Denny Hamlin aims to keep New Hampshire promise
Sept. 20, 2012: Weekend preview
NASCAR Wire Service
It
might not be Babe Ruth's called shot or Joe Namath's Super Bowl III
guarantee, but Denny Hamlin's proclamation after the Chase for the
NASCAR Sprint Cup opener last week was just as bold.
Hamlin
entered the postseason as the top seed based on his four regular-season
wins, but when his fuel tank ran dry Sunday at Chicagoland
Speedway, he opened the Chase with a 16th-place finish and a thud. The
gaffe dropped him into a tie for fourth place in the standings, 15
points behind race winner Brad Keselowski.
But
Hamlin, never one to demur in the self-confidence department, issued
this post-race tweet: "This is 1 week of 10. We will win next week."
Hamlin
will get the chance to make good on his word in Sunday's SYLVANIA 300
(2 p.m. ET, ESPN) at New Hampshire Motor Speedway, site of
round 2 in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series' postseason Chase. The Joe
Gibbs Racing driver has won at the relatively flat, 1.058-mile track in
Loudon once before (in 2007) and has come close thrice before with a
trio of runner-up finishes, most recently in July
when he led 150 of 301 laps, only to run second to Kasey Kahne.
"We're
bringing the best car we have in our stable for it, and obviously feel
like it's an opportunity track for us to continue to gain
points," Hamlin said. "It's the tracks like Dover which you hope to
just maintain and put a band-aid on your program, but I think for the
most part, when we get to Loudon, it's the one track I have in my mind
that we can win at."
Kahne
finished third at Chicago to jump into the tie with Hamlin and Clint
Bowyer in the standings. His New Hampshire victory in July, his
second of the season, gave him the inside track for a wild-card berth
in the Chase, but Kahne still sees room for improvement.
"We
won there this year, but I don't think we were the best car," Kahne
said. "I think we need to work on the car a little bit. We need
to make a few changes to be better than we were, but I think we'll be
pretty darn good when we get there and have a nice package to start with
and try to go from there. ... To win one (there) this year gives our
team a lot of confidence and momentum going
back."
STENHOUSE READY TO MAKE STATEMENT
Ricky
Stenhouse Jr. didn't weather the bumpy surface of Kentucky Speedway so
well in June, taking his lumps with a mediocre eighth-place
finish. Since then, the bumps have been relatively few.
The
defending NASCAR Nationwide Series champion returns to the 1.5-mile
track in Sparta, Ky., with a substantial head of steam for Saturday's
Kentucky 300 (4 p.m. ET, ESPN), the 27th of 33 events this season.
In
the last four races, Stenhouse has two wins and a pair of runner-up
finishes. His triumph last Saturday at Chicagoland helped him reclaim
the series points lead from Elliott Sadler, his chief rival in last
year's title run.
Four
of Stenhouse's five victories this season have come on 1.5-mile tracks,
providing added optimism heading to the intermediate-size Kentucky
layout.
"We're
coming off a big win so we will carry that momentum into this weekend,"
Stenhouse said. "Earlier this year, we didn’t make the right
adjustments but we've learned from that, so I feel we will be a strong
contender this weekend. We've never gotten back-to-back wins so we are
going to try to break that streak by getting our No. 6 Ford Ecoboost
Mustang into Victory Lane."
Sadler,
who had held the Nationwide lead since early June, led Stenhouse by 21
points after his victory last month at Iowa Speedway, but
a mild slump over the last six races has him facing a nine-point
deficit heading to Kentucky. Richard Childress Racing teammate Austin
Dillon, who scored a dominant breakthrough Nationwide win at Kentucky in
June, sits third, 34 points off the lead.
BLANEY RISES AS POINTS TURN OVER IN TRUCKS
Plot
twists were plentiful for the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series at Iowa
Speedway, which only makes the plot thicker this weekend.
The
sorting-out period continues in Friday night's Kentucky 201 (7:30 p.m.
ET, SPEED) at Kentucky Speedway, where the truck tour will race
with fresh faces grabbing the attention.
By
the end of last Saturday night at Iowa, 18-year-old Ryan Blaney was
celebrating in Victory Lane, becoming the youngest winner in series
history and the 12th different winner in 15 events this season. Blaney
will be making just his fourth start in the series, where he'll also
pull double-duty in the NASCAR Nationwide Series.
"As
a driver, confidence is really important in driving race cars and your
confidence level is just sky high when you win the week before,"
Blaney said. "I think it's just always an added bonus being the winner
the previous week and everyone always looks out for you."
The
other fresh faces are the result of an upheaval in the standings after
Iowa. Rookie Ty Dillon's runner-up finish moved him from third
place into sole possession of the series points lead for the first time
in his career. Timothy Peters slipped from first to second, eight
points behind Dillon, while James Buescher dropped from second to third
in the standings and sits 11 points back.
Buescher rolled to victory in the truck series' visit to Kentucky in June, leading 119 of 150 laps.
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