
Kane praises 'amazing defending' in nine-goal CL classic - but Rooney disagrees
Kane calls defending 'amazing' in Bayern's 5-4 loss to PSG, Rooney disagrees.
Carson Hocevar won the Talladega race, showcasing a remarkable hands-free victory lap that surprised the crowd. The 23-year-old driver secured his win with 19 laps to go, solidifying his place in the Cup Series.
Carson Hocevar Wins Talladega Thriller Then Stuns Crowd With Hands-Free Victory Lap That Nobody Saw Coming, Watch
Carson Hocevar didnât just win at Talladega. He made sure nobody in the stands or watching at home would forget it anytime soon. The 23-year-old Chevy driver finally broke through in the Cup Series again, and instead of playing it safe after the checkered flag, he turned the spotlight up even more. What followed wasnât just a celebration. It was something people are still trying to wrap their heads around.
The race itself was already intense enough. Talladega tends to do that, especially late. On April 26, Hocevar put his No. 77 Chevy Camaro ZL1 out front with 19 laps remaining and managed to stay there when it mattered most. That alone is no small feat at a superspeedway where the lead can disappear in seconds.
Hereâs where things started getting serious. A late caution reset the field and erased any comfort he might have had. Suddenly it wasnât about managing a lead anymore. It was about surviving one final push. Chris Buescher, driving a Ford, lined up with a real shot at stealing it away.
The restart came and everything tightened up. Cars stacked behind Hocevar, waiting for any opening. Buescher made his move, closing in as they charged toward the finish. It turned into a drag race in the final stretch, the kind Talladega is known for. Hocevar held his line, kept the momentum, and crossed the line just over a tenth of a second ahead. Thatâs about as close as it gets without things going sideways.
After winning, Carson Hocevar performed a hands-free victory lap that stunned the crowd.
Carson Hocevar took the lead with 19 laps remaining in the race.
Carson Hocevar drove a No. 77 Chevy Camaro ZL1 during the Talladega race.
His victory is significant as it marks a breakthrough in the Cup Series for the 23-year-old driver.

Kane calls defending 'amazing' in Bayern's 5-4 loss to PSG, Rooney disagrees.
Connor McDavid is a game-time decision as Oilers face elimination in Game 5 against the Ducks.
Catch Game 5 of Spurs vs. Blazers on April 28 at 9:30 p.m. ET!
Indiana Fever secure Caitlin Clark's contract through 2027
Mammoth coach reveals why JJ Peterka was benched in crucial playoff game.
See every story in Sports â including breaking news and analysis.
That shouldâve been the headline. First Cup win in three years. Young driver proving he belongs. Done deal. But Hocevar wasnât finished.
After bringing the car to a stop, something seemed off. He didnât jump out right away. Instead, he climbed up and sat on the windowsill, almost like he was trying to figure something out. People noticed, but nobody really knew what he was planning.
Then it clicked.
He fired the car back up and rolled out for a victory lap, but not the kind drivers usually take. Still sitting on the windowsill, Hocevar guided the car in front of the grandstands. At one point, he lifted both hands off the wheel. Completely hands-free. At Talladega. In front of a packed crowd.
Thatâs where things change.
Victory laps are usually controlled, predictable, even a little boring if weâre being honest. This wasnât that. This was risky, maybe even a little reckless depending on how you look at it, but it was also bold in a way fans donât see much anymore.
And hereâs the part that matters. This wasnât some spur-of-the-moment stunt. It had been on his mind for a while. He had tried before and couldnât pull it off. This time, he was determined to make it happen no matter how long it took after the race ended.
That mindset says a lot. Not just about the celebration, but about how he approaches everything behind the wheel.
Hocevar has built a reputation over the past few seasons, and not always the kind that earns universal respect. Heâs been aggressive. Sometimes overly so. Heâs rubbed competitors the wrong way and hasnât exactly backed down when called out for it. That kind of edge can make a driver hard to root for, especially in a series where respect still carries weight.
But Talladega has a way of flipping narratives.
Pulling off a clean, pressure-filled win at one of NASCARâs toughest tracks already forces people to take you seriously. Add in a moment like that victory lap, and suddenly the conversation shifts. Itâs not just about how he races anymore. Itâs about who he is becoming in the sport.
Even within the garage, the reaction leaned positive. Alex Bowman, another Chevy driver who recently returned after dealing with vertigo issues, finished third and gave Hocevar credit for earning it the hard way. That kind of acknowledgment doesnât come easy, especially from competitors whoâve seen both sides of his driving style.
And thatâs where it gets complicated.
On one hand, youâve got a driver who clearly isnât afraid to push limits, whether itâs during the race or after it. On the other, youâve got someone who just delivered when it counted most, under pressure, against top competition. That combination is dangerous in the best possible way for the sport.
Fans donât tune in for safe. They tune in for moments.
Talladega delivered one of those, and Hocevar made sure it didnât end at the finish line.
Thereâs also a personal side to all of this that adds weight to the moment. This win wasnât just another stat on the board. It carried meaning beyond the track, tied to family and loss over the past year. That kind of emotional layer doesnât always show up in the final results sheet, but it changes how a victory feels for a driver.
You could see it in how he handled everything after the race. Not polished. Not overly scripted. Just real.
Thatâs something NASCAR could use more of right now.
So what does this actually mean going forward?
For Hocevar, it resets the conversation. Heâs no longer just the aggressive young guy trying to prove himself. Heâs a race winner again. At Talladega, no less. That carries weight in any garage.
For fans, itâs a reminder that personality still exists in the sport. Not everything has to be clean and controlled. Sometimes a little chaos, even after the race, is exactly what gets people talking.
And for everyone else in the field, itâs a warning. Heâs not just here to mix it up anymore. He can close.
Thatâs the part they canât ignore.