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Connor Zilisch Called a Generational Talent, Receives Praise from Denny Hamlin

Connor Zilisch Called a Generational Talent, Receives Praise from Denny Hamlin

Yahoo3 days ago
Xfinity Series driver Connor Zilisch is widely recognized by many in the industry as a future superstar of the sport. While some fans might view the teenage driver as being overhyped, even amid his historic success, Denny Hamlin believes he's one of the best prospects in decades.
On the latest episode of Actions Detrimental, Hamlin called Zilisch one of the most impressive rookies he's seen in NASCAR in decades. While everyone knew Zilisch would be great on road courses, Hamlin highlighted what he's doing on ovals as just as remarkable.
'Might be the most impressive rookie I've seen in decades. What he's doing on ovals, considering the amount of experience he has and the age that he is. Can't say I've seen anything more impressive, I truthfully cannot. He's already really good, he's gonna be great.'
Denny Hamlin on Connor Zilisch
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Connor Zilisch stats (): 674 points, 4 wins, 11 top-10s, 9 top-5s, 4 poles, 406 laps led, 7.421 average starting position, 10.684 average finishing position in 19 races
Zilisch, who turned 19 years old on Tuesday, became a full-time Xfinity Series driver this year with JR Motorsports. He started slow, placing 27th and 34th in his first two races at Daytona and Atlanta. He immediately followed that up with a win at Circuit of the Americas (COTA).
With a playoff spot in the Xfinity Series already locked up, Zilisch then went to work climbing the NASCAR standings and improving on ovals. He placed ninth at Las Vegas, 12th at Homestead-Miami, and then sixth at Darlington. Still 18 years old at the time, he then went three consecutive weeks without a top-10 finish.
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However, Zilisch has been the best driver in the Xfinity Series for two months now. Over the last eight races, he has three wins and a 2.25 average finishing position with 17 playoff points. One of those wins came at Sonoma in a head-to-head battle against Shane van Gisbergen, with another coming on the 'Monster Mile' at Dover Motor Speedway.
Some might point to Ty Gibbs' Xfinity Series success in 2022 (7 wins and 16 top 5s) as proof that success at the lower level doesn't guarantee Zilisch will perform well in the Cup Series. While that is true, it is also worth noting that Gibbs was 19 years old during his breakout year, while Zilisch's success has come at 18 years old.
At the very least, Zilisch has earned the opportunity to replace Daniel Suarez in the No. 99 car with Trackhouse Racing next season. He can use his rookie Cup season to learn how to handle the Next Gen car on ovals while competing with Shane van Gisbergen as teammates for wins on road courses. At a minimum, he'll have a very good chance to win one of the five-plus road course races next season, which would likely mean making the playoffs in his age-19 season.
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NASCAR Takeaways: Daytona 500 Winner William Byron Snaps Drought At Iowa
NASCAR Takeaways: Daytona 500 Winner William Byron Snaps Drought At Iowa

