Kyle Larson overcomes pit road errors to drive from the back to the top and finish P9 in NASCAR Texas race
Kyle Larson overcomes pit road errors to drive 'from the back to the top' and finish P9 in NASCAR Texas race × Follow Us Create Notifications New User posted their first comment this is comment text Link Approve Reject & ban Delete Log in Manage your profile Editing Story Queue Video Queue Editing Stats Writer Home SEO Redirection Admin Wiki Edits Taxonomy Home Edit Site Menu Mapping Dashboard Tag Pages Community Social Feed Queue Feed Center Notification Center Affiliate Home Manage Pages Bottom Tagline Dash Timeless Stories Logout NASCAR NASCAR Cup Series News
Larson wins Stage 1! #NASCARPlayoffs
WATCH: @USA_Network
STREAM: bit.ly/NASCARonNBC16732Kyle Larson and Denny Hamlin make contact!Larson wins Stage 1! #NASCARPlayoffsWATCH: @USA_Network STREAM: bit.ly/NASCARonNBC https://t.co/XFDLx5HhRJ Kyle Larson also appreciated the car he had underneath him. With the speed in the car, the Elk Grove, California native thought he could challenge much higher up the order and said: “You try to shake it off the best that you can and go out there and put together some good runs. We were able to overcome all the spots that we would lose on pit road. I felt like I drove from the back to the top five or six, almost every run. Really, really good car. Proud of the effort there at the shop, the piece that we brought here to Texas.” Hendrick Motorsports@TeamHendrickFought to the finish at @TXMotorSpeedway.37634Fought to the finish at @TXMotorSpeedway. https://t.co/n3iqLTwjY7 With the race plagued by tire failures across the field, Kyle Larson and a handful of other drivers were lucky that their tires did not let go at the wrong time. Multiple drivers such as Kyle Busch, Kevin Harvick, and Christopher Bell were victims of tire failures, rendering their progress null and void in the race.
I felt like I drove from the back to the top - Kyle Larson overcomes pit road errors to finish P9 in NASCAR Texas race
By Rahul Ahluwalia Modified 26 Sep 2022 Follow Us Comment Share Kyle Larson drives during the 2022 NASCAR Cup Series Auto Trader EchoPark Automotive 500 at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth, Texas. (Photo by Sean Gardner/Getty Images) Kyle Larson's day out at the Texas Motor Speedway in the AutoTrader EchoPark Automotive 500 was filled with attrition as the reigning NASCAR Cup Series champion made his way through the field to finish in the top 10. After dominating the 1.5-mile-long track last year, the 30-year-old was seen fighting tire issues and pit-stop errors as he made his title bid for 2022. After clinching victory in the first stage of the 500-mile-long race after a hard fight with Denny Hamlin, Larson dropped to the back of the field as the #5 pit crew at Hendrick Motorsports seemed to have a poor day on pit road. This saw the #5 hendrickcars.com Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 driver lose multiple places in the pits on numerous occasions. NASCAR on NBC@NASCARonNBCKyle Larson and Denny Hamlin make contact!Larson wins Stage 1! #NASCARPlayoffs
WATCH: @USA_Network
STREAM: bit.ly/NASCARonNBC16732Kyle Larson and Denny Hamlin make contact!Larson wins Stage 1! #NASCARPlayoffsWATCH: @USA_Network STREAM: bit.ly/NASCARonNBC https://t.co/XFDLx5HhRJ Kyle Larson also appreciated the car he had underneath him. With the speed in the car, the Elk Grove, California native thought he could challenge much higher up the order and said: “You try to shake it off the best that you can and go out there and put together some good runs. We were able to overcome all the spots that we would lose on pit road. I felt like I drove from the back to the top five or six, almost every run. Really, really good car. Proud of the effort there at the shop, the piece that we brought here to Texas.” Hendrick Motorsports@TeamHendrickFought to the finish at @TXMotorSpeedway.37634Fought to the finish at @TXMotorSpeedway. https://t.co/n3iqLTwjY7 With the race plagued by tire failures across the field, Kyle Larson and a handful of other drivers were lucky that their tires did not let go at the wrong time. Multiple drivers such as Kyle Busch, Kevin Harvick, and Christopher Bell were victims of tire failures, rendering their progress null and void in the race.