
Even in a race that finished past its scheduled distance and was delayed for more than three hours due to lightning and rain, it was not enough to keep Ryan Blaney from capping off a dominant performance on Sunday at Atlanta's EchoPark Speedway.
Here are four takeaways from the Quaker State 400.
Coming into the weekend, Team Penske had led the most laps (698) at the reconfigured EchoPark Speedway with only a pair of wins from Joey Logano to show for it. Blaney made sure to etch his name on that list in emphatic fashion.
Blaney swept the opening two stages and clearly had the car to beat all night. Aside from some contact with the wall late and a vibration, there was not much slowing Blaney down on Sunday night, taking advantage of a big push from Christopher Bell out of Turn 4 to win a thriller.
WHAT A FINISH IN ATLANTA!! pic.twitter.com/KpYKIe4bzo
— NASCAR (@NASCAR) July 13, 2026
The win is Blaney's second of the 2026 season (Phoenix), second at Atlanta (2021 spring) and the 19th of his career. Not only is this the first time he has won a race after sweeping the first two stages, but Blaney's 171 laps led are the most at a drafting-style track in the Modern Era.
It was a missed opportunity for teammates Joey Logano (ninth) and Austin Cindric (14th), but there was no slowing down Blaney in the draft. He has been a top-10 machine all season, but Sunday's win was the latest reminder of how strong he and the Team Penske cars are when drafting is involved.
It appeared to be a solid points day for Wallace, who is still fighting to secure his "Chase" berth. While he crossed the line side by side with Bell in the battle for second, Wallace dropped to 29th after NASCAR penalized him for going below the double yellow line on the backstretch.
While Wallace argued that he never advanced his position and the argument could certainly be made to get his finishing position back, this is a penalty that could be detrimental if it does not get overturned. He is still 55 points ahead of Logano for the final "Chase" spot, but it could be a lot more if he had the finish to show for his speed on Sunday.
While it is never ideal for any race to last well into the night and into the early hours of the morning, EchoPark Speedway once again proved why it is arguably the hottest ticket in the sport.
Handling played a role in the early portion and spread the field out a little more than expected, but Tyler Reddick's drive from 31st to second in 60 green-flag laps showed that drivers could maneuver their way through the field and make passes.
The intensity only continued as the field battled side by side and even three-wide for several rows deep at times, constantly trading the lead back and forth in the process. That was all with the lengthy red flag in between, providing another reminder of the incredible racing the track continues to put on.
After the head-to-head, bracket-style competition for $1M began with 32 drivers, only four drivers remain after Atlanta. No. 25 seed Todd Gilliland is set to face No. 4 Chase Elliott, while No. 10 Bell will square off with No. 3 Blaney in the sport's first points race at North Wilkesboro since 1996 on Sunday.
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