Kyle Larson, other 1.5-mile stalwarts look to avoid playoffs elimination
Kyle Larson's 2018 has not been what many expected. Some regression from a career-best four-win season last year could have been assumed, but 31 winless races and, now, on the brink of playoff elimination would've made skeptics out of wide-eyed optimists.
Larson had choice words for his team following a disappointing 11th-place finish last week at Talladega, lamenting the lack of competitiveness this season on drafting tracks.
Considering the track type distribution of horsepower from his No. 42 Chevrolet this year, his frustration seems warranted. He ranks sixth in Central Speed, down from third last year. His speed ranks 13th on the drafting tracks of Daytona and Talladega specifically, and just 10th on short tracks. It's the intermediate facilities -- the 1.5-mile tracks most prevalent in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series -- on which Larson has excelled, and this weekend's race at Kansas Speedway, a track fitting the 1.5-mile description, can't get here soon enough.
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Larson ranks second in Central Speed on intermediates, trailing only Kevin Harvick's No. 4 Ford, and that singular strength may rescue him from elimination. He sits 36 points out of the eighth-place cutoff spot and likely is in need of a race win in order to advance to the Round of 8. He profiles as a driver capable of pulling off the feat.
On moderate intermediates, Larson ranks as the most efficient passer in the series. In all, he's accumulated an adjusted pass differential of plus-97 positions on the track type, which is 77 spots more than expected from a driver with a similar running position. While restarts certainly helped steady that number -- he's netted 60 positions on restarts across all tracks -- he's also a reliable long-run passer. He earned a single-race pass differential of plus-35 after starting from the rear of the field at Kansas in the spring (due to an unapproved tire change), despite the event having less than the average number of restarts. He finished fourth.
It's appropriate that the very track type that has defined Larson's season may also be the one that saves it.
Larson isn't alone among bubble drivers hoping Kansas magnifies primary strengths.
RELATED: Kansas clinch scenarios
[caption id="attachment_147377" align="aligncenter" width="899"] Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images[/caption]
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