The Hamilton Spectator

Larson appears to be unstoppable at Hendrick

JENNA FRYER

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Everybody knew Kyle Larson was going to win races once he started driving Rick Hendrick’s cars.

But this? This looks like a driver capable of chasing down the modern-era record of 13 wins in a season set in 1975 by Richard Petty and tied in 1998 by Larson’s childhood idol Jeff Gordon.

His victory Sunday night in the all-star race at Texas doesn’t count in the win column, but it earned Larson a $1-million (U.S.) payout and should have sent fear through everyone else in the field. It was his third consecutive trip to Victory Lane, he has not finished lower than second since May 2 and there are no signs he’s slowing down any time soon.

“That is the best car I have had here; I just couldn’t get close enough to him,” runner-up Brad Keselowski said. “He just motored right on back by me, like damn.”

And he wasn’t done after Texas, either.

Larson was up early Monday morning and headed to Ohio for three nights of dirt racing in search of his first sprint car victory this month. He won three times last month — no surprise there, Larson racked up nearly 50 victories racing coast-tocoast dirt tracks last year during his nearly season-long NASCAR suspension — and is at last meeting the hype that surrounded him when he first entered NASCAR.

Gordon and Tony Stewart were his loudest cheerleaders when Larson arrived as a 19year-old willing to migrate from the local short track scene to the biggest show in the country. Both Hall of Famers were adamant that Larson was the purest racer they’d seen in years and were confident he’d be a superstar in NASCAR. But his equipment at Chip Ganassi Racing wasn’t good enough to win every week and Larson notched just six victories in six inconsistent seasons.

Next up comes Sunday’s first Cup race at Nashville Speedway, which has been dormant since its 21st and final Xfinity Series race in 2011. Larson will go to Tennessee with Valvoline making its debut on his No. 5 Chevrolet as the third of four sponsors so far announced for Larson this season.

It will be just the third time in 17 events that a non-Hendrick company has been featured on his car. But with this rate of success, companies aren’t going to stay away from Larson much longer, which is what Hendrick banked on all along.

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2021-06-15T07:00:00.0000000Z

2021-06-15T07:00:00.0000000Z

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