NASCAR, Kansas Speedway and AdventHealth
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Bell ran top five much of the day at Kansas. He finished third in the first stage, fifth in the second stage and then finished second in the race. This was his sixth top five of the season and eighth top 10. The JGR driver was really never a threat to win, but he was there if Larson had trouble.
He started on the pole, won both stages, earned the bonus point for the fastest lap of the race, led 221 of 267 laps and took the points lead. Larson’s victory was his third of the season, the earliest he has scored three wins in a Cup season.
Quietly putting together a remarkable season, Ryan Preece netted his fourth top 10 of 2025 in this past Sunday\\\"s Cup Series race at Kansas Speedway, and he did so by being the only driver to have top-10 rankings across the board,
Byron sits at No. 2 in the Cup Series standings, while Bell improved to No. 3 with his runner-up finish in Kansas. Chase Elliott stood pat at No. 4, and Ryan Blaney jumped up to No. 5 in the standings by ending Sunday's race in the No. 3 spot.
Kyle Larson made it back-to-back spring race wins at Kansas Speedway. He dominated the NASCAR Cup Series race on Sunday from the pole to win for the third time this season.
Kyle Larson won the AdventHealth 400 NASCAR Cup Series race at Kansas Speedway on Sunday afternoon. Larson drove to the checkered flag on a picture-perfect Mother’s Day afternoon. The race itself was marked by several crashes, cautions and restarts in the last 78 laps that changed the complexion of the 400.5-mile race.
Kansas Speedway will be open for several hours of virtual nonstop action Saturday as the Truck and Cup series hit the 1.5-mile oval. The trucks will be on track just after 2 p.m. ET for practice and qualifying, followed by Cup practice and qualifying for Sunday’s 400-mile race. Christopher Bell qualified first a year ago at Kansas.
Spire Motorsports driver Carson Hocevar defended his actions after winning the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race at Kansas Speedway.