
Christopher Bell has served emphatic notice that he is the early driver to beat in the 2025 NASCAR Cup Series, and the 30-year-old is primed for a run at an historic fourth consecutive win on a track where he will be looking to exact some revenge.
With victories at Atlanta, Circuit of the Americas and Phoenix, the Norman, Okla., native is the first driver to win three Cup races in a row since Kyle Larson did so in 2021. He is also the first driver to win three out of the first four since Kevin Harvick in 2018.
Compared to Harvick’s early-season thrashing of the field seven years ago, Bell hasn’t been quite as dominant. That’s not a knock on Bell, but rather an indication of how NASCAR’s schedule has changed. The first four races of 2025 featured two superspeedways, a road course and a one-mile oval. The first four races of 2018 featured Daytona being followed by three conventional ovals in a pre-reconfiguration Atlanta, Las Vegas and Phoenix.
During his three-race win streak at the start of 2018, Harvick led 433 laps, compared to Bell’s 114 over his three-race win streak. During his streak, Harvick scored a combined 149 laps, compared to Bell’s 139 over his three-race streak.
As Bell prepares to race for a fourth consecutive win at Las Vegas on Sunday, it’s worth looking back at Harvick’s attempt at a fourth straight win in 2018. Harvick was involved in an early crash at that year’s Auto Club 400 and finished 35th. It was a race indicative of the nature of NASCAR: no matter how high you are, you can always be brought down. Bell hopes to avoid a similar fate at Las Vegas.
Harvick’s fourth win of 2018 came seven races after his third in the AAA 400 at Dover. While Harvick made the Championship 4 for the fourth time in five seasons, he and the rest of the ‘Big Three; that included Kyle Busch and Martin Truex Jr. saw their title hopes crushed by Joey Logano.
When looking for the best start to a season in Cup Series history, Bill Elliott’s 1992 season has to come to mind. After leaving Melling Racing at the conclusion of 1991, Elliott landed with Junior Johnson as the driver of the flagship No. 11 car. While his season would ultimately end in a heartbreaking championship defeat at the hands of journeyman Alan Kulwicki, nobody could touch Elliott over the first five races of 1992.
A 27th-place finish at Daytona was disappointing for the two-time Daytona 500 winner, but over the next four weeks, Elliott was far and away the best driver in the field. Wins at Rockingham, Richmond, Atlanta and Darlington solidified him as a championship threat, though he remained behind fellow title contender Davey Allison in the points standings despite his tear.
Different points systems and race lengths prohibit a cross-examination between Elliott and Bell’s respective streaks, but it should be noted that Elliott led 747 of a possible 1,587 laps during his win streak.
Unfortunately for Elliott, his dominance ran out in race six at Bristol, where he finished 20th — 30 laps down. Following his four-race win streak, he would fail to find victory lane again until the infamous season-finale at Atlanta, where Elliott’s fifth win of 1992 failed to deliver him a second Winston Cup title.
Bell now shifts his attention to going for a fourth consecutive win, a feat accomplished by the aforementioned Elliott, Harry Gant — AKA ‘Mr. September’ for winning four races in a row in September of 1991 — and Richard Petty, who won 10 in a row in 1967, among others.
The bad news for the field? Bell is due for a trip to Victory Lane in Sin City.
In his past four starts at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Bell has three top-five finishes and has led 216 laps. Of those 216, 155 of them came in a dominant performance at LVMS in October of 2024, where Bell saw Joey Logano and crew chief Paul Wolfe steal a win that catapulted the No. 22 team to the Championship 4. That race wasn’t just a heartbreaking loss on an otherwise dominant day for Bell, but also ended up being the difference in Bell missing the Championship 4.
The spring race at Las Vegas hasn’t been quite as kind to Bell as its fall counterpart, but with how fast Bell is at the moment, that might not matter. He’ll undoubtedly be near the top of the list of race favorites this week and in the weeks following.
A glance further down the Cup Series schedule shows tracks where Bell can continue his white-hot start. Should Bell win his fourth consecutive race at Las Vegas, the chance for a fifth at Homestead-Miami glimmers in the Florida sun.
Bell has top-five finishes in the past two Homestead races, including a win that lifted him and the No. 20 team to the Championship 4 in 2023. The week after Homestead, the Cup Series travels to Martinsville, where Bell won in the fall of 2022 to advance to what was his first Championship 4.
With Darlington and Bristol leading off the month of April, Talladega on April 27 may be Bell’s biggest hurdle until the summer. Then again, superspeedway races likely seem less daunting to the No. 20 team following Bell’s victory at Atlanta.
Whether Bell’s streak ends next week or continues at Las Vegas and beyond, his three-race win streak has been an historic and undeniably impressive run that has the opportunity to grow and place him alongside the sport’s greats.
If you still don’t have Christopher Bell on your radar as a championship favorite, it’s past time to declare him the biggest threat the Cup Series field as seen since Larson in 2021.
–Samuel Stubbs, Field Level Media