The Capital

Win cements Byron’s rise

- By Shane Connuck

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — William Byron has always had a chip on his shoulder.

The 2024 Daytona 500 winner and the NASCAR Cup Series’ defending wins leader has emerged as one of the sport’s biggest stars.

Deep down, the Charlotte, North Carolina native is just a kid who’s grown up loving racing and is living out his dream. But he’d be remiss if he said certain things didn’t bother him. He won six Cup races in 2023 but fell short of the championsh­ip. Other drivers find themselves getting far more publicity than him at times, despite not necessaril­y having achieved the same success.

Byron, just 26 years old with 11 career wins to his name, has the potential to be an all-time NASCAR great. He had one of the fastest cars pretty much every weekend last year, finishing more than half the races in the top 10. And now, he’ll head to Atlanta this weekend as the only driver who has likely secured his spot in the 2024 Cup playoffs.

“I don’t know if I’ll ever get that chip off my shoulder,” Byron said. “It’s always been there. It’s just, I’m very quiet about it. I don’t know.

“There’s always reasons to find.

“We didn’t win the championsh­ip, and we don’t get talked about the most, and other people get more publicity — whatever I find, I use as motivation. It’s just the way I’ve always been internally . ... It definitely burns inside.”

When Byron won the first of seven NASCAR Truck Series races in 2016, he was still a senior in high school and worked with current crew chief Rudy Fugle. He reached the

Cup Series in 2018, was its rookie of the tear, and made his first playoffs the following season.

With Chad Knaus — the legendary crew chief for Jimmie Johnson who entered the sport’s Hall of Fame last month — retiring after 2020, Hendrick brought in Fugle to pair with Byron. The reunion was a match instantly.

“Bringing Rudy on gave him that confidence because they were so successful in the Truck Series, and they just picked up and clicked,” team owner Rick Hendrick said. “He races like a guy that’s been doing it for a long time, doesn’t make many mistakes, but he just eats and drinks and sleeps winning. He puts in the work.

“I’ve never seen anyone any more dedicated.”

Overall, it’s Byron’s work ethic that’s lent to his success the most. Hendrick said that all Byron thinks about is racing. He’s constantly in the simulator, watching tapes and working hard to improve his performanc­e.

Each year since 1968, some of NASCAR’s best drivers have descended on Pensacola, Fla., for the “Snowball Derby” — dubbed the Super Bowl of short-track racing — that has hosted Hall of Famers like Donnie Allison and Darrell Waltrip.

Byron was this year’s headliner.

Still, he’s not even necessaril­y the superstar within his own team. Kyle Larson won the 2021 Cup title, and Chase Elliott is the 2020 champion and the sport’s most popular driver the last six years.

He might be a star — now a Daytona 500 champion — and the only driver in the Cup Series with a playoff spot essentiall­y locked up.

But Byron said it himself: “I’m the other guy.”

 ?? CHRIS GRAYTHEN/GETTY ?? William Byron won the Daytona 500 on Monday. The season-opening victory comes after he collected a Cup-high six victories in 2023.
CHRIS GRAYTHEN/GETTY William Byron won the Daytona 500 on Monday. The season-opening victory comes after he collected a Cup-high six victories in 2023.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States