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Tag: Kyle Larson

  • Newgarden wins second consecutive Indy 500 race, Auburn native Rossi finished in 4th place

    Newgarden wins second consecutive Indy 500 race, Auburn native Rossi finished in 4th place

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    The final five laps in Indianapolis this year came down to the wire. Josef Newgarden and Pato O’Ward went back and forth down the stretch of the race, but Newgarden took a late lead to win the Indianapolis 500 for the second consecutive year. Newgarden is the first back-to-back Indy 500 winner since Hélio Castroneves in 2001. Had O’Ward held on to his late lead, he would have become the first Mexican driver to win. Alexander Rossi from Auburn had pulled ahead with eight laps to go, before being passed by Newgarden and O’Ward. He finished fourth. Elk Grove native and Indy 500 rookie Kyle Larson was in the lead with as few as 17 laps to go, but a pit stop put him out of contention for first place. Larson made headlines prior to the race because of his plan to run “The Double” and race in both the Indy 500 and Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway in the same day. A 4-hour rain delay pushed back the start time for the Indy 500 and put that plan in jeopardy.

    The final five laps in Indianapolis this year came down to the wire.

    Josef Newgarden and Pato O’Ward went back and forth down the stretch of the race, but Newgarden took a late lead to win the Indianapolis 500 for the second consecutive year.

    Newgarden is the first back-to-back Indy 500 winner since Hélio Castroneves in 2001. Had O’Ward held on to his late lead, he would have become the first Mexican driver to win.

    Alexander Rossi from Auburn had pulled ahead with eight laps to go, before being passed by Newgarden and O’Ward. He finished fourth.

    Elk Grove native and Indy 500 rookie Kyle Larson was in the lead with as few as 17 laps to go, but a pit stop put him out of contention for first place.

    Larson made headlines prior to the race because of his plan to run “The Double” and race in both the Indy 500 and Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway in the same day.

    A 4-hour rain delay pushed back the start time for the Indy 500 and put that plan in jeopardy.

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  • No favorite among NASCAR championship 4 ahead of finale

    No favorite among NASCAR championship 4 ahead of finale

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    AVONDALE, Ariz. — The long and unpredictable NASCAR season comes to an end Sunday with a championship race fitting for a year that saw unprecedented parity and never a clear title favorite.

    Sure, Chase Elliott led the standings for most of the season while winning a career-high five races and the regular-season title. But everything is equal this year, the first for NASCAR’s new Next Gen car that successfully leveled the playing field.

    The Cup Series celebrated 19 different winners — 21 if the non-points races are counted — and five drivers were first-time victors. Momentum was fleeting and shifted throughout the garage weekly and the end result is a unique final four in the winner-take-all finale at Phoenix Raceway.

    Christopher Bell and Ross Chastain will race for the championship for the first time in their careers, while Elliott and Joey Logano are seeking their second titles. Logano won in 2018 and Elliott won in 2020 in the first of back-to-back Hendrick Motorsports championships.

    Kyle Larson won last year but was eliminated in the second round, leaving Elliott as Hendrick’s only shot to make it three Cup titles in a row. And experience may matter: Logano won the pole in Saturday qualifying, while Elliott was fourth.

    “We’ve been the favorite to win since the beginning of the year, if you ask me,” said Logano of Team Penske. His Ford won the first Next Gen race, the exhibition at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum in January.

    “That’s the way I go to a racetrack and if I don’t go to a racetrack like that, then I shouldn’t show up,” Logano continued. “So I’ve always said what everyone thinks about favorites and odds and all that garbage. I don’t care. I know what my odds should be, and I know what I feel like they are. We’ve proven (in qualifying) we’ve got a good horse and we’re ready to rock and roll.”

    The odds according to FanDuel Sportsbook, by the way, favor Elliott to win the title. Logano is trying to give Roger Penske a Cup title in the same season the organization won the IndyCar championship with Will Power.

    Chastain qualified 25th, worst of the title contenders, and Bell has struggled since Joe Gibbs Racing unloaded his Toyota and will start 17th. But Bell has been down before in these playoffs and won twice to avoid elimination and make it to his first title race.

    “I feel like I’ve got the best team out of the four. I definitely like our chances,” Bell insisted.

    If it takes a victory to win, Bell proved he can do it twice, including last week’s dramatic win at Martinsville to save his season. And since the winner-take-all format was established in 2014, the champion has won the final race to claim the Cup.

    The Next Gen has shown how many drivers can win each week, and even though Elliott tapered off a bit in the playoffs, he too likes his chances.

