After close call at Chicagoland, rookie driver has momentum on his side
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LOUDON, N.H. — A lot of folks figure Kyle Larson will wind up in Victory Lane this season in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series.
The Sunoco Rookie of the Year contender is among them.
"I think it’s coming," Larson, 22, said Friday morning at New Hampshire Motor Speedway, site of Sunday’s Sylvania 300 (ESPN, 2 p.m. ET). "I hope it’s before the end of this year. But if not, we won’t be too disappointed because we’ve been running well all season long."
The Chip Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates driver is coming off a third-place finish last weekend at Chicagoland, his sixth top-five of the season. He led 20 laps in his red and white No. 42 Chevrolet, and battled with Kevin Harvick, eventual race winner Brad Keselowski and Jeff Gordon down the stretch for position.
He finished second earlier this year at Auto Club Speedway and also had top-five results at Texas. Pocono, Watkins Glen and Loudon.
"Every race I’ll sit in the motorhome, watch TV, flip through Twitter and everybody always says, ‘This is your weekend.’ And I believe them," he said.
"It kind of sucks when you don’t win. I definitely feel like we’re really close. We’ve been close a couple of times this year. Just a little bit off from winning (at Auto Club); I thought we had the best, maybe the first- or second-best car last week. If I could have done things right, we could have two wins this season."
In spite of his third-place result here at Loudon earlier this year, the former sprint car standout doesn’t consider the 1.058-mile track one of his favorites.
"But I seem to run pretty well here whenever I’ve been here in three different types of cars (Sprint Cup, Nationwide and K&N Pro Series).
"We finished third here earlier in the year so hopefully we can improve on that or still end up in the top five. I thought we were a seventh- or eighth-place car (in July) and were able to luck out on the pit strategy things and have enough fuel to make it to the end. It would be nice to get a win."
It’s more likely that success might surface at the 1.5-mile venues remaining on the schedule. Such tracks are closer, he said, to the three-eighth and half-mile stops from his sprint car background where the momentum carried into the turns and the constant search for a faster line around the track is so crucial.
"I think Kansas will be a good one for us as well as Texas may be our best shot," he said. "(We were) right in the top five pretty much the whole race, finished the whole race earlier in the year. And then Homestead is my favorite track. You run the wall there similar to how you do at Chicago, so hopefully if I can keep it off the wall I can be up front.
"Those three. Charlotte I think we will be pretty good at; we were surprised I wasn’t very good during the 600, but I feel like Charlotte is a good track for me."
New Hampshire and Martinsville are more difficult, he said, "because it’s different than what I’ve ever done."
Braking and track position are key on such tracks. Momentum and multiple racing grooves typically take a backseat.
"You have to get on the brakes and you just run the same line the whole time and I just think a lot of guys that grew up racing Bandoleros and Legends and Late Models … everything they did was on short tracks where you have to learn how to get your car around the bottom as quick as you can and get off the corner," he said.
"I think I’m getting better … but not where I need to be for sure."
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