Larson wins UNOH Battle At The Beach
Feb, 18, 2013
By Travis Barrett
NASCAR News Wire
DAYTONA
BEACH, Fla. -- Kyle Larson spent a lot of time watching short-track
races via online videos, and he was left with one impression.
"I
don't get to do this short-track stock car stuff very often," said
Larson, the 2012 NASCAR K&N Pro Series East champion with a busy
background
in open-wheel sprint and midget cars on dirt. "It seems to me like
every video I've ever seen from a short track like this, it seems the
second-place guy coming out of the turn always wins."
Larson made certain it happened again Monday night at Daytona International Speedway.
Larson,
of Elk Grove, Calif., initiated contact with leader C.E. Falk off the
final turn of the final lap, turning Falk into the infield on the
superspeedway's .4-mile backstretch oval to win the inaugural UNOH
Battle At The Beach NASCAR Whelen All-American Series Late Model race.
Falk made it across the finish line in third place, behind Larson's
teammate and pole sitter Ben Rhodes.
Larson and Falk traded the lead three times over the final 10 laps of the 150-lap event.
"It's the first race I've ever won in that manner, but this was a pretty big race," Larson said. "I wanted to win it.
"It
was a cool race. My adrenaline was really going... My heart was
pounding. When I got the checkered, I was just really excited and glad I
could
win. It was a good win for the team."
Larson,
who started on the outside pole after winning one of two 25-lap heat
races earlier in the day, was content to ride inside the top five for
most of the caution-filled event. He finally started to make a charge
that seemed destined to come up short when he suffered front-end damage
after contact with Rhodes. He recovered from that and set his sights on
the leader.
Larson
led for a single lap on Lap 142, and after conceding the point back to
Falk on Lap 143, he chased him down yet again on the final circuit.
As the two raced into Turn 4, Larson nudged Falk's No. 40 once to get
him loose. Both cars bobbled, but Larson again ran into Falk on the
frontstretch in the ensuing drag race to the checkered flag.
"I did dirty him up there," Larson said. "I got into him once, got into him twice and then got him around.
"It's
the last lap. You have to slow down so much in the center of the
corner, I got a run on him and got into the back of him. I got
underneath
him and then got him around. I feel bad for him, but like I said, I
wanted to win."
Falk
-- who led 61 laps on the night -- was visibly frustrated as Larson
celebrated in Victory Lane, at one point turning away and swatting the
air with his hand in disgust.
"I
just tried to protect the bottom as best I could," Falk said of the
last lap. "He got me once and I thought I was going to be OK, but I was
wheel-spinning
the whole time. Finally, he just finished us off. It sucks that it
ended up that way, but our car's still in one piece -- and I've got some
great notes for next year to go and try and win this thing."
Larson
will try to repeat on Tuesday, where he has rides in both the NASCAR
K&N Pro Series and NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour races here. He's also
entered in the NASCAR Nationwide Series race on the superspeedway
Saturday.
Anthony Anders and Deac McCaskill rounded out the top five in the 29-car field.
1 comment:
I think Kyle Larsen is going to me met with a fews "boos" when they announce his name for the modified and K7N pro series races on Tuesday evening. By most opinions, it was an "ugly" win.
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