Michael Jordan has six NBA championship rings, a Hall of Fame plaque, and a global legacy that transcends sport. But on the eve of his 63rd birthday, the co-owner of 23XI Racing received something he had never experienced before — a Daytona 500 trophy. And if the look on his face in Victory Lane on Sunday was any indication, it hit just as hard as any title he ever chased on a basketball court.
Tyler Reddick delivered the moment, threading through the chaos of a wild final lap at Daytona International Speedway on February 15 to give Jordan and 23XI Racing their most significant win since the team was founded in 2020. The NBA legend, who celebrates his 63rd birthday on Tuesday, February 17, was already in Victory Lane when Reddick arrived — and the bear hug that followed said everything words could not.
Jordan Felt Every Bit of the Daytona Win
The emotion was unfiltered and immediate. Jordan described the feeling in Victory Lane as comparable to winning a championship — one of the most loaded comparisons a six-time NBA champion can make. He was ecstatic, nearly speechless, and could not stop marveling at how the race unfolded. He praised the teamwork, highlighted the role of Riley Herbst in pushing Reddick toward the finish, and made clear that the entire 23XI organization deserved the moment.
Jordan also made one thing very clear to everyone nearby — he wears a size 13 ring. The Daytona 500 championship ring, he said, was something he needed to hold before the win would fully feel real. For a man who has held six Larry O’Brien trophies, that says everything about what this victory meant to him.
Reddick’s co-owner and 23XI co-founder Denny Hamlin, a three-time Daytona 500 winner himself, was equally swept up. Bubba Wallace, Reddick’s teammate who led a race-high 40 laps before finishing 10th, went to Victory Lane in tears. Jordan wrapped his arms around Wallace and spoke quietly into his ear — a private moment of encouragement in the middle of a very public celebration.
Michael Jordan’s Team Fought Hard to Be There
The victory was not just emotionally significant — it was historically loaded. The win for Jordan and 23XI Racing came just weeks after the team and NASCAR reached a settlement in a bitter federal antitrust lawsuit that had threatened the team’s very existence. Jordan was the most prominent face of that legal battle, which went to trial before a settlement was reached on the ninth day. The resolution changed NASCAR’s revenue-sharing model and reshaped the landscape of the sport.
To then win the Daytona 500 — NASCAR’s most prestigious race — in the very next season was a statement that resonated well beyond the sport. The weekend itself carried extra symbolic weight as the Daytona sweep was shared by all three team owners who had been most involved in the lawsuit. Bob Jenkins won the Truck Series opener, Richard Childress won the XFINITY race, and then Jordan and Hamlin got their Daytona 500.
Reddick Bounced Back From a Brutal 2025
For Tyler Reddick, the win carried its own deeply personal weight. The 30-year-old from Corning, California had endured a winless 2025 season — a drought made all the harder by the off-track ordeal of his infant son Beau being diagnosed with a tumor in his chest that affected his heart. Reddick navigated all of that, came into 2026 reset and refocused, and then led only one lap in the Daytona 500 — the last one.
He made a decisive move past Chase Elliott on the final lap after Elliott had grabbed the lead, sailing to the checkered flag and becoming the 44th driver in history to win The Great American Race. He immediately got on the radio asking his team to confirm what had just happened. He snapped a 38-race winless streak and gave 23XI Racing its 10th career win — and its first at Daytona, one of the four crown jewels of NASCAR.
When Reddick arrived at his post-race press conference and was introduced as the latest Daytona 500 winner, he gently but firmly corrected the moderator — not winner, champion.
A Birthday Weekend Jordan Will Never Forget
The timing of the win made the whole story feel almost scripted. Jordan turning 63 on the Tuesday after his team wins the Daytona 500 on Sunday is the kind of birthday gift that does not come around twice. Reddick himself acknowledged the storybook nature of it, and Wallace summed it up perfectly in Victory Lane — calling it a massive birthday present for MJ and meaning every word.
For the NBA legend, who has spent years building 23XI Racing into a legitimate NASCAR contender despite enormous institutional resistance, the Daytona 500 win represents the clearest validation yet that his ambitions in motorsport are serious and sustainable. He is 63 years old, still competitive, still chasing trophies, and still winning.

