By David Morgan, Associate Editor
SPEEDWAY, Ind. – Kyle Larson has been the talk of the town both in NASCAR and the IndyCar world after his debut in the Indianapolis 500 in May and Sunday’s win in the Brickyard 400.
If Larson has it his way, he’ll be back at Indianapolis Motor Speedway next May looking to have another go at the Greatest Spectacle in Racing and hopefully be able to complete his attempt at the Indy 500/Coca-Cola 600 Double.
Immediately upon climbing from his car as the winner on Sunday, it was evident that was on his mind as he turned his attention to the cheering crowd to get their input on whether or not he should take another crack at it.
“I love you, Indiana fans. I know you guys love me, too. How about we come back next May and try to kiss these bricks in an INDYCAR?” Larson asked the crowd, to healthy applause.
“I’d love to [try the Double again]. We’re working on it. I hope we can announce something soon. See you guys all next May.”
In his debut in the Indy 500 in May, Larson was earning his worth as a part of the four-car Arrow McLaren stable of Chevrolets. He was hanging tough in the top-10 for the first 132 laps, learning the intricacies of NTT IndyCar Series racing as he went, until everything unraveled on a green flag pit stop.
Larson came into the pits too hot, locking up the front tires on his HendrickCars.com sponsored machine, exceeding the pit road speed limit and drawing a pass-through penalty from series officials as a result.
After serving his penalty, Larson dropped off the lead lap to 21st place.
Following a crash by Will Power that brought out the caution, Larson was able to take the wave around to get his lap back with 46 laps remaining.
Larson would cycle to the lead on pit strategy, putting himself at the top of the leaderboard for four laps before having to peel off onto pit road for his final stop.
In the final rundown, he would be classified with an 18th place finish, with the entirety of his experience only amplifying his want to return to Indianapolis again and make another run at the Double.
With the way the second half of his Double attempt ended in Charlotte with him unable to even turn a lap in the Coca-Cola 600, Larson noted that it feels like unfinished business.
“We definitely have been talking about it. I think weighing what’s important to everybody,” Larson said.
“It sounds good, I’ll say, so far, but things could change….
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