During the NASCAR Cup Series FireKeepers Casino 400 at Michigan International Speedway, Kyle Larson’s championship aspirations took a severe hit following a dramatic mid-race crash. Larson had been a strong contender for the championship before the incident at the restart halfway through the event. Initially positioned ninth after a pit stop, Larson attempted a bold move in Turn 3 but ended up triggering a multi-car collision.

Larson’s aggressive maneuver to avoid being stuck on the bottom of a three-wide pack saw him take a shallow entry into the turn, squeezing in at the bottom.

The move backfired as he struggled to maintain control along the white line, eventually spinning at the corner exit. The resulting chaos not only forced Larson’s retirement from the race due to significant damage to his Chevrolet but also impacted several other drivers including Bubba Wallace, Christopher Bell, and Joey Logano, who all sustained damage as a result.

Kyle Larson
Kyle Larson, driver of the #5 HendrickCars.com Chevrolet, is assisted by the American Medical Response (AMR) safety team after an on-track incident during the NASCAR Cup Series FireKeepers Casino 400 at Michigan International Speedway on…


Logan Riely/Getty Images

Whilst speaking to the media after the race, Larson commented, as quoted by Motorsport:

“I just messed up. You try to get all you can on restarts. I was just trying to funnel myself up the racetrack. I didn’t want to get stuck on the bottom three-wide. Just got myself in an awkward aero spot and lost it. It’s unfortunate. I made a mistake and cost ourselves a lot of points today.

“Yeah, I mean you get a little bit of warning right before you start spinning. But once these Next Gen cars step out, it’s really hard to save it. I was just doing what I thought would be right to funnel our way up and just put myself in bad spot.”

Finishing in 34th place, Larson brought in just three points from the race, causing him to lose his slender lead in the championship standings. Prior to Michigan, Larson had been leading the championship race just ahead of Tyler Reddick and Chase Elliott. The crash reshuffled the standings significantly, with Reddick, the race winner, taking over the lead and pushing Larson down to fourth place, now trailing by 32 points.

NASCAR Cup Series standings

  1. Tyler Reddick – 23XI Racing
  2. Chase Elliott – Hendrick Motorsports
  3. Denny Hamlin – Joe Gibbs Racing
  4. Kyle Larson – Hendrick Motorsports
  5. Ryan Blaney – Team Penske
  6. William Byron – Hendrick Motorsports
  7. Christopher Bell – Joe Gibbs Racing
  8. Martin Truex Jr – Joe Gibbs Racing
  9. Brad Keselowski – RFK Racing
  10. Ty Gibbs – Joe Gibbs Racing
  11. Alex Bowman – Hendrick Motorsports
  12. Chris Buescher – RFK Racing
  13. Ross Chastain – Trackhouse Racing
  14. Bubba Wallace – 23XI Racing
  15. Joey Logano – Team Penske
  16. Daniel Suárez – Trackhouse Racing
  17. Kyle Busch – Richard Childress Racing
  18. Chase Briscoe – Stewart-Haas Racing
  19. Austin Cindric – Team Penske
  20. Todd Gilliland – Front Row Motorsports
  21. Michael McDowell – Front Row Motorsports
  22. Carson Hocevar – Spire Motorsports
  23. Josh Berry – Stewart-Haas Racing
  24. Noah Gragson – Stewart-Haas Racing
  25. Ricky Stenhouse Jr – JTG Daugherty Racing
  26. Ryan Preece – Stewart-Haas Racing
  27. Erik Jones – Legacy Motor Club
  28. Justin Haley – Rick Ware Racing
  29. Austin Dillon – Richard Childress Racing
  30. Daniel Hemric – Kaulig Racing
  31. Corey LaJoie – Spire Motorsports
  32. John H. Nemechek – Legacy Motor Club
  33. Zane Smith – Spire Motorsports
  34. Harrison Burton – Wood Brothers Racing
  35. Kaz Grala – Rick Ware Racing
  36. Cody Ware – Rick Ware Racing
  37. Joey Hand – Rick Ware Racing
  38. Jimmie Johnson – Legacy Motor Club
  39. Derek Kraus – Kaulig Racing
  40. David Ragan – Rick Ware Racing
  41. Kamui Kobayashi – 23XI Racing
  42. Will Brown – Richard Childress Racing
  43. Cam Waters – Rick Ware Racing