Texarkana Gazette

Larson settled in at Hendrick one month into new job

- By Jenna Fryer

LAS VEGAS — Kyle Larson was out of NASCAR long enough to wonder if he’d still feel comfortabl­e in a Cup car. He raced in nearly 100 events last year, just not in 3,400-pound stock cars.

Would it feel the same as he remembered? Had his familiarit­y with the interior faded? His instincts slipped?

Larson, who won 42 of 83 open-wheel races during his NASCAR suspension for using a racial slur, has fallen right back into the old routine.

Larson, fired by Chip Ganassi Racing after using a racial slur during an iRacing event in April, was hired by Hendrick Motorsport­s when his ban was lifted at the end of last season. His official return was last month at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway, where he opened his second chance in NASCAR with a 10th-place finish in the Daytona 500.

He was running in the top three with seven laps remaining a week later on the Daytona road course when Larson, in a moment of admitted over-aggressive­ness, spun his Chevrolet and fell to a 30th-place finish. Last week at Homestead-Miami Speedway, Larson led five laps and finished fourth, marking back-to-back weeks he believed he had a shot to win.

Next up is Sunday’s race at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. It’s the fourth race of the season and falls one day short of his fourth and final Cup race a year ago. The season was paused for the pandemic, Larson was suspended during the shutdown and missed the final 32 races of the year.

Despite his layoff and the move to a new organizati­on, he’s already fitting in well at Hendrick Motorsport­s. The team got its first win of the season last week from William Byron, a playoff driver who typically hovers around the cutoff mark but is now automatica­lly qualified.

Alex Bowman had one of the fastest cars at the Daytona 500, and reigning series champion Chase Elliott could have won both the Daytona 500 and the road course race a week later. Chad Knaus, vice president of competitio­n, believes Hendrick drivers could have swept the first three races of the season and Larson could get a victory soon.

Coming off the suspension, Larson has made a strong off-track impression on Hendrick, too. He has been a welcome addition to the driver debriefs, which no longer include seven-time champion Jimmie Johnson downloadin­g informatio­n for the first time in nearly two decades.

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