19-year-old Dawson Sutton stunned the field by grabbing pole in the All-American 400 at Nashville Fairground Speedway. The Tennessee native beat out the likes of 2024 Truck Series champion Ty Majeski.Sutton lit up his home track with an 18.182-second laptime. He'll sport the orange and black colours of the Tennessee Volunteers for the 40th running of the annual event.The race marks a potential case of redemption for Sutton, as he hopes to rewrite last year's heartbreak when he lost after leading 164 laps. Cole Butcher will start alongside Sutton, while a tight qualifying session saw the top-5 slot into a narrow window of two-tenths. Notably, Ty Majeski will start the ASA STARS National Tour season finale in 11th.In a post-qualifying interview, Sutton addressed the feat and said(via RacingAmerica)"It's nice being home, back in Vols country. My team brought me a really good race car. P1 in qualifying here, but, you know, 300 laps is a long race tomorrow. Hopefully, we can put everything together. Just maximize every lap and hopefully be there at the end tomorrow."When asked about redeeming his 2024 loss, the Tennessee native replied,"That would mean everything, you know. I feel like we were really close last year. Hopefully, we can put the last 10 laps together. That's what matters at the end of the day."It was yet another Truck Series driver who stole Sutton's win in the 2024 All-American 400. ThorSport Racing driver Jake Garcia had never led a lap until the second overtime restart, but he held on to his position and ultimately won the race.However, the 20-year-old suffered a devastating crash in Friday's practice. Consequently, the defending All-American 400 winner will skip the weekend.Jake Garcia addresses All-American 400 exitJake Garcia hoped to go back-to-back in the All-American 400, but a broken Axle reared its ugle end on Friday. Without a backup car, the reigning winner has been sidelined from the race altogether.In an interview with NASCAR reporter Steven Taranto, Garcia broke down the turn of events, saying,"The left rear axle tube snapped in half. Turn into a corner, wheel, brakes, everything. Axel fell out, it landed in the woods and I was kind of along for the ride.""Yeah, it sucks. So this is what happens. I thought there was a lot of potential this weekend, but, you know, stuff like this happens in racing," he added.The withdrawal now shifts his focus to December’s Snowball Derby, where he’ll return with fresh equipment. He was glad that the same car won't carry over to that race.The All-American 400 is scheduled for 1 PM CT/2 PM ET on Sunday, November 9.