- Tyler Reddick won the Daytona 500 with a last-lap pass, giving Michael Jordan his first win as a team owner in NASCAR’s biggest race.
- Jordan said, “It feels like I won a championship, but until I get my ring, I won’t even know,” then noted he wears a size 13.
- Reddick led only the final lap, while Chase Elliott’s late lead ended in a crash after contact in the closing surge.
Michael Jordan, six time NBA champion, is now a Daytona 500 winner too.
Tyler Reddick won “The Great American Race” on Sunday with a last-lap pass at Daytona International Speedway, setting off a frantic celebration from Jordan. The NBA Hall of Famer bear hugged Reddick in Victory Lane and then jointly hoisted the Harley J. Earl Trophy with the 23XI Racing driver.
Jordan, who turns 63 on Tuesday, will get a Daytona 500 ring for his birthday and made it known in Victory Lane that he wears a size 13.
“It feels like I won a championship, but until I get my ring, I won’t even know,” Jordan said.
The scene matched the message team co-owner Denny Hamlin delivered to 23XI employees in a meeting ahead of NASCAR’s season opener. Hamlin, who finished 31st on Sunday in his bid to become the third driver in history to win four Daytona 500s, said: “He loves his race team,” then pointed back to what the organisation saw when Reddick won at Talladega in 2024. “I was like, ‘You know, you guys understand the responsibilities you have, that you have the power to bring joy to Michael Jordan. You have that power and nobody else can do it.’
“There’s nothing else that can bring him the joy that seeing what his team can do and they took it to heart.”
Reddick, in a Toyota, led only one lap on Sunday, the one to the checkered flag. He was also the 25th different driver to lead a lap, a new Daytona 500 record.
“Just incredible how it all played out,” Reddick said. “Just true Daytona madness. I’ve already lost my voice from screaming. Never thought I’d be Daytona 500 champion.”
Reddick, 30, from Corning, California, won for the ninth time in the Cup Series and for the first time since late in the 2024 season. Winless last year, Reddick was focused on his infant son, who was found to have a tumor in his chest that affected his heart. He opened last year with a runner-up finish in the Daytona 500, then snapped a 38-race losing streak by finishing one place higher on Sunday.
Reddick’s win sparked a celebration that included multiple stars, including Jordan and Hamlin.
Reddick is teammates with Bubba Wallace, who went to Victory Lane in tears after leading a race-high 40 laps before finishing 10th. Jordan wrapped his arms around Wallace from behind and spoke closely into Wallace’s ear in a brief message of encouragement.
“I don’t want my emotions to take away from the monumental day they just accomplished,” Wallace said. “Happy birthday, MJ. That’s a massive birthday present. I thought this was our week, the best 500 I’ve ever had, and come up short, sucks.
“Led a lot of laps, lap leader, I believe. It was a good day for us, but damn. Try again next year.”
Hamlin, who drives for Joe Gibbs Racing, was involved in the final caution when he and teammate Christopher Bell collided with nine laps remaining, setting up a four lap sprint to the finish.
Chase Elliott grabbed the lead at the start of the final lap when Carson Hocevar was spun off the track. Reddick surged with help from teammate Riley Herbst, made contact with Elliott that caused Elliott to crash, then sailed past to deliver Jordan a victory in NASCAR’s biggest event of the year.
“It’s stuff you dream of as a kid,” Reddick said. “Now, I definitely didn’t look into the future and know that I would drive for Michael Jordan. But to be able to have someone like Michael Jordan believe in me enough, someone like Denny Hamlin.
“I’m just trying to do my best to live on the promises that I made to them and vice versa.”
Jordan was also the face of the December federal antitrust lawsuit that NASCAR settled on the ninth day of trial, a settlement that changed the revenue-sharing model in the United States’ top motorsports series.
Jordan watched the win from a suite overlooking the superspeedway built by the France family, NASCAR founders and private owners, the same group he had just battled in federal court. NASCAR chairman Jim France, personally a defendant in the suit, went to Victory Lane to congratulate the winners.
“I can’t even believe it. It was so gratifying,” Jordan said of the victory. “You never know how these races are going to end. You just try to survive. We hung in there all day. Great strategy by the team, and we gave ourselves a chance at the end. Look, I’m ecstatic.”
The victory also completed a Daytona weekend sweep for three team owners heavily involved in the trial. Bob Jenkins, who joined 23XI in suing NASCAR, opened the weekend with a win when Chandler Smith took the Truck Series opener Friday night for Front Row Motorsports. Richard Childress, who testified on behalf of 23XI and Front Row and was the subject of disparaging text messages by since departed NASCAR chairman Steve Phelps, was the winning team owner Saturday when Austin Hill won. Then it was time for Jordan and Hamlin, the two front facing litigants, as they got their first Daytona 500 victory together.
“All we do is win,” said a shrugging Hamlin, who called the trio of weekend winners “coincidence.”
Former race winners Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and Joey Logano finished second and third as Toyota, Chevrolet and Ford each placed a driver on the podium. Elliott wound up fourth and sat dejected and in disbelief on the outside wall after climbing from his car.
“We ended up kind of getting gifted the lead … and then at that point in time, you’re just on defense,” Elliott said. “Man, that’s a really, really tough place to be, truthfully. Obviously, looking back, you can run it through your mind 1,000 times, do you do something different?”
