Tyler George Reddick (born January 11, 1996) is an American professional stock car racing driver.
[5] In November 2013, it was announced that Reddick had been signed by Brad Keselowski Racing to compete in the Camping World Truck Series; he was scheduled to drive the team's No.
[6] In September that year, he won his first Xfinity race at Kentucky Speedway after leading 66 laps and winning with a 14-second advantage over teammate Brennan Poole.
On September 14, 2017, Reddick was signed by JR Motorsports to a full-time schedule for the 2018 Xfinity season, replacing William Byron, who was promoted to the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series, in the No.
[8] On February 17, 2018, Reddick beat teammate Elliott Sadler in a photo finish to win the season-opening race at Daytona.
[11] Reddick explained that his move to RCR was for a better chance to run in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series in the near future.
[14] At the 2019 O'Reilly Auto Parts 300 at Texas Motor Speedway, Reddick scored his fourth pole of the season and would lead 32 laps before crashing and finishing 29th in the final order.
23 in a partnership with Our;[19] he finished second behind RCR's Myatt Snider, but was disqualified when his car failed the rear height requirements during post-race inspection.
Reddick was involved in two incidents during the race: on lap 159, as he was about to pit, contact by Cody Ware sent him airborne before being hit by Jimmie Johnson, ripping Johnson's left side; on lap 191, he was involved in "The Big One" that collected 20 other drivers.
Reddick was 29th fastest, but Gaughan started at the rear for the race under NASCAR's driver change rules.
[30] Reddick nearly won the 2020 GEICO 500 at Talladega, controlling the lead in the late stages but ultimately losing it with four laps to go and finishing 20th.
Reddick also contended with RCR teammate Austin Dillon for the victory at Texas after opting not to pit during a caution caused by fellow rookie Quin Houff spinning out, which moved him to the lead with 23 laps to go as a result.
Reddick climbed up to fourth with roughly ten to go and battled with Martin Truex Jr. and Kyle Larson.
However, when he finally got by both of them for good, he did not have enough time to catch the race winner William Byron, despite having the fastest car on the track.
Reddick's consistency and a fifth-place finish at the 2021 Coke Zero Sugar 400 at Daytona enabled him to make the playoffs for the first time.
At the Bristol dirt race, he battled Chase Briscoe for the lead on the closing laps when Briscoe lost control and caused both cars to slide on the final turn, leading to Reddick finishing second to Kyle Busch.
At Road America, Reddick held off Chase Elliott to score his first career Cup Series win.
[38] At the Indianapolis Road Course, Reddick held off the field in overtime to win his second race of the season.
[44] On October 15, 2022, 23XI Racing announced that it bought out the remainder of Reddick's contract from RCR to replace Kurt Busch in the No.
45 team 10 owner and driver points for unapproved ballasts during inspection prior to qualifying at Darlington.
[51] Following the Southern 500, Reddick clinched the regular season championship, beating Kyle Larson by just one point.
[53] Hours after the Roval race, Alex Bowman received a post-race penalty from NASCAR for not meeting weight requirements, dropping him to 38th as a result of being disqualified and promoting Reddick as the seventh driver to enter the Round of 8.
[54][55] On lap 90 at Las Vegas, Reddick, as well as Chase Elliott and Martin Truex Jr., were 3 wide coming off Turn 4.
[56] At Homestead, Reddick passed Ryan Blaney while in turn 4 on the final lap, winning the race and securing him a spot in the Championship 4 at Phoenix.
* Season still in progress 1 Ineligible for series points (key) (Bold – Pole position awarded by qualifying time.
Green 2001 K. Harvick 2002 G. Biffle 2003 B. Vickers 2004 M. Truex Jr. 2005 M. Truex Jr. 2006 K. Harvick 2007 C. Edwards 2008 C. Bowyer 2009 Ky. Busch 2010 B. Keselowski 2011 R. Stenhouse Jr. 2012 R. Stenhouse Jr. 2013 A. Dillon 2014 C. Elliott 2015 C. Buescher 2016 D. Suárez 2017 W. Byron 2018 T. Reddick 2019 T. Reddick 2020 A. Cindric 2021 D. Hemric 2022 T. Gibbs 2023 C. Custer 2024 J. Allgaier