6.

Austin Cindric – He was in the lead when contact spun him, triggering the 23-car accident that sent the race into overtime. He finished 32nd, 29 points below the cutline for Charlotte Roval.

Talladega “Big One” rallies almost the entire field

The Big One at Talladega strikes with five laps to go after Austin Cindric receives a push from Brad Keselowski, and it is the largest Big One ever documented in NASCAR history, with 28 cars involved.

Ryan Blaney – Wrong place, wrong time. He was collected in a crash and finished 39th. He retired from four of the last seven races due to an accident.

Blaney and Chastain absorb big hits at the end of Phase 2

Alex Bowman gives Ryan Blaney a push in the trio at the end of Stage 2 at Talladega, and the No. 12 absorbs a huge hit from both the outside wall and Ross Chastain.

By Jasper

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