Carson Hocevar wins his first career Cup Series race at Talladega in one of the most popular victories of the 2026 season.
Hey race fans, welcome back to Driving on Marbles! What an absolutely wild Sunday afternoon at Talladega Superspeedway.
If you watched this one from start to finish I genuinely don’t know how your nerves held up because this race had everything. A 26-car Big One. Multiple lead changes. Small teams running at the front. And a first-time winner who has been one of the best stories of the entire 2026 season finally getting the result his talent deserves.
Carson Hocevar won the Jack Link’s 500 at Talladega Superspeedway for his first career NASCAR Cup Series victory in just his 91st start. The kid who has been flying all season long for Spire Motorsports finally got to do a victory lap at one of the most iconic venues in all of motorsport.
It was a brilliant race and an incredibly popular win and if you weren’t cheering at the finish line you might want to check your pulse.
Let’s get into how it all went down.
The Race
Qualifying was rained out on Saturday which meant the starting lineup was set by NASCAR’s qualifying metric. Tyler Reddick took the pole position with Kyle Larson joining him on the front row.
From the very first lap it was clear this was going to be one of those wild Talladega days where nothing goes to plan for anybody.
Early on it was Denny Hamlin and Chase Briscoe trading the lead while the field ran three wide from front to back. Chaos from the very first green flag lap which is exactly what you expect and love about Talladega.
Ryan Preece grabbed the Stage 1 win with eight Ford drivers in the top ten at the end of the first stage. RFK Racing was absolutely flying early and that gave us real hope for Buescher and Preece both having big days.
Then the Big One arrived.
On Lap 113, Ross Chastain got into the back of Bubba Wallace and turned him at the front of the pack. Twenty-six cars were involved in the accident, forcing a ten-minute red flag for track cleanup. Twenty-six cars.
In one incident. That’s Talladega doing exactly what Talladega does and it reshuffled the entire race in one violent moment.
Among the drivers heavily involved were Joey Logano, Ryan Blaney, Bubba Wallace, Ty Gibbs, and Kyle Larson.
Larson would go on to finish dead last in 40th. Logano finished 39th. That’s just Talladega.
Chastain won Stage 2 which was a genuinely exciting moment for our pool card before the final stage reshuffled things again.
After Reddick got into the wall with 28 laps to go his tire carcass came off and forced another caution. From there Buescher and Hocevar led at the front trading the lead throughout the final run to the checkered flag.
With Alex Bowman pushing Hocevar from behind the No. 77 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet held off Buescher at the line.
Hocevar crossed the finish line ahead of Buescher by 0.114 seconds to claim his first career Cup Series win in one of the most popular victories of the entire 2026 season.
The crowd at Talladega absolutely loved it and the celebration in Victory Lane was everything.
The Storylines Worth Talking About
Carson Hocevar is officially a Cup Series winner
Hocevar led most of the laps in the final run to the checkered flag and pulled away at the line in what was described as a very popular win with the fans in the stands. The 22-year-old from Michigan has been one of the absolute best stories of the 2026 season and this win felt completely inevitable to anyone who has been watching him closely.
He’s been close before, leading as they took the white flag at the Daytona 500 and running up front at Atlanta too. The talent was never in question. He just needed the Talladega stars to align and on Sunday they absolutely did.
The Big One claimed all the favourites
The Chastain-Wallace incident on Lap 113 collected 26 cars and wiped out most of the pre-race favourites in one single moment. Logano, Blaney, Wallace, Gibbs, Larson all heavily involved.
That’s Talladega being Talladega and it’s exactly why we built the card the way we did this week with four drivers from outside the top 12. When the Big One hits it tends to hit the favourites hardest.
Tyler Reddick signs a contract extension
Ahead of the race Reddick confirmed he’s signed a contract extension with 23XI Racing, reportedly in the range of eight to nine million dollars annually staying in the No. 45 car. He finished 14th on Sunday after getting into the wall late but the championship lead is still very much intact. The season goes on.
