Kyle Larson came oh-so-close to winning all three races held at Homestead-Miami Speedway from March 21-23, but he has another chance to complete the rare weekend sweep at Bristol Motor Speedway.
Larson will drive the No. 07 Chevrolet Silverado for Spire Motorsports in Friday's NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race, the No. 17 Chevrolet for Hendrick Motorsports in Saturday's NASCAR Xfinity Series race, and the No. 5 Chevrolet for Hendrick Motorsports in Sunday's NASCAR Cup Series race.
The 2021 NASCAR Cup Series champion is looking for his second Truck Series win of 2025 after mounting an impressive comeback at Homestead on March 21, in which Larson rebounded from a spin by charging through the field and earning the victory.
In the Xfinity Series race at Homestead, Larson dominated and held a huge advantage in the closing laps. However, a late yellow flag forced a restart, which saw Sam Mayer give Larson a bad push, taking away any chance Larson had of winning.
In the Cup Series race at Homestead, Larson got around his Hendrick Motorsports teammate in Alex Bowman in the closing laps to earn his first Cup Series win of 2025.
Bristol has been an excellent track for Larson as of late. After winning the 2021 Bristol Night Race in a classic finish, Larson has had the best average finish in the four Bristol races held with the Next-Gen car.
In the four Next-Gen Bristol races, Larson has earned 51 stage points, led 535 laps, won two stages, and had an average finish of 3.3 including four top-fives and a win in the 2024 Bristol Night Race.
Larson hasn't made an Xfinity Series start at "Thunder Valley" since 2018, but his nine NXS starts at Bristol make up an incredible resume. Larson won his last Xfinity Series start at Bristol in 2018, and has a total of seven top-fives, eight top-10s, 746 laps led and an average finish of 5.7.
Larson's only Truck Series start at Bristol came on the dirt in 2021, but while he doesn't have any experience on Bristol's concrete surface in the Truck Series, he'll still be a favorite regardless.
With the circuit headed to one of his best tracks and the best equipment in NASCAR underneath him, Larson could pull off one of the most difficult feats in NASCAR by sweeping all three races this weekend. It's only been done twice in NASCAR history, but both of those occurrences came at Bristol with Kyle Busch behind the wheel in 2010 and 2017, respectively.
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