Fox Sports

time6 minutes ago

  • Fox Sports

NASCAR Takeaways: Daytona 500 Winner William Byron Snaps Drought At Iowa

NASCAR Cup Series NASCAR Takeaways: Daytona 500 Winner William Byron Snaps Drought At Iowa Published Aug. 3, 2025 9:43 p.m. ET share facebook x reddit link NEWTON, Iowa — William Byron snapped a 21-race winless streak on Sunday afternoon. While a 21-race drought isn't something to sweat over too much, when that last victory was the Daytona 500, there could be a feeling of what could be wrong. The Hendrick Motorsports driver stretched his fuel for the win, once when he certainly needed help after pitting with 144 laps remaining at Iowa Speedway. Knowing he could only run 110 to 115 green-flag laps, Byron took advantage of 50 laps under caution in those final 144 laps on the 0.875-mile oval. William Byron eats corn in celebration in victory lane after winning the NASCAR Cup Series Iowa Corn 350 "We needed to win a race," Byron said. "I feel like we deserved to win a race based on how we've run all year, and it just wasn't happening. 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Three races (Watkins Glen, Richmond and Daytona) remain in the regular season, and the winner of the regular-season title earns 15 additional playoff points, while second is worth 10 and third is worth eight. Playoff points give a driver a better chance to advance in the playoffs if they don't win a race in the three-race playoff rounds. William Byron and crew spray champagne in victory lane after winning the NASCAR Cup Series Iowa Corn 350 "I respect my teammates a ton," Byron said. "I feel like we learn a lot from one another. We all have kind of our unique driving styles, but we have all kind of morphed into being able to drive this car really well. "It's just cool to see us all compete, and hopefully us on [my team] can put three good weeks together on that end of things." As far as the playoff bubble, there are currently three spots open for drivers without wins. Tyler Reddick has a 122-point edge on the cutoff, while Alex Bowman (+63) and Chris Buescher (+23) are inside the playoff bubble with Ryan Preece (-23) on the outside looking in. Keselowski Comes Up Short Brad Keselowski needs to win to make the playoffs and appeared to be in the best position midway through the race to control the event. But with all the caution flags, his pit strategy didn't pan out as he needed some longer runs. He finished third on a day when he led 68 laps. "When you're in traffic, you just have to use the car harder. And by the end, everybody's tires were just garbage because we had fought in traffic for so long," Keselowski said. "The caution sequence and the way the race played out was not very favorable for us. Brad Keselowski (right) and Chris Buescher walk the grid during practice for the NASCAR Cup Series Iowa Corn 350 "We had good pace and thought we executed pretty well." Keselowski was a little frustrated. 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"Once I got [to Byron], he started taking my air and my car just kind of died as soon as that happened," Briscoe said. "I thought I was going to be able to still be good, especially as he caught lapped traffic there. I still just didn't quite have enough." Bob Pockrass covers NASCAR and INDYCAR for FOX Sports. He has spent decades covering motorsports, including over 30 Daytona 500s, with stints at ESPN, Sporting News, NASCAR Scene magazine and The (Daytona Beach) News-Journal. Follow him on Twitter @bobpockrass. share

Frustrated Kyle Larson boils over in radio rant during rough Iowa Cup race
Frustrated Kyle Larson boils over in radio rant during rough Iowa Cup race

Yahoo

time37 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Frustrated Kyle Larson boils over in radio rant during rough Iowa Cup race

The NASCAR Cup race at Iowa Speedway was not kind to Kyle Larson, who was hoping to carry the momentum forward from a runner-up finish in the Brickyard 400 one week ago. Larson's day started to unravel when he and teammate Chase Elliott kept finding each other on restarts. The two Hendrick Motorsports drivers slammed doors multiple times as they fought over a position inside the top ten. Then, with just under 100 laps to go, things really went sideways while he battled Christopher Bell for sixth position. Bell got into Larson, nearly wrecking him and costing the driver of the No. 5 several spots. To make matters worse, Ross Chastain filled the hole in the next corner, using up Larson some more. He fell back through the field as more cars bounced off of him. Radio rant "F*** every single motherf****** -- damnit," radioed Larson in frustration. Moments later, the caution flew as Bell spun in a separate incident with Tyler Reddick. "How much f****** room do I have to leave people?" Larson lamented to his team. "I've been trying to be good to teammates, trying to be a good competitor, and it hasn't gotten me anywhere the last f****** hour." While crew chief Cliff Daniels played the role of cheerleader, it didn't change the fact that things were only about to get worse. Soon, after, Larson sustained nose damage while checking up for a spinning car, forcing the team to make repairs. He was also involved in another caution with a slowing Ty Dillon. Larson ended the day 28th of the 30 cars that remained on the lead lap. This was a major blow in his fight to win the regular season championship, which brings with it some extremely valuable playoff points. He is now 45 points back from the lead, which is currently held by his teammate and Iowa race winner William Byron. Read Also: Opportunity lost as Brad Keselowski misses out on another NASCAR win William Byron saves enough fuel to win caution-filled NASCAR Cup race at Iowa To read more articles visit our website.

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