The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Larson grateful for second chance in NASCAR after suspension

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DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Kyle Larson loaded his motorhome and drove to Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway by himself, alone for some seven hours to prepare for his return to NASCAR competitio­n.

The excitement of a new season settled his nerves and he felt optimistic about his future.

After serving a sixmonth suspension for his use of a racial slur that nearly cost him his career, Larson was just appreciati­ve of the opportunit­y ahead.

“I feel extremely grateful because, you know, I really never thought I would get another chance to race in

NASCAR and I kind of accepted that,” Larson said Monday as he waited for the Daytona infield to open.

“I hope to do a good job on and off the track and really take advantage of a second chance.”

Larson’s career imploded early in the pandemic during a night of virtual racing. He used the N-word to address his spotter over the livestream and it was heard by everyone following online.

The clip quickly spread and the fallout was swift: Larson was dropped by nearly every sponsor and fired by Chip Ganassi Racing within a day. He’d been headed into free agency, poised to sign the most lucrative contract of his life, and suddenly found himself unemployab­le at 27 years old.

He began a path to redemption that went far beyond the sensitivit­y course NASCAR ordered him to take during his suspension. Larson took it upon himself without publicizin­g his actions to pursue a hands-on education in racial inequality and injustice.

Larson volunteere­d with a Minneapoli­s foundation focused on youth developmen­t and empowermen­t, visited with former Olympian

Jackie Joyner-Kersee and resumed work with a Philadelph­ia nonprofit that helps minorities advance in motorsport­s. Although he’s half-Japanese and advanced through NASCAR’s diversity program, Larson had his eyes opened to his childhood of privilege coming from a middle-class, two-parent household.

NASCAR reinstated Larson late last year and he found a soft landing with Hendrick Motorsport­s, one of the top teams in motorsport­s. Rick Hendrick wanted to offer Larson that second chance and his support has been unwavering — he’s willing to fund the No. 5 Chevrolet out of pocket if needed and the sponsor for Sunday’s season-opening Daytona 500 is a Hendrick automotive company.

Larson spent most of 2020 rebuilding his image and is ready to prove his character in and out of a race car.

“A lot of people do things and they just say ‘I’m sorry’ and go right on running their life. And that’s all they have to do and people say ‘OK, we’ll give you another shot,’ ” Hendrick said. “This guy did 10 times that. He’s created an image and (done) things in that community that people really respect.

“It was Kyle’s heart and Kyle’s desire that got him back.”

Hendrick is confident that sponsorshi­p of Larson will develop once Larson is back on track. The team so far has signed two sponsors to cover four of this year’s 36 Cup races and Larson spoke to executives with both companies to close the deals.

Once he gets in Hendrick equipment, though, Larson is expected to be a title contender. He won only six times in 223 races driving for Ganassi but Hendrick is at a different level. Chase Elliott last year gave Hendrick its record-extending 13th Cup title and the organizati­on opens 2021 only six wins away from Richard Petty Motorsport­s’ all-time mark of 273 victories.

DAYTONA 500 Sunday, 2:30 p.m. (FOX)

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