With the conclusion of Sunday's NOCO 400 at Martinsville, we are officially one-fourth of the way through the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series season.
This is usually around the time of year when it starts to become clear who the title favorites are going to be. This season is no different, and three drivers right now have separated themselves from the pack.
The first is Kyle Larson, who won on Sunday for his second victory in the past three races. Larson could very easily have four wins already this year if not for being outmuscled in the closing laps at Las Vegas and Phoenix, where in both cases he was leading before late cautions and restarts shook up the running order.
Larson is known to win in bunches. In 2021 he won 10 races, the first time any driver had done so since Jimmie Johnson in 2007. Last year was a down season with "only" three wins, but he seems fully focused and motivated again. That's not good news for the rest of the field.
Larson's biggest challenger might be his teammate William Byron, the driver who beat him in those aforementioned Las Vegas and Phoenix races. Byron is the only other driver to have multiple wins this season, and also ranks second in laps led with 385, only behind Larson's 468.
Byron has only three top tens in nine races and an average finish of 17.6. But those numbers are misleading and mostly indicative of bad luck. Byron leads the series in average running position, which at 8.9 is nearly eight spots better than his average finish. This will almost certainly even out.
The third driver may seem like an unconventional pick, but watch out for Tyler Reddick. After starting slow, Reddick has top-five finishes in four of the past six races and was dominant in his win at Circuit of the Americas.
Reddick will likely only get better throughout the year as he's still adjusting to his first season with 23XI Racing. And, like Byron, the underlying numbers are a mark in his favor. His +145 on-track pass differential leads the series, meaning he's often had to overcome adverse track position.
Right now, those three drivers have a clear edge on the rest of the field. But there's a lot of season to go and plenty of other names who could join the elite group by the end of it -- namely, Chase Elliott has just returned from a broken leg and is sure to be back in the mix sooner rather than later.
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Rick Hendrick has long known how to rein in young guns when deliberate wrecks and hard pushes cross the line. In 2023, after Ross Chastain repeatedly tangled with Kyle Larson, the HMS owner publicly warned that if Chastain hit any Hendrick driver again, there would be payback, and manufacturer ties to Chevrolet would not shield him. Now, Carson Hocevar finds himself in a position similar to Chastain back then, though Dale Earnhardt Jr. believes the Spire Motorsports rookie will likely set boundaries when it comes to Hendrick. With 318 Cup Series victories, Hendrick Motorsports stands as the winningest team in NASCAR’s top tier, and Mr. Hendrick’s influence runs deep. Crossing him or his drivers rarely ends well for a newcomer, a point Dale Jr. stressed on his podcast. He said, “I am entertained by Hocevar until it becomes my problem… That goes back to the same thing. I think it’s all fine until he does something that irks a Hendrick or somebody that’s directly above his chain of command.” Junior continued, “I think you know if he goes out there and impeded the lap for Larson and the big man gets upset, because the big man has some influence over Spire. The big man has influence over most things Chevrolet. “And so when you start messing with what his program’s doing or what he’s trying to accomplish, that’s when the vice gets a little tight and Carson will feel that. But until that happens… he’s not going to make the adjustments ’cause he doesn’t feel like he needs to. Not going to change.” It’s a scenario that mirrors Chastain’s shift in tone. One warning from Hendrick at a press conference drained much of Chastain’s bravado, making him far more cautious about wrecking not only HMS drivers but anyone on the grid. After this year’s Nashville incident, where the 22-year-old Hocevar wrecked Hyak Motorsports’ Ricky Stenhouse Jr. in Stage 2 without provocation and followed it with unapologetic comments about refusing to change, speculation grew that a call from Mr. H might be coming if he targets an HMS driver. For now, Hocevar’s aggressive streak is in full view, and the limelight will remain on whether he tones it down or keeps pressing the limits until he is issued a warning from a big name in the game.
The Green Bay Packers have a cause for concern with Jordan Love in the preseason. The quarterback suffered a thumb injury during the Packers' 30-10 loss to the New York Jets on Saturday. Love went 1-of-5 passing for seven yards and took a sack for -3 yards in the defeat. Both of his drives ended in punts. Per Matt Schneidman of The Athletic, Love is set to have surgery on his thumb after seeing how it held up at practice on Monday. General manager Brian Gutekunst believes Love will be ready for Week 1 against the Detroit Lions. "Gutekunst sounded adamant that Love will be ready for Week 1 against the Lions," Schneidman wrote. "Hit his left hand on a helmet on that half-scramble vs. Jets. Wanted to see how it felt at practice yesterday and decided to get it fixed to avoid future issues. Will be with team in Indianapolis. "Brian Gutekunst says Jordan Love is having a procedure done on his left thumb. It’s a 'ligament thing.' Hurt it in the preseason opener. Gutekunst hopes he returns to practice next week." The injury comes at an inopportune time for the Packers. Love and the majority of his receivers have not been in sync during training camp and in the preseason game. Like last season, Packers' receivers have dropped passes during practices and did so in the preseason opener against the Jets. Green Bay needs Love on the field, gaining chemistry with his pass-catching targets, including first-round pick Matthew Golden, before it plays the Lions.
A Minnesota Vikings wide receiver's season is already over. The Minnesota Vikings announced on Tuesday that wide receiver Rondale Moore is being placed on season-ending injured reserve due to a leg injury that he suffered in the team's first preseason game against the Houston Texans this past weekend. It is a devastating blow for Moore who is now being sidelined for an entire season, before it even begins, for the second year in a row. Moore signed a one-year, $2 million contract in free agency with the Vikings this offseason in the hopes he could return from a different injury that cost him the entirety of the 2024 season. Moore was a member of the Atlanta Falcons in 2024 after being acquired in a trade with the Arizona Cardinals for backup quarterback Desmond Ridder. This is now two different teams that Moore has been a part of but will never play a game for them due to injuries. Moore was injured while returning a punt. He began his career with the Arizona Cardinals, catching 135 passes for 1,201 yards over three seasons before being traded. He was never going to be counted on to be a key contributor for the Vikings offense this season, especially given the superstars they already have at wide receiver in Justin Jefferson and Jordan Addison, but he still had a chance to be an interesting depth player. Now it is fair to wonder what the rest of his career might even look like. Missing two full seasons due to two different leg injuries is going to be a brutal thing to try to come back from. Missing two seasons for any reason is difficult, but when you add the leg injuries to the equation, it makes the obstacle even steeper.
Oregon wide receiver Jurrion Dickey has struggled to live up to expectations in his first two seasons with the Ducks, and he is now in a terrible position heading into 2025 as well. Dickey has been suspended indefinitely by Oregon, head coach Dan Lanning announced on Tuesday. Lanning also suggested that Dickey may not play for the Ducks again. "We have two team rules; that’s respectful, be on time,” Lanning said, via James Crepea of The Oregonian. “There’s some pieces of that where I felt like he needed a break from us and we needed a break from that so we could focus on what’s in front of us right now. "Wishing him nothing but the best, as far as success and want to see him get back to where he can be a contributor somewhere; that might be here that might be somewhere else.” Dickey was a five-star recruit and rated as one of the top wide receivers in the country when he came out of Menlo-Atherton High School in Atherton, California in 2023. He suffered an injury his senior year in high school and redshirted as a freshman at Oregon. Dickey has two catches for 14 years during his time with the Ducks. Oregon went 13-1 in Lanning's third season with the program last season. The Ducks lost to eventual national champion Ohio State in the College Football Playoff quarterfinals.
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