Miami Herald

Larson climbs all the way back with Cup title

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Kyle Larson won.

That was the expected result of NASCAR’s season-ending championsh­ip race, right?

Larson closed his comeback season in NASCAR with his first championsh­ip Sunday. He capped his return from a nearly yearlong suspension with a title-winning victory at Phoenix Raceway.

Larson was in tears during his cooldown laps as he reflected on his rebuild from out-of-work NASCAR driver to Cup champion.

“I was just thinking about the journey and how tough of a road it’s been to get to this point for so long, but especially the last year-and-a-half,” Larson said. “I haven’t felt an atmosphere like this maybe ever. With the pressure of this race and everything that was on the line, to win this championsh­ip, every one of these fans made me feel it.

“I was trying to tell myself to just chill out, stop tearing up. I make fun of my dad all the time for crying, and I’m worse than he is. I can’t believe it. I didn’t even think I’d be a racing a car a yearand-a-half ago.”

Larson led seven times for a race-high 108 laps but was running fourth, last among the title contenders, as Martin Truex Jr. and Denny Hamlin controlled the championsh­ip late in a pair of Toyotas.

Then a caution reset everything.

Because he won the pole Saturday in the qualifying, Larson had the first stall on pit road and the shortest sprint back onto the track of the four title contenders. He silently prayed for a flawless service call from his Hendrick Motorsport­s crew to get the No. 5 Chevrolet back on track ahead of his three title rivals.

Wow, did the No. 5 team deliver.

Larson’s crew performed its second-fastest stop of the season — a span that stretches 38 races — and Larson went from last among the final four to first.

“I knew the only way we were going to pull it off is if our pit crew got us off as a leader, and damn, they did. That was just crazy,” Larson said. “Those guys nailed the pit stop.”

Larson controlled the restart with 25 laps remaining, quickly cleared Truex, then held off several of Truex’s challenges. There was no stopping Larson, just as he’s been impossible to stop all season, and he drove to his 10th Cup victory of the year.

He beat Truex to the finish line by an easy .398 seconds.

“There were so many points in this race where I did not think we were going to win,” Larson said. “Without my pit crew on that last stop, we would not be standing right here.

They are the true winners of this race. They are true champions.

“I’m just blessed to be a part of this group. Every single man or person, man and woman at Hendrick Motorsport­s, this win is for all of us, and every one of you. This is unbelievab­le. I’m speechless.”

Truex, the 2017 champion, finished second and was followed by Hamlin, his Joe Gibbs Racing teammate. Hamlin is 0 for 5 in championsh­ip finales and was the only driver among the final four contenders who did not lead a lap Sunday.

Truex has finished second in the championsh­ip standings three times in the four seasons since his 2017 title.

“Ultimately, we needed to beat him off pit road. It’s unfortunat­e, but we win and lose as a team,” Truex said. “That’s three times we’ve been second, and that sucks. Second hurts, I’m not going to lie, especially with the car we had and the job the guys did.”

Hamlin, who raced Larson all season for the regular-season title that ultimately went to Larson, has firmly maintained that Larson should be the champion.

But it didn’t soften the blow of another title defeat for the three-time Daytona 500 winner.

“Any time you can win 10 races in a year, you’re absolutely a deserving champion,” Hamlin said. “They did a great job on the last pit stop and got him out there, and he just set sail after that. Proud of my team … just a really good year. A really, really good year, and things just didn’t pan out.”

Chase Elliott, the reigning champion and NASCAR’s most popular driver, led 94 laps but finished fourth.

Larson seemed to have tears in his eyes on his cooldown lap as he celebrated a career-defining moment he wasn’t sure would happen last year. He was fired four races into the season and lost nearly every sponsor for his use of a racial slur while racing online, and Larson retreated to his sprint car roots to rebuild his life.

He volunteere­d for multiple different grassroots organizati­ons as Larson went on a personal journey to learn more about himself, as well as social justice issues.

It was Rick Hendrick who decided to give him another chance and he hired Larson once NASCAR lifted his suspension.

Larson watched last year’s championsh­ip race from the competitio­n compound on the Hendrick Motorsport­s campus in North Carolina. A year later, he gave Hendrick its 14th Cup title.

 ?? RICK SCUTERI AP ?? Kyle Larson celebrates after winning his first NASCAR Cup Series championsh­ip for Hendrick Motorsport­s on Sunday at Phoenix Raceway. It’s the 14th title for Hendricks.
RICK SCUTERI AP Kyle Larson celebrates after winning his first NASCAR Cup Series championsh­ip for Hendrick Motorsport­s on Sunday at Phoenix Raceway. It’s the 14th title for Hendricks.

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