
Former NASCAR Cup Series champion Kyle Larson has celebrated his third victory at the Chili Bowl Nationals.
Larson’s win put him alongside Christopher Bell as a three-time Chili Bowl champion.
The Chili Bowl Nationals, a major event in midget racing, began in 1987 and has since become a staple of the sport’s annual schedule.
The event format involves several qualifying nights that lead up to the A-Main race. Kyle Larson’s journey to victory during the main event began with his win on Monday’s qualifying night.

Jonathan Bachman/Getty Images
This victory set the stage for his participation in the Pole Shuffle, a unique feature of the event where top qualifiers race head-to-head to finalize starting positions for the grand A-Main race.
Reflecting on his third Chili Bowl victory, Larson commented, as quoted by NASCAR.com:
“All three (Chili Bowl wins) are different.
“The first one was just a big hurdle to get over mentally I feel like to get a win in here finally. Then the next year meant a lot because we didn’t have the best car that race but we played defense really well.
“Tonight, the track was challenging to make a lap by yourself, so when you can win a 40-lap race on a track that challenging, it’s pretty cool.”
He managed to lead every lap of the main event, though not without close calls. With 17 laps remaining, Larson encountered a stalled car, Jacob Denney, amid the traffic. Despite making contact, his car restarted just in time to maintain his lead.
Larson described the heart-pounding moment, stating:
“He was just stopped sideways in front of me. I just kind of ramped over the left-front of his race car. I just kind of jumped him really. It stalled in mid-air.
“When it was getting ready to land, I was like, ‘Please, please, please re-fire.’ It re-fired, so I thought I would only get one break, not two.”
Later in the race, Larson made contact with the wall, which could have been disastrous. Fortunately, a caution flag caused by an unrelated dislodged banner allowed him to retain his position at the front.
“I made a mistake on the frontstretch and was kind of up on top of the wall and it shot me off of it.
“I thought I was going to flip similar to how I did last year. I didn’t know it at the time, but it had ripped the banner down. I thought they threw the caution for me.
“Before I got back around to the other side I was like, ‘Man, I don’t know how they’re going to score this.’
“If they were going to have me as the cause of the caution, if I would get penalized or anything. But I saw the banner laying there and I was like, ‘OK, well that’s good. Maybe I’ll keep my spot.'”