What started as a dream weekend for Justin Allgaier at Daytona turned into a nightmare on Saturday.
The reigning Xfinity Series champion entered Speedweeks as one of the hottest drivers, leading JR Motorsports into its Cup Series debut and securing the pole for the United Rentals 300—a moment that had Dale Earnhardt Jr. grinning from ear to ear.
But by the time the checkered flag waved, Allgaier wasn’t celebrating—he was apologizing.
From Pole Position to Pileup: Allgaier’s Night Unravels
Despite starting on pole, Allgaier quickly lost the lead within the first 20 laps. Austin Hill dominated the race, sweeping both stages while Allgaier faded into the background.
Then, with just eight laps to go, chaos erupted.
🚨 THE INCIDENT:
🔹 Allgaier collided with Justin Bonsignore, setting off a multi-car wreck.
🔹 Anthony Alfredo and Sammy Smith were collected in the crash.
🔹 Moments later, Allgaier—while trying to push teammate Connor Zilisch—triggered another wreck.
🔹 Zilisch got squeezed between Allgaier and Sheldon Creed, slamming into the wall.
For Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s young Xfinity star, Zilisch, it was a brutal end to his full-time season debut.
Allgaier Takes Full Responsibility: ‘I’ll Own It’
Unlike some drivers who deflect blame, Allgaier owned up to his mistakes immediately.
“Causing that last wreck was not how I wanted our night to end. The outside row stacked up, I ran in the back of Jim, tried to keep from crashing him. I hedged the middle, and I think the 32 was coming with a big run—it was too late. I should have pulled a little left earlier. At the end of the day, it was frustrating.”
“I’ll own it.”
Beyond Zilisch, the crash also wrecked the nights of Christian Eckes and William Sawalich.
Allgaier’s Post-Race Regret
🔹 “I feel bad for everybody—I tore up a lot of cars tonight.”
🔹 “I’ve been in this sport a long time. The last thing you want to do is destroy equipment, especially coming to the white flag.”
🔹 “The team did a great job—I just made mistakes.”
Is Daytona Playing Tricks on Allgaier?
One interesting takeaway from Allgaier’s post-race comments:
He hinted that something felt ‘different’ about the track this year, though he didn’t specify what.
Could it be track conditions? Handling issues with the Next-Gen cars? Either way, Allgaier knows he can’t afford another mistake on Sunday when he competes in JR Motorsports’ Cup Series debut in the Daytona 500.
From hero to heartache in 24 hours, can Allgaier recover in time?