NASCAR at Homestead results: Kyle Larson capitalizes on Alex Bowman’s mistake for first win of 2025

After tearing the wall at the top of the race track throughout the day and recalling the speed when it was more important, Kyle Larson, his teammate on Hendrick Motorsports Alex Bowman, passed to five rolls to achieve his first victory in the 2025 season in The Straight Talk Wireless 400 at Homstead-Miami Speedway. Larson’s victory is the thirty of his career in the NASCAR Cup, and he is now the third best driver in the history of Hendrick Motorsps.
After stripping the wall over and over again while running its line at the top of the race track while also dealing with left -wing side damage from the collision of the hole, the Larson car appeared over the past twenty latter rolls while it was rising from the fourth place along the second place by the time when the race reached 10 rolls. Bowman tried to match the Larson line in order to stop his progress, but he will end up in the next lines with five rolls to go when he entered the wall and cleaning a large speed coming to five rolls to go – giving Larson the opportunity he needs to take the initiative forever.
NASCAR 2025 Race table, Results: Full list of Cup Series Race, Winners, Paths, Sites
Stephen Taranto
“He was a kind of continuing to connect with what I know and what is good for me,” Larson told Fox Sports. “Just proud of myself, proud of the team, just a lot of hard work, today there is between the damage on the PIT Road Road, the bad restart, and all these things. Just a super pump – one of the most wonderful victories I think about my career in the cup only because of all the insects that I have here, and the penis only yesterday, and I keep your head in drilling.”
Larson’s victory coincides with his second victory in his cup in Homestead and the second in the past four years, and he is wandering on a perfect weekend if not for one defect. After winning the Craftsman Truck Series series on Friday, Larson dominated the Xfinity Series series on Saturday – driving 132 rolls and finds all the first five cars – until the late caution created the restarting of the Larson as the Larson car failed to launch it after Sam Mayer hit it from behind. Larson finished fourth, which cost him the opportunity to become the second driver in history to sweep all the three races on one weekend, which Kyle Bush accomplished in Bristol in 2010 and 2017.
With his victory, Kyle Larson became the third best driver in the history of Hendrick Motorsports, with his 24th career in Hendrick cars behind only the Fattar Naskar Jeff Gordon Hall (93) and Jimmy Johnson (83) in the team’s history.
Poman will end in second place to Larson, followed by Boba Wallace – who led 56 rolls, including most of 100 from the last 100 – Chis Brezu and Dini Hammeen. Chris Boischer, Alam Olmen, Tyler Riddik, Ryan Brice and Justin Haley.
Ryan Balni, who was absent from the top 10 goals, was the dominant car in the first half of the race and the field pace for 124 rpm. The Blaney race reached a sudden end with 60 rolls to go when his engine exploded while running in third place. Meanwhile, the Championship of the referee Cup chain Joy Logano – a Blanci teammate in the Bensky team – is still closed from the top of 10, as he was involved in a drilling road accident with both Larson and Las Vigas Josh Berry, who led to him and Berry spinning near the excretion of the hole. Logano recovered to occupy the fourteenth place, but he continues to build on the longest start of the season without completing the 10 best players in history.
Right -wireless hadith 400 results
- #5 – Kyle Larson
- #48 – Alex Bowman
- #23 – Boba Wallace
- #19 – Chis Brisco
- #11 – Dini Hameen
- #17 – Chris Bosher
- #16 – AJ Allmender
- #45 – Tyler Riddik
- #60 – Ryan Press
- #7 – Justin Hali
- #38 – Zan Smith
- #24 – William Bayron
- #3 – Austin Delon
- #22 – Joy Logano
- #43 – Eric Jones
- #4 – Noah Garajson
- #21 – Josh Perry
- #9 – Chis Elliot
- #2 – Austin Centreke
- #71 – Michael Macculawal
- #8 – Kyle Bush
- #99 – Daniel Suarez
- #42 – John Hunter Nimchik
- #47 – Ricky Steinhus Junior
- #54 – Tae Gibs
- #6 – Brad Kisselovsky
- #10 – Tae Delon
- #41 – Cole Kester
- #20 – Christopher Bell
- #34 – Todd Gillland
- #1 – Ross Shasin
- #88 – Shin van Jesperbrgen (PBUH)
- #35 – Riley Herbet
- #51 – Cody Ware
- #44 – JJ Yey
- #12 – Ryan Balani
- #77 – Carson Hosevar