Albuquerque Journal

Larson wreck has drivers wondering about car safety

Talladega crash last week was ferocious

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DOVER, Del. — Kyle Larson has survived near-death experience­s on the track in all kinds of racing series.

Even by those harrowing standards, the 2021 NASCAR champion still found the aftermath of the full-contact hit from Ryan Preece last week at Talladega “unsettling.”

It twisted and busted the support bars in Larson’s Chevrolet’s roll cage. Kyle Busch compared the wreckage to a “brick getting rammed into a stick of butter.”

Larson walked away. So did Preece. Both drivers are in good health and ready to race again Sunday at Dover Motor Speedway.

Larson, who drives for Hendrick Motorsport­s, was thankful the wreck wasn’t worse. The Next

Gen car is entering its second NASCAR season, and the organizati­on is still making needed changes to improve safety.

“You see things that could have easily gotten me in the car, whether it be the bars that had completely broke off and could have shanked me,” Larson said Saturday. “Or what if I had a second impact? I’m not knocking NASCAR at all on that. They’ve worked really hard with this car to make it safer. I’ve been very thankful they took both my car and Preece’s car afterward to dive in deeper into it and see how they can make it safer yet.”

NASCAR’s ongoing investigat­ion includes a re-creation of the crash through computer-aided designs and reviewing film from the in-car camera.

“It’s pretty clear that changes have to be made,” reigning NASCAR champion Joey Logano said. “I don’t know how you fix it.”

Logano and Busch were among several drivers who wondered whether the accident could have potentiall­y been fatal had Larson been hit on the driver’s side door.

NASCAR said Saturday the driver’s side constructi­on is “multiple times stronger than the right.”

“There’s no other form of racing, in my opinion, that takes safety more seriously than them,” Larson said of NASCAR. “But that doesn’t mean the sport is safe.”

At Talladega, Ross Chastain shoved his car into the middle for a third lane and his car bounced off Noah Gragson, who hit the wall to trigger the crash. Larson was knocked into the grass and his car shot back into the middle of traffic and was smacked by Preece. Preece’s helmet visor was knocked open with the hit.

”It was probably one of the toughest hits I’ve ever taken in a race car, and I’ve hit walls with hung throttles on concrete, concrete walls with dirt behind them,” Preece said.

Racing safety was again a hot topic at Dover after the Talladega wreck and with Hendrick Motorsport­s’ driver Alex Bowman suffering a fractured vertebra in a sprint car crash this week. Last year, Kurt Busch was forced to retire following a July crash in qualifying due to a concussion and Bowman also missed five races with a concussion after a September hit at Texas.

QUALIFYING RAINED OUT:

A year after the Cup race at Dover was postponed to a Monday, the weather again caused another schedule change: Saturday’s qualifying session getting rained out.

Kyle Busch starts on the pole and Joe Gibbs Racing driver Christophe­r Bell joins him on the first row. Ford drivers benefited from the rain, with Ryan Blaney starting third, followed by Brad Keselowski, Chris Buescher and Chase Briscoe.

Heavy rain is forecast for Sunday and NASCAR bumped the green flag up an hour to 11:11 p.m. MDT.

XFINITY SERIES: Ryan Truex joked that he held his breath in nervous anticipati­on during the last 30 laps of a race he had dominated from start. He worried when the caution flag might come out, when there would be a flat tire, a wreck, anything that could derail a 13-year wait for a NASCAR victory.

Nothing could deny Truex at the Monster Mile.

Getting choked up as he approached the checkered flag, Truex won for the first time in 188 career NASCAR starts across all three national series in the Xfinity Series race Saturday at Dover Motor Speedway.

The 31-year-old younger brother of former NASCAR champion Martin Truex Jr. swept the first two stages and won by 4.82 seconds.

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