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Kyle Larson dominates Food City 500 at Bristol Motor Speedway
NASCAR Cup Series driver Kyle Larson (5) wins the NASCAR Food City 500 at Bristol Motor Speedway. Randy Sartin-Imagn Images

Kyle Larson dominates Food City 500 at Bristol Motor Speedway

For the second straight NASCAR Cup Series race at Bristol Motor Speedway, Kyle Larson took the field behind the woodshed. 

After dominating the 2024 Bristol night race and Saturday's Xfinity Series race en route to victories, Larson put a similar beatdown on the field on Sunday, leading 412 laps in his second win of 2025 and his third Cup Series win at Bristol. 

Larson swept the stages and led 412 laps — including 350 in a row from Lap 40 to Lap 389 — in the victory. 

Larson's win comes just days after Hendrick Motorsports Communications Director Jon Edwards — who worked closely with both Larson and Hall of Famer Jeff Gordon — tragically passed away. Many teams ran decals honoring Edwards on their vehicles throughout the race weekend at Bristol. 

"This one's definitely for Jon," Larson told Fox Sports. "We're going to miss him. Successful weekend here, I wish he was going to be with us here to celebrate, but I know he's celebrating in spirit."

"Just another flawless race here at Bristol for the No. 5 team," he continued. "I don't know how many laps of green we ran there, but it was fun. (I) felt like I did a pretty good job in traffic."

Denny Hamlin, Ty Gibbs, Chase Briscoe and Ryan Blaney rounded out the top-five, with William Byron, Ross Chastain, Christopher Bell, AJ Allmendinger and Austin Dillon completing the top 10. Only nine cars finished the race on the lead lap. 

Other notable finishers include Carson Hocevar in 11th, Kyle Busch in 14th, Chase Elliott in 15th, Bubba Wallace in 19th and Joey Logano in 24th. 

In his NASCAR Cup Series debut, Jesse Love finished 31st, five laps down. Meanwhile, polesitter Alex Bowman experienced engine troubles and finished 37th, 157 laps down. 

After taking a one-week break, the NASCAR Cup Series will race at Talladega Superspeedway on April 27 in the 10th race of the 2025 season. The Jack Link's 500 will go green shortly after 3 p.m. ET, with coverage on FOX, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio. 

Samuel Stubbs

Hailing from the same neck of the woods as NASCAR Hall of Famer Mark Martin, Samuel has been covering NASCAR for Yardbarker since February 2024. He has been a member of the National Motorsports Press Association (NMPA) since October of 2024. When he’s not writing about racing, Samuel covers Arkansas Razorback basketball for Yardbarker

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Report: Steelers turned down wild trade from Commanders for Terry McLaurin
NFL

Report: Steelers turned down wild trade from Commanders for Terry McLaurin

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What teams are asking about Commanders’ Brian Robinson Jr. amid trade interest
NFL

What teams are asking about Commanders’ Brian Robinson Jr. amid trade interest

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Steelers undrafted rookie reportedly upset Mike Tomlin before being cut
NFL

Steelers undrafted rookie reportedly upset Mike Tomlin before being cut

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Packers HC bothered by rookie's 'unacceptable' behavior during preseason game
NFL

Packers HC bothered by rookie's 'unacceptable' behavior during preseason game

Green Bay Packers right tackle Anthony Belton had a forgettable first half against the Indianapolis Colts on Saturday when he committed five penalties in the first half. The rookie was called for a false start, two illegal formation penalties, a face mask and unnecessary roughness. Packers head coach Matt LaFleur was peeved by the unnecessary roughness penalty, which the second-round pick was called for when he pushed Colts cornerback Johnathan Edwards from behind after the play. Per Matt Schneidman of The Athletic, LaFleur "let Belton have it" at halftime. Following the game, LaFleur explained to the media why that behavior bothers him — it hurts the team. “That’s the one that really bothers me because that is — I mean, they all bother me — but you can’t be getting personal fouls because that really hurts the team, puts you in a really tough position,” LaFleur said. “That is completely unacceptable in my mind. I appreciate the effort that he plays with and I thought he did a really nice job…I love the effort. It’s just, you got to be smart in those situations.” Belton's penalties were costly for the Packers. One of the illegal formation flags took away what would have been a touchdown pass from quarterback Taylor Elgersma to tight end Ben Sims. The 15-yard penalty on the unnecessary roughness call turned a manageable 3rd-and-5 into a 3rd-and-20. Saturday's preseason game is a learning experience for the 2023 third-team All-ACC offensive lineman. The Packers can't have Belton on the field if he's going to commit that many penalties, and the unnecessary roughness mistake would have been easy to avoid.

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