Cool-Down Lap: Sweet revenge at Phoenix for two NASCAR stars
March 5, 2012
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
AVONDALE, Ariz. -- Who knew? We went to a race weekend in Phoenix and got an exorcism as a bonus.
Driver Denny Hamlin and crew chief Darian Grubb both buried ghosts at flat, one-mile Phoenix International Raceway.
In
Hamlin's case, the track had haunted him since November 2010. In the
next-to-last race of the season, Hamlin had a chance to bury Jimmie
Johnson's quest for a fifth straight Sprint Cup championship and had the
car to do it.
The
clear class of the field, Hamlin led 190 laps, but a major
miscalculation by the brain trust on his pit box left Hamlin short on
fuel in the closing laps at the same time Johnson and most of the rest
of the field were saving gas.
Forced
to pit while others stretched their fuel to the end of the race, Hamlin
finished 12th to Johnson's fifth and lost 18 points of his 33-point
championship lead.
He
might as well have lost a million. Despondent after the blunder at
Phoenix, Hamlin squandered his chance at a first NASCAR Sprint Cup title
the following Sunday at Homestead, where a lackluster qualifying run
led to trouble in traffic and a spin off Turn 2 early in the race.
Faced
with a barrage of questions about his failure, Hamlin spent most of
2011 in a funk, winning just one race and narrowly qualifying for the
Chase for the Sprint Cup. It was a marked contrast with 2010, when
Hamlin won a series-best eight times.
Judging
from his demeanor and his performance on Sunday, Hamlin has put the
ghost of Phoenix to rest once and for all -- and he did so with
masterful help from Grubb, who had his own goblins to silence.
Halfway
through last year's Chase, owner/driver Tony Stewart told Grubb he
would not be retained as crew chief after the 2011 season. Forget that
Stewart went on to win five of 10 Chase races and his third
championship. Stewart had his eye on Steve Addington, who had become
disenchanted with his role as Kurt Busch's crew chief at Penske Racing.
Grubb
quickly landed the job as Hamlin's crew chief at Joe Gibbs Racing,
replacing Mike Ford. Still, the dismissal from Stewart-Haas Racing had
to hurt, and Grubb's performance in his first open-motor race with
Hamlin -- after Hamlin's career-best fourth in the Daytona 500 -- was a
validation of his ability.
So were Hamlin's comments after the race.
"It
just seemed like we kept improving our car," Hamlin said. "I think the
turning point for us was that green-flag pit stop (on Lap 188 of 312).
Whatever he did to the car at that point was just lights-out after
that."
While
Hamlin charged to the front, Stewart floundered, falling back from his
front-row starting position. If Grubb could have heard the radio chatter
between Stewart and Addington, he might have enjoyed the exchange --
though he'd never admit it publicly.
After
Stewart shut off his engine under caution in an attempt to save fuel
and couldn't get the engine to re-fire, the No. 14 Chevrolet lost two
laps on pit road. Stewart suggested to Addington that they try something
different for the remainder of the race, because the previous
adjustments to the car weren't working.
After
the race, Grubb would allow only that there was a "little but of
vindication" in winning early in his partnership with Hamlin. Grubb is
simply too nice a guy to say more.
The
victory at Phoenix, however, spoke volumes. Hamlin exuded a calm
confidence that suggests that 2010 finally is gone and forgotten. Grubb
seems the perfect complement to the ability and personality of his
driver.
Both have something to prove -- and together they're well on the way to doing just that.
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