Cindric Muscles Past The Pack And Steals Stage 1 In Dramatic Fashion

Feb 15, 2026; Daytona Beach, Florida, USA; Driver Ross Chastain (1), Driver Austin Cindric (2), and Driver Alex Bowman (48) round the track during the 68th running of the Daytona 500 at Daytona International Speedway.

Every now and then, a driver puts together a run that grabs the entire garage’s attention. Austin Cindric delivered one of those moments in Stage 1 at EchoPark Speedway, turning a deep 30th‑place starting spot into a statement drive that set the tone for his afternoon. From the drop of the green, he looked nothing like a driver buried in traffic.

The No. 2 Team Penske Ford sliced through the pack with purpose, each move measured and confident. EchoPark’s opening stage is always a handful of tight quarters, unpredictable air, and drivers still figuring out what their cars will give them, but Cindric handled it with the calm of someone who knew exactly what he had underneath him.

Lap after lap, he kept climbing. No desperation. No wasted motion. Just smart racing and a car that responded every time he asked for more. By the time the field came around for the final lap of the stage, Cindric had worked his way to Bubba Wallace’s bumper. Wallace had been strong all stage, but Cindric wasn’t settling for second.

He timed his run perfectly, slipped to the inside, and completed the pass with the kind of precision that makes a stage win feel bigger than a handful of points.It was a move that reminded everyone why Cindric is becoming a force on tracks that demand both patience and nerve.

What This Means For Cindric And Team Penske

A stage win is always valuable, but coming from 30th to get it sends a different kind of message. It shows speed, execution, and a team operating in sync. The setup was right. The calls were right. And Cindric delivered behind the wheel when it mattered.

For Team Penske, it reinforces what they already know: Cindric is growing into a driver who can take control of a race rather than wait for it to come to him. Starting Stage 2 from the front gives him clean air and the ability to dictate the pace, two things that matter a lot at EchoPark, where passing can turn into a chore once the field settles in.

What’s Next

Austin Cindric’s Stage 1 charge wasn’t just impressive. It was the kind of performance that shifts the tone of a race. Climbing from 30th to first and sealing it with a last‑lap pass on a driver as tough as Bubba Wallace takes skill, confidence, and a willingness to commit when the moment presents itself. As the race moves forward, the No. 2 car has made one thing clear: Cindric isn’t just along for the ride today. He’s here to contend.