NASCAR delivers one of the all-time great Cup races at Homestead-Miami

Credit: Jasen Vinlove-Imagn Images

Jasen Vinlove-Imagn Images

That will go down as one of the all-time great NASCAR Classics.

Ryan Blaney, Denny Hamlin and Tyler Reddick each effectively needed nothing short than a victory on Sunday at Homestead-Miami Speedway to advance to the NASCAR championship in two weeks at Phoenix Raceway and the race was decided exclusively amongst them.

The bonus is that this duel arguably took place at the best venue for on-track racing and everyone delivered on the promise of playoff dramatics.

It’s not just how Tyler Reddick won, but all the different scenarios that had to play out just to give his 23XI Racing No. 45 team the opportunity, and also how the other championship contenders lost their own opportunities to win the race.

Game changer

Reddick had no chance to win.

Despite winning the pole earlier in the weekend, the No. 45 just didn’t have race winning speed or track position so crew chief Billy Scott made the decision to run Reddick to brink of fumes in the hopes of catching a caution that never came.

At the same time, Kyle Larson had recovered from an incident earlier in the race and was challenging Blaney for the lead.

Reddick was finally called down pit road, never getting the caution he needed to retain the lead on equal tires, but then Larson crashed trying to take Blaney and lap down Austin Dillon three-wide. Reddick had just driven back to the lead lap and only had three laps on his tires when the caution came out.

Everyone else pitted for tires and they had a new life.

Hamlin shot to the lead on the restart when Reddick didn’t get going and was flanked by Blaney. Again, Blaney and Reddick absolutely had to win to advance after crashing out last week at Las Vegas Motor Speedway and Hamlin all but needed to.

Blaney was able to reel Hamlin in by two laps to go but Reddick really got going after two or three laps. Blaney gave Reddick the wall and he ripped the top all the way around Turns 3 and 4 to drive his way into the Championship Race.

“I had a good shot to win it and I didn’t have a very good last lap,” Blaney said. “I thought I got into three hard and the 45 just went in there and it stuck for him, which is really impressive. I hate to give one away there like that. I don’t know if we gave it away. We got the lead back after losing it on the restart and just that last lap didn’t play out for us.”

“We were backed in a corner, man,” Reddick said in his frontstretch winner’s interview. “We had no other choice. I know we were on tire deficit. Here at Homestead Miami Speedway, that’s a death sentence. I don’t care. We did what it took to win this race. We’re fighting for a championship.”

In real time, Blaney was in disbelief that a car that kept taking him to the front, over and over again, didn’t ultimately prevail.

Hamlin must have experienced quite the topsy-turvy run of emotions as he went from losing track position early in the race, to winning the second stage on a long run strategy, to not having quite enough to make that option work again, to leading off the final restart, and then settling for a podium that leaves him still on the outside of a championship race berth.

“I was resigned to finishing third there, before the caution, to certainly, got the restart we needed and was thinking I would have enough to hold them off but for whatever reason, couldn’t do it,” Hamlin said.  

Hamlin had to watch as the car he co-owns with Michael Jordan accomplished the first of two goals every team has at the start of the season. Jordan was there celebrating with Reddick on an afternoon where Hamlin had to feel conflicted.

They’re currently suing NASCAR!

Combined, it was all incredible theater.

https://twitter.com/NASCARonNBC/status/1850658685690708080

Total package race

Even separated from the finish, the entire race was tremendously dramatic and entertaining with so much championship implication from the drop of the green flag.

Kyle Larson, who suffered an 11th place finish with no stage points last week to open the three-race Round of 8, suffered a tire puncture early in the race that damage his underbody rear diffuser and left him unable to score any stage points.

Crew chief Cliff Daniels made all the right changes to compensate and gave Larson a car that challenged for the win but ultimate spun trying to split leader Blaney and Dillon three-wide.

“Yeah, I mean you’re making split-second decisions,” Larson said. “Austin did nothing wrong. I was just hoping that he would see me coming as (Blaney) got to his inside, and maybe he’d run a lane off the wall just to give me some clean air. He continued to run his line.

“I had a little bit of a hole and I was trying to shoot the gap to get in front of the No. 3 and get to the wall quickly to either hopefully stay on the outside of the No. 12 or build a run to have a shot at him in (turns) one and two. But yeah, it just didn’t work out.”

That was a common refrain on Sunday.

Chase Elliott, also needing nothing less than a win ran up front all day, and ultimately finished fifth … not quite enough.

“I just got tighter and tighter as the day went on,” Elliott said. “I was just trying to manage that on the front side of a run, and ultimately I just didn’t do a great job of managing it. When the pace got quicker and everyone started pushing, I didn’t really have anything left to push.”

And that is just from a playoff standpoint.

The race featured everything great about Homestead-Miami, from usable grooves from wrapping the bottom line to right up against the wall once tire management really came into play. There was passing galore and even some underdog top-10 performances from Carson Hocevar and Ryan Preece.

Before the Larson-Dillon crash, there were three different strategy attempts to win the race:

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