LAS VEGAS – Since Kyle Larson joined Hendrick Motorsports ahead of the 2021 NASCAR Cup Series season, the No. 5 team has been the standard. No team has won more races (23) or led more laps (6,055).
For most Cup Series teams, scoring a pair of podium finishes through the opening four races of the season, featuring a pair of superspeedways and a road course, would be pleased to have escaped with minimal damage. Not Larson, who has led a mere 12 laps through the opening month of the 2025 campaign.
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Admittedly, Larson’s biggest struggle since moving to stock cars has been figuring out superspeedways. He remains winless in 49 starts but finally earned a top-five finish last month at the reconfigured Atlanta Motor Speedway in his seventh attempt. That followed the season-opening Daytona 500, where the No. 5 car was mired toward the rear of the field, signaling Jeff Gordon, vice chairman of Hendrick Motorsports, to say the poor results on superspeedways were getting to Larson’s head.
But with one decent finish through the first two races of the year on superspeedways, Larson felt as though he was off to a better start than 2024, which was the first season to start with consecutive drafting tracks.
“I think, like, Daytona just was rough,” Larson said on Saturday at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. “We just were buried in the back the whole time. So, that was frustrating to start your season off like that. I would have rather been up front and got crashed but never got to see the front. Atlanta was good. You know, I was happy. You know, I expected to go there and crash, and we got a good finish. So, I felt like we were a week ahead of schedule.”
When the series picked up at Circuit of The Americas, Larson had multiple issues throughout the event, despite the No. 5 team believing it had a Chevrolet capable of contending inside the top five. The biggest hindrance was losing his right-front wheel after exiting the pits, resulting in a two-week suspension for two crew members. The No. 5 team plucked two members from Justin Haley’s No. 7 team — a Hendrick Motorsports developmental pit crew — to fill in through this weekend at Las Vegas. The No. 5 car left COTA with a 32nd-place finish.
In a crucial race at Phoenix Raceway last weekend, William Byron was the lone Hendrick car that stood above the rest. Yet when the checkered flag flew, it was Larson who was the best in the finishing order, ranking third.
“Phoenix last week, we just weren’t fast,” Larson stated. “We weren’t very good. But our team did an amazing job executing: pit stops, restarts, all of that stuff kept us in the hunt.
“I just feel like we haven’t had consistency really to start, whether that be kind of everything coming together. So, I’m hoping that this week, a track that we have success at in the past, you know, we can kind of put it all together and you have a solid weekend. And then go to another track next week where I’m really confident at and try and just put a few good races in a row together.”
Since the formation of the No. 5 bunch, Larson has won at least one race through the opening month of the season in three of his four seasons with HMS (2023). And while Larson is still looking to secure a playoff ticket, Cliff Daniels, crew chief of the No. 5, has actually been enthused with where his team sits.
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“I think we would have wanted to show a little bit more strength at times,” Daniels told NASCAR.com of the team’s start to 2025. “Last week was a big team day for us because we had somewhere between an eighth- and 11th-place car, call it a 10th-place car. It wasn’t our best showing for what we wanted. And the way the race played out, we had to hang tough and make a couple of strategy calls here and there.
“But I think there’s been a lot of valuable learning situations for our team, areas to get stronger and improve, which you’ve got to take those in stride and accept those when they come. I think our team is going to be a lot better off down the stretch for it. Certainly not discouraged. If anything, the opposite, encouraged that we’ve had those moments and those opportunities where we’ve had to show a little bit of grit and toughness and be ready to keep moving forward.”
Larson has won three of the eight races at Las Vegas that he’s driven for Hendrick, with two additional runner-up finishes. The No. 5 team swept all three stages of last year’s spring Las Vegas race, leading 181 of 267 laps.




