Kyle Larson wins NASCAR’s first Nashville Cup race, full results and recap

It was a race of blown brake rotors and cut tires at Nashville Superspeedway, a track that hosted its first NASCAR Cup race on Sunday.

The Ally 400 winner didn’t blow any rotors. Kyle Larson wasn’t braking much, leading 264 of 300 laps, including the final one, to win his fourth race of the Cup Series season.

He finished with a 4.3 second lead over Ross Chastain, who finished in second. William Byron finished in third.

Larson’s No. 5 crew chief Cliff Daniels was on the radio reminding Larson to conserve fuel at the end of the race as he stayed out front for the final 78 laps. No unexpected cautions came to bunch the field during that time.

So it was up to Larson and his team not to make any mistakes, including maneuvering through a mild drama in the final 50 laps in which debris was stuck on the leader’s grille, causing the car to overheat. Larson slid behind a lapped car, the debris blew off and he was back to sailing away with another win.

“We never really had to run behind people, so I don’t know,” Larson responded on NBCSN when asked if the win felt dominant. “If one of my teammates got out front again, it would have been hard to pass them.”

Byron was running in second late in the race, and could have potentially put up another 1-2 Hendrick Motorsports finish, as the organization has done in the last four races. Team owner Rick Hendrick said he wished Byron had “a little bit of gas” to stay ahead of Chastain at the end of the race for another top-two, but still called it “pretty flawless all day long” for the No. 5 team.

“They’ve been in full stride here for the last seven, eight weeks, and really all year,” Hendrick said. “It’s good to finish it off.”

Hendrick, Larson and Daniels also all commented on the crowd at Nashville, which sold out its roughly 40,000 seat capacity for NASCAR’s return to the track since races there for the Xfinity and Trucks Series for the first time since 2011. The last Cup race near the city was at Nashville Fairgrounds Speedway in 1984, when Geoff Bodine took the checkered flag for Hendrick Motorsports in the No. 5 car.

Traffic issues for fans arriving at the 1.33-mile track in Lebanon, Tenn., forced NASCAR to delay its green flag start time by 10 minutes, and the grandstands appeared packed throughout the race. Hendrick said it felt like “old times.”

“I got trapped trying to get in,” Hendrick said. “But it just felt good. It felt like we were back years ago with fans excited, (standing) shoulder to shoulder.”

Although Larson dominated, the slick, all-concrete track was no easy feat for most teams. At least six teams and drivers, including Ryan Blaney, Ryan Preece, Cole Custer and Chase Briscoe, suffered from broken brake rotors that forced them to the garage early. Leading laps helped take that concern away for Larson.

He started fifth after qualifying, and quickly jumped up to the lead within the first 10 laps, then pitted when a caution came out at the end of the first stage. Larson finished in third in that stage, then won the second stage after multiple cautions for debris on the track and debris causing spins.

Kyle Busch, who won Saturday’s Xfinity race at the track for his 100th career win in the series, was considered a top contender before the event. He raced in the top-10 throughout the evening, but cursed out his ill-handling equipment, dropping multiple F-bombs on his team radio. He fell back to 24th at one point during the final stage, but finished 11th. Joe Gibbs Racing teammates Denny Hamlin and Martin Truex Jr. had similar struggles, and both pitted late in the final stage for fuel for a 22nd and 23rd place finish, respectively.

Hamlin continues to lead the series in points (684) after Sunday, but his lead over Larson (675) has been cut to just 10 points, while Larson has passed Truex for the most race wins with four. His earlier wins this season were at Las Vegas, Charlotte and Sonoma, as well last weekend’s non-points All-Star Race for a million dollar prize.

Larson’s victory at Nashville came in his first race with sponsor Valvoline, a company that said it would match his personal contribution to charitable organizations working with his Drive for 5 campaign. Larson and Valvoline have pledged $5 each for every lap completed and $5,000 for a top-five finish at Nashville, bringing their total contributions from Sunday to $13,000.

“I look forward to the other couple races with Valvoline (at Daytona and Bristol) and hopefully we can get some more partners throughout the rest of the season,” Larson said.

Race results

Pos.

Car

Driver

Time behind

Best Time

Best Speed

1

5

Kyle Larson

--

30.552

156.716

2

42

Ross Chastain

4.335

30.991

154.496

3

24

William Byron

7.159

30.869

155.107

4

10

Aric Almirola

8.591

30.825

155.328

5

4

Kevin Harvick

9.106

31.138

153.767

6

47

Ricky Stenhouse Jr.

10.416

30.776

155.576

7

99

Daniel Suárez

14.119

31.342

152.766

8

1

Kurt Busch

15.728

31.157

153.673

9

20

Christopher Bell

16.541

31.348

152.737

10

22

Joey Logano

21.281

30.868

155.112

11

18

Kyle Busch

21.652

30.779

155.561

12

3

Austin Dillon

23.35

31.43

152.339

13

6

Ryan Newman

25.914

31.547

151.774

14

48

Alex Bowman

26.316

31.169

153.614

15

7

Corey LaJoie

29.995

31.593

151.553

16

34

Michael McDowell

30.589

31.507

151.966

17

38

Anthony Alfredo #

31.057

31.742

150.841

18

8

Tyler Reddick

31.7

31.455

152.217

19

43

Erik Jones

32.102

31.39

152.533

20

23

Bubba Wallace

-1

31.085

154.029

21

11

Denny Hamlin

-1

31.002

154.442

22

19

Martin Truex Jr.

-1

31.396

152.504

23

2

Brad Keselowski

-1

31.322

152.864

24

21

Matt DiBenedetto

-2

30.887

155.017

25

53

Garrett Smithley(i)

-2

31.824

150.452

26

52

Josh Bilicki

-2

32.237

148.525

27

51

JJ Yeley(i)

-2

31.601

151.514

28

78

BJ McLeod(i)

-5

32.162

148.871

29

15

Joey Gase(i)

-5

32.224

148.585

30

41

Cole Custer

-48

30.937

154.766

31

14

Chase Briscoe #

-73

31.149

153.713

32

37

* Ryan Preece

-103

31.679

151.141

33

66

* Chad Finchum(i)

-143

32.52

147.232

34

13

* David Starr(i)

-174

32.414

147.714

35

77

Justin Haley(i)

-221

31.712

150.984

36

17

Chris Buescher

-223

31.181

153.555

37

12

Ryan Blaney

-247

31.625

151.399

38

0

Quin Houff

-300

0

0

39

9

Chase Elliott - DQ*







*Elliott was disqualified after post-race inspection for four loose lug nuts. He originally finished 13th.