Sunday perfect for Larson to break out of NASCAR losing streak
Kyle Larson speaks to the media after a NASCAR Cup series race in Martinsville, Va., on Sunday. (AP photo)
AVONDALE, Ariz. — Kyle Larson is stuck in a 23-race NASCAR losing streak and really hasn’t done much better in his sprint car, either. His momentum hit a wall after his failed second attempt to run the Indianapolis 500 and Coca-Cola 600 on the same day.
Larson crashed and failed to finish both races in a demoralizing hit he didn’t realize he’d carry for so many months. He has never experienced a slump like this, even when he drove for Chip Ganassi Racing and only won six races.
“Even when I was not ever winning, I could still go to sprint car racing and win and that would keep your confidence in yourself that you can do it,” Larson said. “This year when they both took a dip, you’re like ‘Man this sucks’ and like ‘How am I going to get out of this?’ and ‘Like, is it me?’ ‘Is is the cars?’ ‘Is is the bad luck?’
“You’re just down, searching for answers and sticking through it. Then it slowly started turning around, maybe not as quickly as I would like, but quietly we were getting better and now the NASCAR stuff? We’re peaking at the right time.”
Larson will race Hendrick Motorsports teammate William Byron, and Joe Gibbs Racing teammates Denny Hamlin and Chase Briscoe on Sunday in NASCAR’s winner-take-all championship finale. He’s the only driver in the final four with a championship, the one he won in 2021, his first season at Hendrick.
Hamlin, Briscoe and then Byron all won to earn their spots in the field, while Larson failed to win in the playoffs and earned the final berth through points. Even so, he likes how the No. 5 Chevrolet is running the last nine weeks and likes his chances Sunday.
“I feel like we can win at any point,” Larson said noting he’d run in the top-five the last month. “I feel like that’s back to where we are. To me, it doesn’t seem like it’s been that long since we’ve won because we’ve at least been contending to win the last four races.”
Larson has one previous victory at Phoenix, in the 2021 championship race he won. He has three top-fours in five races since.
William Byron
Another trip to the championship, another middle seat on a commercial flight for Byron.
Two years after Byron needed to win at Martinsville Speedway to make the playoffs, he did it again this year. And just like any NASCAR driver who doesn’t own an airplane, he had to quickly find a way to get to Phoenix Raceway.
Hendrick Motorsports wasn’t leaving in time to get Byron to Texas, so he once again booked a commercial flight.
Byron has a chance to bookend this season with victories. He opened it with a win in his second consecutive Daytona 500 and now can close it at Phoenix with a victory that would give him his first NASCAR Cup title.
This is Byron’s third straight appearance in the final four, and he finished third the last two years as a finalist.
Chase Briscoe
Born and raised in Indiana, Briscoe is a dirt track kid who idolized Tony Stewart, a fellow Hoosier and NASCAR Hall of Famer. He wanted nothing more than to make it to North Carolina and somehow enter a NASCAR race.
He would be content if he made just one start, he didn’t even care at what level of the national series Briscoe got his shot. If it came in a development series, so be it, Briscoe still would have made it.
He sure did, and with a team owned by Stewart, no less. But when Stewart-Haas Racing closed at the end of last season, he needed a new job. Joe Gibbs Racing grabbed him and, in the best equipment of his career, he’s raced his way into a shot at his first NASCAR championship.
Back in Mitchell, Indiana, the high school gymnasium will be open Sunday night to root on their local hero.
Briscoe scored the first Cup win of his career at Phoenix when he still drove for SHR. In his one visit to Phoenix with JGR this spring, he crashed and finished 35th.
Denny Hamlin
Hamlin is the sentimental favorite and recognized as the greatest NASCAR driver to never win a championship.
He was the first driver to qualify for the finale by winning at Las Vegas, a victory that marked the 60th of his career and tied him for 10th on the all-time win list. Hamlin is a three-time Daytona 500 winner and long ago made peace with the idea he may never win a Cup title.
This is his sixth wide-open shot at the title — first time in the finale since 2021 — and he let the first five chances slip away through a comedy of errors.
Hamlin is not the most likeable driver among fans, but his tenacity in suing NASCAR along with Michael Jordan over antitrust claims, the candid opinions he offers both on his “Actions Detrimental” podcast and social media, and the recent revelation that his father is dying, has given him strong outside backing.
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