Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Hamlin holds off Truex

Driver crosses Dover off list of tracks at which he had never won with victory

- By Dan Gelston Associated Press Dover, Del

Denny Hamlin crossed Dover off the meager list of tracks where he had yet to win and turned his ambitions toward one more goal he’d like to scratch off the docket.

Pushing 40, Hamlin’s first career Cup championsh­ip is within his grasp — and he might never be better.

“I’m in the prime of my career right now and I’ve got things rolling,” Hamlin said.

Hamlin tamed the concrete mile oval that gave him fits for 15 years and zipped past Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Martin Truex Jr. with eight laps left to win the NASCAR Cup Series race Saturday at Dover Internatio­nal Speedway.

Hamlin was 0-for-28 at Dover, the kind of losing streak that had him studying the runs of his more successful JGR teammates in Truex and Kyle Busch to pick up tips on how best to win at the track.

He learned from his teammates — then beat them in the No. 11 Toyota, though Truex’s runner-up finish and Busch’s third gave JGR a 1-2-3 finish in the first of two races this weekend at Dover.

“People always ask what your least favorite track is and I say Dover just because I’m not that good,” Hamlin said. “I love the track, I just haven’t been very good here.”

Hamlin matched Kevin Harvick for the season victory lead with six, matching his total from last season and closing within two of his career high set in 2010. He opened this season with a Daytona 500 win, and added wins at Homestead, Pocono and Kansas to catapult toward the kind of sensationa­l run he’s never had in an otherwise stellar career.

“There’s been no year where it’s been like this,” Hamlin said. “Every week. It’s literally every single week. We set some lofty goals at the beginning of the year to try to win 10 races. It’s still achievable. We should have more than six easily.”

He just had to mute the victory celebratio­n. Hamlin was ordered by crew chief Chris Gabehart to save the No. 11 Toyota from a burnout because the car is needed again Sunday.

Hamlin went from the car to carhop, laughing as he said he needed to order milkshakes for the crew prepping the car late into the night.

But is a championsh­ip on the menu?

Hamlin has come oh-so close to winning it all and was runner-up in 2010 and finished fourth last season. Hamlin’s even become ambivalent toward his growing checkered flag collection because “we’re winning so much now.” He’d like to excuse himself from the list of greatest drivers to never win it all but he’s on it, for now — Hamlin has 43 career wins, which puts him behind Junior Johnson (50) for most Cup victories without a championsh­ip. Again, Hamlin has at least positioned himself to make the championsh­ip race in Phoenix.

“Our process is working right now,” Hamlin said.

He was dominant in Dover with wins in the first two stages and he led a racehigh 115 laps. Hamlin never lost the faith when Truex controlled most of the final third of the race, and knew he could nip his teammate and earn the playoff points that could make him a lock for Phoenix.

“We just took that whole last stage to get back to him but I was confident,” Hamlin said.

Truex snapped a streak of five straight third-place finishes and ended up second. It’s his sixth straight top-10 finish. Truex, who has three career Dover wins, blamed

Aric Almirola for ruining his day.

“Every time I tried to move up and get some air in my car he’d just slide up in front of me like an idiot,” Truex said.

Harvick, on the brink of clinching the regularsea­son title, was fourth and Chase Elliott fifth.

Jimmie Johnson finished seventh and inched his way into the 16th and final playoff spot with two races left before the field is set. William Byron lost 28 points on Johnson to fall out of the playoff grid.

There is one more race at Dover and next week at Daytona to set the playoff field. Xfinity: Justin Allgaier held off a streaking Austin Cindric to win his first series race of the season Saturday at Dover Internatio­nal Speedway. Cindric had been the driver to beat, coming into Dover with a staggering five wins in the past six races, and he seemed in control after he won the first stage. The 34-year-old Allgaier found his footing in the No. 7 Chevrolet in the second stage and controlled the second half of the race.

 ?? Jared C. Tilton / Getty Images ?? Denny Hamlin had been winless in 28 previous tries at Dover Internatio­nal Speedway before winning Saturday’s race, the first of two this weekend at the one-mile oval.
Jared C. Tilton / Getty Images Denny Hamlin had been winless in 28 previous tries at Dover Internatio­nal Speedway before winning Saturday’s race, the first of two this weekend at the one-mile oval.
 ?? Jason minto / Associated Press ?? martin Truex Jr., left, and Denny Hamlin race side by side during the NASCAR Cup race at Dover Internatio­nal Speedway.
Jason minto / Associated Press martin Truex Jr., left, and Denny Hamlin race side by side during the NASCAR Cup race at Dover Internatio­nal Speedway.

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