Noah Gragson's stunning ninth place
Nobody is going to talk about this enough. Noah Gragson finished ninth at Talladega in what was genuinely one of the surprise performances of the afternoon. A smaller team driver navigating the chaos of a 26-car wreck and coming out with a top-ten result is the kind of thing that makes Talladega so special.
How Our Picks Did
Alright let’s be completely honest about the card this week because there’s a genuinely brilliant story here alongside a painful one.
Christopher Bell (Main Driver) — Quiet Day
Bell finished 17th which is a survivable Talladega result in the context of a race where 26 cars were collected in one incident. He wasn’t a factor at the front but he kept the car clean and brought it home in one piece which at Talladega is genuinely worth something. Not the result we were looking for but a whole lot better than 39th.
Joey Logano (Inside Top 12) — Big One Victim
Logano finished 39th after getting heavily collected in the Lap 113 Big One. He was running well and leading laps before the chaos arrived. That’s just Talladega and there’s genuinely nothing you can do when 26 cars are involved in one incident. It was the right pick and the wrong race. We move on.
Chase Briscoe (Outside Top 12) — Big One Victim
Briscoe finished 29th after also getting caught up in the mayhem. He was one of the early leaders and looked absolutely strong in the opening stages before the crash shuffled everything. Back-to-back weeks of bad racing luck for the No. 19 JGR Toyota but the talent and the speed are clearly still there. We’ll come back to him.
Ricky Stenhouse Jr. (Outside Top 12) — Hit
Sixth place and Stage 2 points.
This is exactly why we put Stenhouse on the card when almost nobody else was talking about him. The market consistently undervalues him at plate tracks and he delivered a top-ten result at the best price on the inside of the card. Really pleased with this one.
Ross Chastain (Outside Top 12) — Hit
Seventh place and he WON Stage 2.
After three weeks of frustration with Chastain on the card, Talladega was absolutely the right week to stick with him and the results prove it. He was aggressive, he was at the front when it mattered, and he delivered stage points plus a seventh-place finish from the outside tier of the card. That is a pool-winning result from a longshot pick. Brilliant.
Michael McDowell (Outside Top 12) — Big One Victim
McDowell finished 32nd after getting collected in the wreck. The FRM superspeedway pedigree was real and he was running competitively before the Big One hit. Sometimes Talladega just takes you out no matter how well you’re driving and Sunday was one of those days for the No. 71.
The big picture this week
Stenhouse sixth with stage points. Chastain seventh with Stage 2 win. Bell 17th and clean. Three of our six picks either hit or survived while the other three were all legitimate victims of the biggest wreck of the season.
In a race where 26 cars got collected in one incident the fact that Chastain won a stage and Stenhouse finished sixth is honestly a brilliant pool result. The aggressive Talladega card structure we built this week absolutely paid off in the spots where it could.
Updated Points Standings
Tyler Reddick continues to lead the championship comfortably. The points picture will be updated fully before our Top 20 rundown midweek ahead of the Wurth 400 at Texas Motor Speedway.
Next Up: Texas Motor Speedway
The NASCAR Cup Series heads to Texas Motor Speedway next Sunday May 3 for the Wurth 400, shown live on FS1 beginning at 3:30 PM ET. Texas is a 1.5-mile intermediate oval, a very different challenge from Talladega, and the kind of track where the top teams typically reassert themselves after the madness of a superspeedway week. My full Top 20 rundown will be out midweek and the picks post will be live before qualifying on Saturday.
Until then race fans, have an awesome week.
Bryan | Driving on Marbles
Author Profile
- Bryan
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Hey there race fans, welcome to Driving on Marbles, where I break down NASCAR with real insight, smart strategy, and race by race analysis. This isn’t just race recaps and highlight talk, it’s trends, track history, driver momentum, and the little details that actually make a difference on race day.
Whether you’re setting your fantasy lineup, looking for betting angles, or just want to understand why things happen on the track, I’ve got you covered. My goal is simple: help fans see the race the way teams and strategists do, one decision, one adjustment, one edge at a time.
If you love NASCAR and want more than surface level coverage, you’re in the right place.
Let’s get you closer to the action.
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