The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Kyle Larson finally poised to answer expectatio­ns

- By Jenna Fryer

CHARLOTTE, N.C. >> It is odd to classify a victory on a 1-mile concrete oval in Delaware as the biggest win of Kyle Larson’s career. Maybe he is among those who count their greatest triumphs on dirt, in sprint cars, venues far away from NASCAR’s glitz and glamour.

But at this time of year, in the middle of a long losing streak and just a year away from free agency, Larson’s victory Sunday at Dover Internatio­nal Speedway was enormous for both driver and team.

Larson was not considered a legitimate title contender when the playoffs began.

He wasn’t even the strongest of the two Chip Ganassi Racing entrants, and had been overshadow­ed almost all season by new teammate Kurt Busch. Then Busch had a rocky opening round of the playoffs and was eliminated when the field was trimmed from 16 to 12 a week ago.

Seven days later, Larson became the first driver locked into the third round — the reward for snapping a 75-race winless skid — and suddenly is in the championsh­ip conversati­on.

“This is my best opportunit­y to win the championsh­ip,” Larson said. “I’ve got to take advantage of that.”

Larson had nine top-10 finishes, but this season could have been considered his worst in years. His numbers are down in nearly every meaningful category — top-five and top-10 finishes, laps led and average start and finish — and he wasn’t a lock to even make the playoffs until the final month of the regular season. He did score the $1 million payday with his win in May at the exhibition AllStar race, but his success this year had been relegated to sprint cars, where Larson is idolized for his talent and passion for grassroots racing.

It’s why that losing streak didn’t seem so bad.

“I’ve won sprint car races this year. I’ve won midget races this year. Go-kart races. So yeah, I mean, it doesn’t feel like that long,” Larson said.

But it had been almost two years and the pressure was mounting. Larson came to NASCAR billed as the next Jeff Gordon or Tony Stewart, and while his potential has come in flashes, the results have not been consistent and questions have swirled about his commitment to Cup racing.

With his contract with Ganassi up at the end of next season, it’s not necessaril­y the best time for team owners to wonder if Larson would prefer to be dirt racing but paid as an elite NASCAR driver.

The Dover victory now gives Larson the power to meet his NASCAR expectatio­ns. He can prove over the remaining six weeks that he is a top driver, that Ganassi’s cars have turned a corner in competitiv­eness and that Larson does want to be part of NASCAR’s weekly show. He’s got his sights on Homestead-Miami Speedway, where the champion will be crowned in November.

Larson has three top-five finishes in six career starts at Homestead, where he has led laps in all but one appearance and has the skills to attack the progressiv­e banking on the 1.5-mile oval.

But Larson could never make it out of the second round of the playoffs — no Ganassi driver has ever been to the round of eight — and his performanc­e at Homestead each year meant absolutely nothing in the championsh­ip race. Now he doesn’t need to worry about Sunday’s race at Talladega Superspeed­way, where Larson has crashed in two of the last three races, or the eliminatio­n race at Kansas Speedway, where an engine failure in 2017 knocked Larson out of the playoffs.

Instead, he and the No. 42 team can study the tracks at Martinsvil­le, Texas and Phoenix, and carve out the clearest path to making the final four at Homestead.

 ?? JASON MINTO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Kyle Larson celebrates his win in the NASCAR Cup Series on Oct. 6 at Dover Internatio­nal Speedway in Dover, Del.
JASON MINTO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Kyle Larson celebrates his win in the NASCAR Cup Series on Oct. 6 at Dover Internatio­nal Speedway in Dover, Del.

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