    “When I sit back and I look at this weekend and the way this format is and the way the final four works (with one race), if you’re in, you have a shot,” Elliott said.

    So that includes Chastain, who shot to fame last Sunday with a wall-riding final half lap that gained him five positions and leapfrog nemesis Denny Hamlin by two points for the final spot in the championship race. The video-game style move has been celebrated globally in motorsports but not so much in the NASCAR garage.

    His fellow drivers believe what Chastain did in deliberately crashing into the wall, taking his hands off the wheel and flooring it while letting the wall guide his Chevrolet, is a dangerous move. While entertaining, they’ve argued it could have gone terribly wrong and injured someone, including spectators.

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    AP auto racing: https://apnews.com/hub/auto-racing and https://twitter.com/AP—Sports

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  • Wallace charges after Larson following crash at Las Vegas

    Wallace charges after Larson following crash at Las Vegas

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    LAS VEGAS — Bubba Wallace tried to fight reigning NASCAR champion Kyle Larson after a crash Sunday at Las Vegas Motor Speedway that also collected title contender Christopher Bell.

    Wallace had led 29 laps and clearly had a fast car in the opening race of the third round of the playoffs. Wallace did not qualify for the playoffs, and Larson was eliminated last week.

    The incident began when Larson attempted a three-wide pass — Kevin Harvick in the middle dropped out of the bunch — and Larson slid up the track against Wallace. When Wallace didn’t lift to give Larson any room, Larson used his Chevrolet to shove Wallace’s Toyota into the wall.

    Wallace then bounced back down the track, followed Larson’s car down to the apron and appeared to deliberately hook him in retaliation. That sent Larson spinning into the path of Bell, who won last Sunday at Charlotte to earn the automatic berth into the round of eight, and ended Bell’s race.

    Wallace climbed from his car and marched his way toward Larson. Wallace was shouting before he even got to Larson and immediately began to shove the smaller driver. Larson tried to turn away from him and several times lifted his arms to block Wallace’s shoves, but Wallace got in multiple shots before a NASCAR safety worker separated the two.

    Wallace claimed he didn’t deliberately wreck Larson, but both Larson and Bell viewed it as clear retaliation. NASCAR could penalize Wallace if it also believes he deliberately retaliated.

    “I’m smart enough to know how easily these cars break, so when you get shoved into the fence deliberately like he did trying to force me to lift, the steering was gone,” Wallace said. “Larson wanted to make a three-wide divebomb, but he never cleared me and I don’t lift.

    “I know I’m kind of new to running up front, but I don’t lift. I wasn’t even at a spot to lift and he never lifted, either, and now we’re junk. Just (very bad) move of his execution.”

    Asked what message he was trying to send to Larson when he began shoving him, Wallace said, “He knows.”

    “He knows what he did was wrong. He wanted to question what I was doing, and he never cleared me,” Wallace said.

    And as for Bell becoming collateral damage?

    “Sports,” Wallace, who like Bell is a Toyota driver, said with a shrug.

    Larson, who hit the wall last week at Charlotte to contribute to his playoff elimination, said he wasn’t surprised Wallace hooked him.

    “I obviously made an aggressive move into (turn) three, got in low, got loose and chased it up a bit,” Larson said. “He got to my right front, and it got him tight and into the wall. I knew he was going to retaliate. He had a reason to be mad, but his race wasn’t over until he retaliated.

    “It is what it is. Just aggression turned into frustration and he retaliated.”

    He thought Wallace’s crashing of Larson was inappropriate considering how much scrutiny NASCAR has been under concerning its new Next Gen car. Alex Bowman, who is Larson’s teammate at Hendrick Motorsports, is out for a third consecutive race with a concussion and Kurt Busch has been forced to step away following his July concussion.

    “I think with everything that’s been going on here lately, with head injuries… I don’t think it’s probably the right thing to do,” Larson said. “I’m sure with everything going, he’ll know that he made a mistake in the retaliation part and I’m sure he’ll think twice about that next time.”

    He also said he expected Wallace to be ready to fight when Wallace approached his crashed car.

    “I saw him walking over, so I figured he would do something,” Larson said. “He had every right to be upset. I would rather him do that (fight) than tear up our cars in a dangerous manner.”

    Bell, who will be scored 34th on Sunday and likely drop to last in the eight-driver playoff standings, said “we got the short end of the stick” with Larson and Wallace tangling.

    “It’s disappointing because our performance is capable of racing for the championship, and it doesn’t appear that we’re going to get to,” he said.

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    More AP auto racing: https://apnews.com/hub/auto-racing and https://twitter.com/AP—Sports

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