Royal Oak Tribune

Larson comes full circle with Hendrick in winning 1st title

- By Jenna Fryer

NASHVILLE, TENN. » Kyle Larson was 18 years old and looking to jump from dirt racing to the big leagues when he went into a meeting at Hendrick Motorsport­s with childhood idol Jeff Gordon.

“I was like star struck a little bit,” Larson recalled. “We were going to his office and I turned the corner and his supermodel wife was standing there, and she’s like 7-foot tall and beautiful, and I was like ‘Oh, my God, this is crazy.’”

And then Gordon broke Larson’s heart.

“We sat down in his office, and Jeff Gordon is such an awesome race car driver and one I’ve looked up to since I was a little toddler,” Larson said. “Everybody knows I love dirt racing, and he’s like, ‘You really need to get out of dirt cars. They’re going to teach you bad habits.’”

Larson was crushed when he left the meeting and he ended up right down the North Carolina road at Chip Ganassi Racing, where the owner didn’t care about Larson’s extracurri­cular racing and signed him on the spot. Larson spent seven-plus seasons driving for Ganassi until he was fired four races into 2020 for using a racial slur. He was suspended nearly all of last year by NASCAR but when it was lifted, Larson’s journey with Gordon and Hendrick came full circle.

Larson got his second chance in NASCAR with the team, and Rick Hendrick and Gordon changed

their mind about Larson’s dirt racing. If it kept him sharp and didn’t detract from his job as driver of the No. 5 Chevrolet, then Hendrick would allow Larson to race in other series.

“When you talk to a driver and you know in his heart that it’s really important to him, I told him ‘Look, I don’t want you to get hurt,’” said Rick Hendrick. “He said, ‘It makes me better. It keeps me sharp. I think it helps me in the Cup car.’ So I just agreed to let him do it.”

The agreement led to Larson’s first Cup Series title — and record-extending 14th for Rick Hendrick — and one of the most dominant seasons in at least a decade. Larson won 10 races, the $1 million All-Star race and broke Gordon’s 20-year mark for most laps led in a season.

“I joke with Jeff about my trip to Hendrick that day,” Larson said. “It all worked out in the end. I got to get experience and they didn’t have to pay for any of it before I got to them.”

Larson spoke ahead of Thursday night’s annual season-ending awards celebratio­n for NASCAR in Nashville. The event was canceled last year because of the pandemic when Hendrick driver Chase Elliott won his first title, so the party will be a Hendrick celebratio­n of back-to-back championsh­ips.

Larson has enjoyed the VIP treatment and noted NASCAR provided him with both security and a car service to get around Nashville. And as he fulfilled his preparty obligation­s, his son Owen was running outside the hotel as Larson’s motherin-law tried to burn off some of the 6-year-old’s energy.

Owen Larson has celebrated his father’s first NASCAR title as if he’s the actual winner; at a parade two weeks ago in Larson’s hometown of Elk Grove, California, Owen rode in an oversized shopping cart while his parents and little sister waved to fans from the backseat of a convertibl­e.

 ?? RICK SCUTERI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Kyle Larson, right, and his son Owen celebrate after winning a NASCAR Cup Series auto race and championsh­ip, Nov. 7, in Avondale, Ariz.
RICK SCUTERI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Kyle Larson, right, and his son Owen celebrate after winning a NASCAR Cup Series auto race and championsh­ip, Nov. 7, in Avondale, Ariz.

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