Times Colonist

Gibbs dedicates Daytona 500 victory to late son

- JENNA FRYER

DAYTONA BEACH, Florida — Joe Gibbs closed his eyes during a tribute lap for his late son, while crew members raised a banner to honour the co-founder of Joe Gibbs Racing.

J.D. Gibbs had been handpicked by his father to run the organizati­on, changed tires during the early seasons, had a brief stint as a driver, pushed for a pivotal switch to Toyota and discovered Denny Hamlin. He signed Hamlin to drive the No. 11, his number from his football days, and it is his name above the driver door on Hamlin’s car.

J.D. Gibbs died last month following a long battle with a degenerati­ve neurologic­al disease and Hamlin dedicated this NASCAR season to Gibbs’ memory.

When Hamlin crossed the finish line Sunday night to win his second Daytona 500 in four years, Joe Gibbs could not hold back what the moment meant to him. A Hall of Fame NFL coach with three Super Bowl victories ranked JGR’s third Daytona 500 win as top.

“It’s the most emotional and the biggest win I’ve ever had in my life in anything” Gibbs said. “J.D. built our race team, was the guy that ran day to day operations for 27 years. He invested his occupation­al life in our race team. It was the most important night in my occupation­al life.

“I know J.D. and everybody in my family was emotional.”

Hamlin came to Daytona determined to honour his late car owner with a victory.

He delivered a storybook tribute.

Hamlin led JGR in a 1-2-3 sweep of the podium in overtime and was met in victory lane by the entire Gibbs family, including J.D.’s widow and four sons.

“He meant a lot to me and it’s hard for me not getting choked up because I’ve been choked up about 100 times about it,” Hamlin said. “Just to have Melissa [Gibbs] and all the kids here, it’s just crazy.”

Kyle Busch and Erik Jones finished second and third as JGR became the second team in NASCAR history to sweep the Daytona 500 podium. Hendrick Motorsport­s did it in 1997 with Jeff Gordon, Terry Labonte and Ricky Craven.

Busch, now winless in 14 Daytona 500s, was initially openly disappoint­ed in falling short.

“He’s got two, I’ve got none, and that’s just the way it goes sometimes,” Busch said.

But he reiterated the JGR and Toyota goal of working together to win the race and noted he didn’t have much of a shot at beating Hamlin because the field had been decimated by a flurry of late accidents.

“Was trying to make sure one of us gets to victory lane, first and foremost,” Busch said. “There wasn’t enough cars out there running at the end. I don’t know how it would have played out.”

Hamlin and Busch alternated as the leaders during the handful of late restarts, and the final rush to the checkered flag was a push to hold off Ford driver and reigning NASCAR champion Joey Logano. The Ford camp went 1-2-3 in both of Thursday’s qualifying races and was favoured to win.

Logano, who started his career at JGR, settled for fourth and also took a moment to honour J.D. Gibbs.

“I’m not a Gibbs driver but for what J.D. has done for my career is the reason why I’m sitting here today,” Logano said. “As bad as I want to win it, it is pretty cool to think that the first race after his passing, to see those guys one, two, three, it just says he’s up there watching and maybe gave [those] guys a little extra boost there at the end.”

 ??  ?? Denny Hamlin celebrates in Victory Lane after winning the Daytona 500 on Sunday.
Denny Hamlin celebrates in Victory Lane after winning the Daytona 500 on Sunday.

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