Hamlin survives spin, steals win in first Chase race at Chicagoland
Sept. 20, 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
JOLIET, Ill. – In the theater, using the expression “Break a leg” is a way to wish an actor good luck on opening night.
Twelve
days before Sunday’s opening Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup race at
Chicagoland Speedway, Denny Hamlin tore the ACL in his right leg playing
basketball.
Late
in the myAFibRisk.com 400 at the 1.5-mile track, Hamlin found his good
fortune in the form of a serendipitous pit call on the part of crew
chief Dave Rogers.
Staying
out on old tires, Hamlin grabbed the lead moments after a restart with
five laps left and streaked away to a .963-second victory over Joe Gibbs
Racing teammate Carl Edwards, who surged from sixth to second during
that restart on Lap 263 of 267.
Hamlin saw an opening as the cars roared toward Turn 1 on the restart.
“It
was ballsy, but I’d been stuck so many times three-wide in the middle,”
Hamlin said of the winning move. “The front cars almost have a
disadvantage to the back cars the way it all plays out.
“We
got a great restart, and I just held it wide open through (Turns) 1 and
2, and it stuck. We were able to get in that clean air and take off.”
Remarkably,
Hamlin won from the 29th starting position, rallying from a spin on Lap
2 that left him a lap down. Hamlin didn’t get back on the lead lap
until he took advantage of a wave-around before a restart on Lap 129.
“Luckily,
that one caution (for debris on the backstretch on Lap 122) came out
that allowed us to get the wave-around and get back on the lead lap,”
Hamlin said. “We had a fast car, and that was the most important thing.
We stretched out there at the end even with no tires.
“I’m proud of this effort. The pit crew did a phenomenal job again and now we’re looking forward to the next round.”
Hamlin’s
first victory at Chicagoland, his second of the season and the 16th of
his career ensured the driver of the No. 11 JGR Toyota will advance from
the Challenger Round to the Contender Round of the Chase, as the NASCAR
Sprint Cup Series heads to New Hampshire and the second race of the
postseason.
Reigning
champion Kevin Harvick wasn’t as fortunate. The driver who vowed to
pound the JGR drivers into the ground three days before the Chase began
instead pounded the Turn 3 wall with the rear of his No. 4 Stewart-Haas
Chevrolet after contact with Jimmie Johnson’s No. 48 Chevy during a Lap
135 restart flattened Harvick’s left rear tire.
“I
got a pretty good restart, and obviously, the 22 (Joey Logano) and 48
got a good run, and I just held my line and the 48 just slammed into the
side of my door,” Harvick said. “That was pretty much it.”
Johnson had a simple explanation for the contact.
“He
was pinning me down, and I’ve got to get back up on the track,” Johnson
said. “I wouldn’t say that what he did is any different than other
situations I’ve been in like that. When you’re in Kevin’s situation, you
want to give that inside car a bad angle, so they’ve got to lift.
“I
was fine with lifting, but I had to get back on the race track. So I
worked my way back onto the track… I pulled down inside of him, and then
we were door-to-door, and then, as I moved back into the racing groove,
that’s when we touched door-to-door, tire-to-tire.”
Now
last in the Chase standings, Harvick feels he must win one of the next
two races to advance to the Contender Round. That’s not a new position
for the driver of the No. 4 Chevy. Last year he triumphed in a must-win
situation at Phoenix before taking the checkered flag at Homestead to
secure his first premier series title.
“We
can win anywhere,” Harvick said after the race. “We could have won
today. It’s just a matter of putting a couple of days together and being
able to come back to Victory Lane. Same thing as last year.”
After
the race, Harvick, who finished 42nd, confronted Johnson and pounded
the six-time Sprint Cup champion with a blow to the chest. Kept apart by
one of Harvick’s lieutenants, the drivers then went their separate ways
without further incident.
Kurt
Busch, who like Hamlin stayed out on old tires, led the field to green
on Lap 263 after the sixth caution for debris in Turn 1 slowed the race.
Busch fell to third at the finish, followed by 2014 Chase runner-up
Ryan Newman, who posted his first top-five finish since April at
Bristol.
Matt
Kenseth ran fifth and assumed the series lead, bolstered by 12 bonus
points earned for four victories in the 26-race regular season.
Notes:
In a manner of speaking, history repeated itself where Hamlin is
concerned. In 2010, he won at Texas, just 10 days after surgery to
repair the torn ACL in his left leg… With 12 of 16 drivers slated to
advance to the Contender Round, Jamie McMurray (16th on Sunday), Paul
Menard (17th), Clint Bowyer (19th) and Harvick are currently below the
cut line.
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