Driver missed Sprint Cup Series race at Martinsville
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Sounding upbeat and ready to race, Kyle Larson spoke with the national media Thursday afternoon about a fainting episode Saturday that kept him out of his race car for last Sunday’s Sprint Cup Series race at Martinsville Speedway and in a hospital bed for two days while doctors performed a litany of tests.
Larson, 22, said that in the end, doctors feel it was a severe case of dehydration.
"I feel great right now and I felt perfectly fine shortly after I fainted the other day," Larson said. "I just had to get a lot of tests run to make sure nothing serious was wrong with me and all those test came back negative.
"All that time I felt fine and hated I couldn’t race this weekend."
He even joked, "I had stuff hooked up to me from my head to my toes. Probably the only test I didn’t get was a math test."
Larson, last year’s Sunoco Rookie of the Year, fainted while signing autographs at the track. After initially being taken to a local hospital he was transported by helicopter to Carolinas Medical Center closer to his home in Charlotte for further tests. Larson was released late Monday night and on Thursday was cleared by NASCAR to resume competing again.
In a release earlier on Thursday, Chip Ganassi Racing said, "following a thorough review of all test results by his attending physicians and in conjunction with the medical staff from NASCAR, Kyle Larson has been cleared to return to all NASCAR related activities beginning at Texas Motor Speedway next weekend, April 10-11."
.@KyleLarsonRacin is ready to race @TXMotorSpeedway! pic.twitter.com/esEZOCvmwX
— CGR NASCAR Teams (@CGRnascar) April 2, 2015
Last Friday, Larson qualified his Chip Ganassi Racing No. 42 Chevrolet seventh on the grid. But it was Regan Smith who drove the car Sunday collecting a 16th-place finish as Larson watched the race on FOX Sports 1 as a hospital patient.
"I still felt like I was there," he said of being able to listen to his team’s communication on NASCAR.com.
As for the incident, Larson said he had been rushing around Saturday morning. He actually completed the autograph session but was lingering around to speak with the last fan in line when he felt light-headed.
"I tried to lean forward and maybe see if that fixed it, and then I passed out," Larson recalled.
"I don’t know, it was just kind of a weird morning just because I was almost late to practice, so I just rushed myself that morning and didn’t take very good care of myself throughout the day and just ended up dehydrating myself.
"Just got to do a better job of taking care of myself, and that should never happen again."
Larson said it was the first time he had ever been hospitalized overnight in his life and was a little nervous at first, but reassured by the doctors and by the way he felt.
"Any time you’re in a hospital you get nervous," he said. "But I was confident everything was fine, and it turned out where everything in the end was fine. Like I said, just got to make sure I hydrate myself throughout the day better than I did that day."
Larson dropped from 18th to 24th in the Cup standings after missing that race. He had two top-10 finishes in the last three races in the No. 42 Chevrolet before Martinsville. And he is still eligible for the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup postseason because he qualified his car for the event on Friday.
As many of the drivers are enjoying this rare off-weekend on the Sprint Cup schedule, Larson sounded eager to get back behind the wheel. The popular driver said he was never too worried about the outcome of his time in the hospital.
"I pretty much stayed positive through the whole thing," Larson said. "I never thought anything was wrong with me because I felt fine while I was sitting in the hospital. Just was looking forward to when I could finally get out, looking forward to the last test that they had to run so I could get out of there.
"I was never nervous about it being the end of my career or out for a while or anything like that. I had it pretty much set in my mind that I was OK.
"I think the doctors kind of knew what all was going on, they just wanted to, like I said, run every test that they could just to make sure they could scratch everything off the list."
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