Larson dominates at The Roval to lead all 4 Hendrick cars into next round of NASCAR playoffs
CONCORD, N.C. — Kyle Larson raced to his Cup Series-high sixth victory of the season Sunday to easily advance to the third round of NASCAR’s playoffs, winning on The Roval, the hybrid road course/oval at Charlotte Motor Speedway.
Larson led a race-high 62 laps in the No. 5 Chevrolet for Hendrick Motorsports to win in a runaway. He beat longtime rival and title contender Christopher Bell by 1.511 seconds.
“It was good to have a little bit of a stress-free weekend,” Larson said.
It was Larson’s second victory of the playoffs, but he is the first championship-eligible driver to win in the round of 12. The elimination race cut the field from 12 drivers to eight, and those knocked out of title contention were the Team Penske drivers of Joey Logano and Austin Cindric, Daniel Suarez of Trackhouse Racing and Chase Briscoe of Stewart-Haas Racing.
All four Hendrick drivers — Larson, William Byron, Alex Bowman and Chase Elliott — advanced into the round of eight.
“I’m so proud of everyone at Hendrick Motorsports to have four of the last eight standing,” Elliott said. “I think it is an extremely amazing statement.”
Hendrick Motorsports, which is based less than a mile from Charlotte Motor Speedway, was also thrilled with the team success Sunday.
“Kyle just set a blistering pace, and it was nice to get the win and get everybody locked in,” Hendrick said. “If you set out every year and want to get better and better, well, our teams are better together. I’m living the dream.”
Joining them for the next three-race series are reigning Cup champion Ryan Blaney of Penske, Joe Gibbs Racing drivers Denny Hamlin and Christopher Bell in Toyotas, and Tyler Reddick, the regular-season champion who squeezed through in a Toyota for 23XI Racing.
Blaney is the only Ford driver still eligible for the Cup title.
Bell finished second was followed by Byron, Cindric, Elliott, defending race winner AJ Allmendinger and Shane Van Gisbergen. Logano was eighth, while Bubba Wallace and Blaney rounded out the top 12.
Reddick won the first stage but was involved in a spin with Austin Dillon in the second stage that dropped him to 37th in position and below the cutline. He had to scramble the rest of the race to finish 11th and preserve his spot in the playoffs.
Michael Jordan, Hamlin’s business partner in ownership of 23XI Racing, embraced Hamlin and Reddick on pit lane for advancing.
Logano, meanwhile, finished eighth and was eliminated by four points from advancing to the next round. Two of three Penske cars being eliminated came a day after Team Penske won the IMSA sports car championship at Road Atlanta.
Briscoe was eliminated when he went to the garage with 66 laps remaining with mechanical damage that officially ended Stewart-Haas Racing’s shot at a championship. The team is scaling back from four cars to one next year without Tony Stewart as part of the ownership group, and Briscoe will drive for Gibbs in 2025.
“I wish we were racing for a championship still. It stings,” Briscoe said. “Not even really for myself, just all the employees at Stewart-Haas. They were all kind of living through the 14 car, and the environment we have had these last few weeks has been really exciting to be a part of.
“I hate that it is coming to an end. I know what that means for Stewart-Haas not to be racing for a championship anymore. That was keeping a lot of people, honestly, in the building.”
NASCAR opens the third round of the playoffs next Sunday at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, where Larson is not only the defending race winner but also won in the spring.
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