NASCAR & Auto Racing

NASCAR: William Byron punctuates dominant day with Las Vegas win

Mar 5, 2023; Las Vegas, Nevada, USA; NASCAR Cup Series driver William Byron (24) celebrates his victory of the Pennzoil 400 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. Mandatory Credit: Gary A. Vasquez-USA TODAY Sports
Mar 5, 2023; Las Vegas, Nevada, USA; NASCAR Cup Series driver William Byron (24) celebrates his victory of the Pennzoil 400 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. Mandatory Credit: Gary A. Vasquez-USA TODAY Sports Gary A. Vasquez-USA TODAY Sports

William Byron led 176 laps on Sunday — and that included the final one.

The 24 car swept all three stages at Las Vegas Motor Speedway en route to his first win of the 2023 season. It also marked the first win for Hendrick Motorsports on the year — reminding the rest of the field how dangerous Hendrick cars are on intermediate tracks: HMI teammate Kyle Larson finished second, and HMI teammate Alex Bowman finished third.

This was Byron’s fifth victory in 183 races.

“I’ve just been really confident about the guys that I have on this 24 team,” Byron told the Fox broadcast after the win. “They work extremely hard, and we spend a lot of time in the offseason just going through and running through the sim with Chevy and running on iRacing and trying to get better as a racecar driver and the team. It’s all about the team.”

The race ultimately came down to an exciting late-race restart. With four laps to the good, Larson had a three-second lead over second-placed Byron when Aric Almirola got loose and spun into the wall. That prompted a caution and meant overtime and a crucial pit stop.

Martin Truex Jr. elected to stay out and took the lead spot. Larson and Byron went down pit road and both took two tires, and Byron ever-so-slightly edged Larson on that pit stop to give him second place on the restart.

After a good jump, Byron maneuvered around Truex with ease and subsequently held off Larson until he was able to do a celebratory burnout and fetch the checkered flag. Sunday marked Byron’s first victory and his fourth Top 10 in 11 races at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

Larson was happy for his teammate post-race. But he also will probably look back on Sunday and imagine what would’ve happened had that final caution not come.

What was he thinking about when the caution came out with a few laps to go? “Damn,” he said with a laugh.

“It’s just part of Cup racing it seems like,” Larson said. “You count laps down, lap-by-lap, and then sure enough the yellow lights come on, so yeah I mean you just gotta try to get over that and then try to execute a good pit stop. And I thought I did a really good job getting to my sign, and getting to the commitment line. I had a gap to William behind me, and their pit crew must’ve just done a really good job and got him out in front of us, and that (meant we) gave up the front row, so I knew I was in trouble.”

Larson added: “Just a bummer that we didn’t end up the winner, but all-in-all, William probably had a little bit better car than I had today, and their pit crew executed a little bit better there at the end.”

The race saw 13 total lead changes and eight leaders. Among them: Byron led 176, Larson led 63 (a bulk of which was before that restart), Denny Hamlin led 10 and Joey Logano led nine. The only Hendrick car that didn’t finish in the Top 5 was the No. 9 car driven by Josh Berry, who replaced Chase Elliott after he sustained an injury to his left leg after a snowboarding accident this past weekend.

Sunday saw about as clean a Cup race as possible. There were a total of four cautions for 26 laps.

The only other caution-prompting crash besides Almirola’s aforementioned one came in Stage 3 in Lap 183: Logano got squeezed into the wall running three-wide alongside Brad Keselowski and Kyle Busch and subsequently spun out. That ended his day.

Logano didn’t collect anyone in his wreck and it certainly didn’t affect Byron — the 25-year-old Charlotte native who pretty much locked in a playoff spot with Sunday’s win.

Unofficial results from Las Vegas Motor Speedway

Pos.CarDriverTime behindLaps
124William Byron--271
25Kyle Larson0.622271
348Alex Bowman0.766271
423Bubba Wallace0.866271
520Christopher Bell1.173271
62Austin Cindric1.385271
719Martin Truex Jr.1.39271
831Justin Haley1.463271
94Kevin Harvick1.631271
1099Daniel Suarez1.8271
1111Denny Hamlin2.103271
121Ross Chastain2.11271
1312Ryan Blaney2.184271
148Kyle Busch2.376271
1545Tyler Reddick2.588271
1610Aric Almirola15.03271
176Brad Keselowski40.282271
1816AJ Allmendinger98.924271
1943Erik Jones1.766270
207Corey LaJoie-1270
2117Chris Buescher-1270
2254Ty Gibbs #-1270
2341Ryan Preece-1270
2447Ricky Stenhouse Jr.-1270
2534Michael McDowell-1270
2621Harrison Burton-2269
273Austin Dillon-2269
2814Chase Briscoe-2269
299Josh Berry(i)-2269
3042Noah Gragson #-2269
3138Todd Gilliland-3268
3278BJ McLeod-5266
3315JJ Yeley-6265
3477Ty Dillon-6265
3551Cody Ware-12259
3622Joey Logano-88183

This story was originally published March 5, 2023 at 7:39 PM.

Alex Zietlow
The Charlotte Observer
Alex Zietlow writes about the Carolina Panthers and the ways in which sports intersect with life for The Charlotte Observer, where he has been a reporter since August 2022. Zietlow’s work has been honored by the Pro Football Writers Association, the N.C. and S.C. Press Associations, as well as the Associated Press Sports Editors (APSE) group. He’s earned six APSE Top 10 distinctions for his coverage on a variety of topics, from billion-dollar stadium renovations to the small moments of triumph that helped a Panthers kicker defy the steepest odds in sports. Zietlow previously wrote for The Herald in Rock Hill (S.C.) from 2019-22. Support my work with a digital subscription
Sports Pass is your ticket to Charlotte sports
#ReadLocal

Get in-depth, sideline coverage of Charlotte area sports - only $1 a month

VIEW OFFER