Denny Hamlin hitting stride as Richmond, playoffs near
Sept. 5, 2012: Weekend preview
NASCAR Wire Service
The
only way Denny Hamlin could have timed his recent tear better is if it
had taken place in the crucial stages of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint
Cup. Whatever the timing, momentum
appears to be on Hamlin's side as the regular season draws to a close.
Hamlin
carries a two-race win streak into Richmond International Raceway, one
of his best tracks, for Saturday night's Federated Auto Parts 400 (7:30
p.m. ET, ABC), the final
event before NASCAR's 10-race postseason Chase. The native of nearby
Chesterfield, Va., clinched at least a share of the top seed for the
playoffs with his series-best fourth win last weekend at Atlanta.
"You
know, you wish you could bottle it up and take these (last two) wins
and put them in the Chase," Hamlin said after prevailing in Sunday's
AdvoCare 500. "But they are worth
something, they're worth six (bonus) points, and we've gained six
points in the Chase. That's six spots. That's hard to come by here and
there. These guys know more than anything what one point matters when it
comes to the Chase."
Hamlin
has won two of the last three September events at the .75-mile track,
but his confidence might stem from the support system around his Joe
Gibbs Racing team.
New
crew chief Darian Grubb, who orchestrated Tony Stewart's spirited march
to the Sprint Cup title last season, has injected life into the No. 11
Toyota, helping Hamlin win on
short tracks (Bristol), one-mile flat tracks (Phoenix) and 1.5-mile
intermediate speedways (Kansas, Atlanta). In the pit box, Hamlin's crew
has also been stellar, sealing the Atlanta victory with a clutch
late-race stop that put their driver in front for the
final restart.
"I'm
just happy to be at the race track every single week knowing I can win a
race," Hamlin said. "It doesn't matter the race track any more, it's
just I know we can win. Darian
has just taken this program to that next level, and obviously anyone
can go on a 10-race run. He did it last year, and hopefully he's got
some of the magic saved up for us here in the next few weeks."
Kyle
Busch has been similarly magical at Richmond, but oddly enough, the
track's mid-spring event -- which he's won four years running -- has
been kinder to Hamlin's JGR stablemate.
Busch ranks second in driver rating over the last 15 Sprint Cup races
at Richmond, behind only Hamlin.
Busch
will need to draw on his Richmond expertise as the hunt for wild-card
spots reaches its tipping point. With just one race left before the
Chase, the top nine drivers in
the Sprint Cup standings are locked into the postseason, with the 10th
-- Stewart -- assured of at least a wild-card berth.
The
jockeying for the two wild-card spots, which go to the drivers in
positions 11-20 with the most wins, remains mathematically an
eight-horse race. Should Stewart tumble out
of the top 10, his three wins on the season would comfortably land him
in the Chase through the wild card. Kasey Kahne (two wins, 11th in
points) and Busch (one win, 12th in points) hold the provisional
wild-card slots heading to the regular-season finale,
but a Richmond victory from a host of one-win drivers -- Jeff Gordon,
Marcos Ambrose, Ryan Newman and Joey Logano -- would endanger Busch's
chances.
"I'm
not saying that I'm for sure going to be in (the Chase) because
anything can happen," Busch said. "Jeff (Gordon) is no slouch at
Richmond either -- he will be fine. I feel
like that's the guy we're racing -- the 24 car. We'll just have to see
how it all plays out. Jeff could give us a run for our money."
NATIONWIDE RACE A TWO-CAR TANDEM
This
season's NASCAR Nationwide Series title hunt is beginning to have a
2011 look and feel to it. This year's fight between current points
leader Elliott Sadler and defending
series champ Ricky Stenhouse Jr. might be a more evenly matched
contest.
The
heavyweight battle for Sadler and Stenhouse hits Richmond International
Raceway for Friday night's Virginia 529 College Savings 250 (7:30 p.m.
ET, ESPN). Just 12 points separate
Sadler from second-place Stenhouse, with Sam Hornish Jr. 32 points off
the lead in third.
How
even is Sadler-Stenhouse matchup? Each driver has four wins, three pole
positions and 18 top-10 finishes in 24 races this season.
"I
think all of the race tracks that we have left are ones that we run
really strong on, but the problem is the 2 (Sadler) runs really strong
on them as well, so I don't think
either one of us really has an advantage as far as the race tracks go,"
Stenhouse said after winning last Saturday night at Atlanta Motor
Speedway.
"They've
got great equipment. We've got great equipment and it's just going to
be who doesn't make as many mistakes. We've got to make sure we do our
job on pit road. I've got
to do my job on the track and we just have to keep everything together
and double-check everything that we do because it's going to be a tough
battle."
Neither
Sadler nor Stenhouse has won at Richmond, but neither has a Nationwide
series regular in the last 17 races on the .75-mile track. The last
driver not doing double duty
to win at Richmond was Johnny Sauter in September 2003.
Sprint
Cup drivers Kurt Busch, Denny Hamlin and Kevin Harvick -- all former
Richmond winners in the series -- are on the entry list for Friday's
250-lapper. Travis Pastrana, who
led his first laps in the series last weekend at Atlanta, will make his
first start for Roush Fenway Racing in the No. 60 Ford.
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