Motorsport News

Going the Distance

#1: Ross Chastain, TrackHouse Racing, Advent Health Chevrolet Camaro, #5: Kyle Larson, Hendrick Motorsports, Hendrickcars.com Chevrolet Camaro, #3: Austin Dillon, Richard Childress Racing, Bass Pro Shops/Tracker Chevrolet Camaro and #11: Denny Hamlin, Joe Gibbs Racing, FedEx Ground Toyota Camry 4 wide at the close of the 2022 Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway, nascar cup series, NKP

This weekend brings on what many to believe to be the greatest weekend in motorsports, with the Indianapolis 500 and the Coca-Cola 600 on tap for a weekend full of battling.

These races are all about distance. Charlotte Motor Speedway will, of course, be run for at least 600 miles while the NTT IndyCar Series runs its course through 500 miles on the grandest stage the sport has to offer. Some drivers have been known to tackle both in a single day, just like Kyle Larson plans on doing this year.

There may be a bit of weather in the forecast, but if all goes according to plan, Larson will have quite the distance to go to complete the double. Some quick math will tell anyone that the total between the two races is 1,100 miles. That much is easy, but it’s for just one person, and it only encapsulates the actual raced distance instead of the miles traveled.

Just how far is Larson really going, then? From Charlotte to Indianapolis Motor Speedway is another 578 miles. Larson will at least have to do that after the 500, which would bring the total to almost 1,700 miles, and with the presumed to-and-from driving that will take place throughout the day, should eclipse the 1,700 mark pretty handily.

For reference’s sake, that’s more than six times the length of the Grand Canyon (277 miles) and just longer than the entire lower 48 states from top to bottom (1,650 miles). It would also take more than 9,000 Eiffel Towers to equal the distance (984 ft.).

Larson would have to do some more legwork to reach distances such as that of, say, the Great Wall of China, which measures in at just over 13,000 miles. There are plenty of other walls that he would be able to best, though. The Berlin Wall was just under 100 miles, and Larson will have that mark obliterated after a few minutes of Indy.

Maybe, then, it is best to look at rivers for a comparison. The Mississippi River runs just a hair under 2,350 miles. If Larson wanted to build in another plane ride, he could very well best that mark. He would have to run the double more than two years in a row, though, to best the mark set by the Nile River (4,132 miles).

For even more staggering numbers, things have to be multiplied. Over the course of the Coca-Cola 600, if all 40 entrants to the race complete the full 600 miles, that leads to a crisp 24,000 total miles shared throughout the field. For the Indy 500, 34 entrants could combine for a total of 17,000 miles covered throughout the day….

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