Kyle Larson: Nascar’s reluctant Asian American pioneer races toward the title | Sport

Kyle Larson is the rare Nascar driver who makes himself easy enough to spot in a crowd. More often than not he’s the guy riding the top line on one-and-a-half-mile length oval circuits, within a whisker of the outer barrier. Or at least he was before a wave of repaving projects pushed him out of his groove. “To me it’s easier to run a few inches off the wall, just because I have more grip and can use the aerodynamics to pack air and get even more grip,” Larson explains. “Basically, Homestead is the only place left where I can still do that.”

By Homestead of course Larson means Homestead-Miami Speedway, the intermediate track that will once again decide this year’s Cup championship. The race to the finish started in earnest with Sunday’s playoff-opening South Point 400 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway – one of five intermediate tracks on the Cup series’ 10-week playoff. The schedule is an unforgiving steeplechase complete with elimination rounds designed to pare a field of 16 title contenders down to four come Homestead; the championship will go to whoever finishes highest in that race.

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