Kyle Larson takes Brickyard 400 for
fourth win of 2024
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[July 22, 2024]
Kyle Larson checked off a third crown jewel race Sunday
afternoon.
Larson won a second overtime shootout under caution in the 28th
Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in the NASCAR Cup
Series' return to the legendary oval in Speedway, Ind.
As the first Cup race on the IMS oval since July 5, 2020 neared its
finish, sixth-place Kyle Busch wrecked with three laps left to
create the shootout scenario with leader Brad Keselowski.
However, Keselowski pulled off before the green flag due to a lack
of fuel, and a big melee soon occurred just outside the top 10.
In the second two-lap shootout after a red-flag period, leader
Larson pulled his No. 5 away from Ryan Blaney, who slowed
dramatically. Larson beat polesitter Tyler Reddick before the 10th
caution came out for Ryan Preece's spin to freeze the field and end
the race.
Larson's series-leading fourth win was the 27th of his career and
first at the 2.5-mile speedway.
It was Hendrick Motorsports' 11th career victory at IMS, a track
record.
Larson has scored wins at the Brickyard 400, Darlington's Southern
500 and Charlotte's Coca-Cola 600, three of the four crown jewel
races, with only the Daytona 500 missing on his racing resume.
"It's for sure up there," said Larson, who led eight laps, before
kissing the bricks. "It's just such a prestigious place and such
hallowed ground. Pretty neat to just get to race here on the oval
again."
Running in second as the first overtime was about to go green,
Blaney watched leader Keselowski run out of gas then saw third-place
Larson slide up to the inside line, the preferred groove at the flat
track, as Keselowski hit pit road.
"Call it off and re-choose," Blaney said of what he felt NASCAR
should have done. "You promote the third-place guy before the
second-place guy. It's not right. It's just dumb luck (considering)
where Brad ran out. ... I'm just upset. That's a heartbreaker."
Rounding out the top-five finishers were Blaney, Chase Elliott and
Bubba Wallace.
In his 700th career Cup start, Busch brought his No. 8 Chevrolet
home in 25th.
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Jul 21, 2024; Indianapolis, Indiana, USA; NASCAR Cup Series driver
Kyle Larson (5) reacts after winning the Brickyard 400 at
Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Mandatory Credit: Mike Dinovo-USA TODAY
Sports
Reddick and his No. 45 23XI Racing Toyota were
quickest in Friday's practice and matched that on Saturday with his
eighth career pole over team co-owner Denny Hamlin.
When the green came out Sunday, Reddick created a healthy gap on his
boss and the rest of the field by leading them all before pitting on
Lap 37 in the first of the two 50-lap stages.
Hamlin gained the lead for the first time when 2018 Brickyard winner
Keselowski pitted with eight laps to go as the final driver who had
not received pit service.
The No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing driver kept a strong pace and beat
Larson and Blaney at Lap 50, giving Hamlin his sixth stage win this
season and first ever at IMS.
William Byron, one of four three-time winners in 2024 to start the
race, had a hard hit when his No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
crashed into the inside wall on Lap 74 after contact in the back of
the pack.
In his first segment win since 2022, Wallace received the full bonus
points by beating Elliott and Hamlin to close Stage 2.
--Field Level Media
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