Kyle Larson dominates clean air

Kyle Larson took the lead and then stopped dominating and then won the Adventhealth 400 NASCAR Cup Series on May 11 at Speedway.

Larson in pole position was the first 165 laps of the first two stages, taking all the races in the first 165 laps, and then dropped to about 30 laps of the third laps after losing track position on the track.

But Chase Elliott stopped with a bad pit stop on the final sequence, and Larson rushed through Christopher Bell on the restart to regain control of the frontline.

Larson led 221 in 267 laps and scored the biggest on the day's score. Bell ranked second and Ryan Blaney ranked third.

Here are the winners and losers of the Kansas NASCAR Cup Series:

NASCAR Kansas Champion and Loser: Kyle Larson Dominates Kansas

A few weeks ago, Preece continued to try to dig himself out of the hole caused by the disqualification of Talladega.

The results on Sunday will help. Preece entered the top ten early in the game and finished seventh in the entire afternoon.

No. 60 RFK Racing Ford competes fiercely throughout the day on a team that includes Ryan Blaney, Joey Logano and teammate Chris Buescher. Playoff or not, this is very encouraging for Preece’s new racing team, the first three months of the season.

I'm not sure if there is a driver (regardless of location or not) all day than Josh Berry at the 21 Wood Brothers racing.

Berry started the last time after hitting the wall in the qualifying round, then advanced to the top 10 of 100 laps. Then, a free throw from the highway pushed Berry from the fourth shot outside the top 20 to less than 100 laps.

In the final green flag run, Berry drove from 17th to 6th, getting good results from a vibrant weekend. If Berry and the Wood Brothers continue to be so good on the 1.5-mile track, No. 21 Ford will be a factor in the late season.

Keselowski's nightmare season continues on Sunday, despite the outstanding first few stages. Keselowski passed Kyle Larson for a second time shortly after his break in the final stage, then closed within a second of leader Chase Elliott, before cutting the tires and slapping the exterior wall.

Keselowski finished 37th and had no top ten in 2025, with Sunday's results being the most disappointing.

"We're winning, we're in the right place," Keselovsky told Fox in his after-in-life interview.

It was a brief Sunday on the AJ Allmendinger track, which lost the engine on lap 7 and finished 38th.

Sunday's DNF was No. 16, Kowlin Racing Chevrolet's second straight win, and the third straight win outside the top 20. After the engine malfunction, Allmendinger was frustrated, knowing that the last run would further bury him in the playoff photos.

Two weeks ago, Allmendinger ranked 14th, sitting in a universal card position. But he is now in the top 20 in the standings and faces a high task to return to the general card competition. Summer road courses are imminent.