Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Byron is back in Texas with more big wins

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When William Byron first met Rick Hendrick a decade ago, the teenager who had learned racing on a computer wasn't all that confident how things would work out as he revealed his goal to drive one day for the NASCAR team owner.

There is certainly no lack of confidence now for Byron, who at 26 is getting race wins for NASCAR's winningest team, and some significan­t ones at that. A week after Byron's 13th career win in a 1-2-3 finish for Hendrick Motorsport­s at Martinsvil­le as the team marked the 40th anniversar­y of its first victory, the series is back at Texas Motor Speedway, where he led only the final six laps last September to get Hendrick's 300th victory.

“For me, just felt like a full-circle moment. Just with all the history of Martinsvil­le,

with being in the 24 (car) .... talking to Rick on the phone and then going to celebrate with him,” Byron said.

Byron, who qualified sixth, opened this season by winning the Daytona 500, the record-matching ninth for Hendrick but first since 2014. He also won three weeks ago in the other Texas race in Austin.

Hendrick teammate Kyle Larson is the points leader and earned the pole for Sunday's race at Texas, a 1 1/2-mile track like Las Vegas, where he got his victory this season. He led 99 laps at Texas last fall but got loose and spun into the wall with 85 laps to go. Larson won from the pole in the 2021 fall race there, where he also won NASCAR's All-Star race there earlier that year.

“It's always been a really good racetrack for me,” Larson said. “Last year, I just screwed up on one of the late restarts and spun and crashed, but we had a dominant race car that day. Hopefully we'll have another race car just like it.”

Larson's 18 wins since joining Hendrick in 2021 include the team's recordsett­ing 269th victory that year at Charlotte Motor Speedway to pass Petty Enterprise­s for the most.

Byron grew up in NASCAR's

hotbed of Charlotte, North Carolina, and idolized seven-time Cup champion Jimmie Johnson in the No. 48 car for Hendrick. Now Byron is in his seventh season in the famed No. 24 that Jeff Gordon drove to win four Cup titles and 93 races.

“I was put into Jeff's car and that was a lot of pressure. And I had to just, we had to, kind of make it our own,” Byron said. “Jeff is a great mentor and a great asset for our team . ... He's made it known when I got in the car that it's my own.

“Once we started winning races in the third year, won a race, and then the next year we won another one and really started to win races at places that are difficult to win, I just felt like we started to click.”

Xfinity Series

Sam Mayer made a lastlap pass and held on to win by a matter of inches ahead of Ryan Sieg at Texas Motor Speedway in one of the closest finishes in Xfinity Series history.

Mayer was high against the outside wall after the two cars banged side by side on the way to the checkered flag. The final margin was .002, matching the second-closest finish in series history.

Justin Allgaier finished third after leading 117 of the race's 200 laps.

Sieg went from 10th place to first in a span of four laps just before the race's final caution. After the restart with 11 to go, Sieg stayed in front until the final lap when Mayer was able to get the No. 1 JR Motorsport­s Chevrolet under and by him on the backstretc­h.

Off the final turn, Sieg got back to the inside of Mayer but came up just short in the No. 39 Ford of getting his first win in 342 career starts for the RSS Racing team owned by his family.

It was the fifth career win for Mayer, and his first this season. He led four different times for a total of only five laps.

While Allgaier dominated the race without getting the win, he still finished in the top 10 for the 266th time in his career. That matched Kyle Busch's record for the most in Xfinity Series history.

 ?? LARRY PAPKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Sam Mayer, rear, edges out Ryan Sieg at the finish line to win the NASCAR Xfinity Series race in Fort Worth, Texas.
LARRY PAPKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Sam Mayer, rear, edges out Ryan Sieg at the finish line to win the NASCAR Xfinity Series race in Fort Worth, Texas.

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