Bubba Wallace Denies Penalty After Yellow Line Move Costs Him 27 Points at EchoPark Speedway
**Bubba Wallace was penalized 27 points and dropped to 29th at EchoPark Speedway on July 13, 2026, after NASCAR ruled his yellow line move advanced his position-despite his claim he stayed third.** The penalty, confirmed after a 31-minute review with officials, now threatens his playoff push as rivals close in on the points lead.
Wallace’s car crossed the yellow line on the backstretch during the final lap, forcing **Carson Hocevar** and **Ryan Blaney** three-wide into Turns 3 and 4. The move nearly propelled him into the lead, but he braked hard to avoid a crash, ending side-by-side with Hocevar. NASCAR’s review concluded he *did* advance from third to second, triggering the penalty.
*“I stayed third from Turn 3 until 50 yards out,”* Wallace told reporters. *“I was all over the brakes-my car didn’t like that move. It didn’t advance me.”* The NASCAR Rule Book (Section 8.3.2) states drivers risk a black flag if they go beneath the yellow line *to improve position*, but Wallace argued his intent was to avoid a wreck, not gain track.
The penalty carries a **27-point deduction**, a devastating blow in the tight Cup Series standings. *“Everybody behind us is licking their chops,”* Wallace said. *“We’re not safe. We need to figure out what’s next.”* With **23 points** separating him from the next contender, the hit could reorder the playoff picture.
No. In-race penalties are non-appealable, unlike finish protests. His team met with NASCAR for 31 minutes post-race but left without further options. The ruling now shifts focus to **Daytona International Speedway**, where Wallace will need a strong run to claw back lost ground.
EchoPark was Wallace’s **second-place finish** before the penalty-a rare top-three result in 2026. The 27-point hit erases momentum just as the **NASCAR playoffs** loom. Rivals like **Joey Logano** and **Kyle Larson** now have a clearer path, while Wallace’s team scrambles to adjust strategy before the next race.