Austin American-Statesman

Angry Hamlin tells NASCAR he won’t pay $25,000 fine

He says reaction to last week’s Gen-6 car comment unfair.

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LAS VEGAS — A furious Denny Hamlin said he won’t pay the $25,000 fine leveled on him by NASCAR on Thursday after his criticism of the Gen-6 race car.

The fine also left many of his fellow drivers wondering what they can say about their new cars without incurring NASCAR’s wrath.

Hamlin couldn’t understand why he was at the center of NASCAR’s latest tempest over its drivers’ media comments. He compared the new race car unfavorabl­y to last year’s car, along with lamenting the overall quality of racing last week in Phoenix.

Although Hamlin’s brief comments were barely noticed last weekend, NASCAR — clearly concerned about the Gen-6 car’s public perception — leveled a significan­t fine against him before Thursday’s open test of the new car at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

“Ultimately, I’m not OK with it,” Hamlin said outside his hauler after the morning test. “This is the most upset and angry I’ve been in a really, really long time about anything that relates to NASCAR.”

He reiterated his position later Thursday in a lengthy Twitter post and said he’ll appeal the fine.

“I believe I was severely disrespect­ed by NASCAR by getting fined,” he tweeted. “I believe that the simple fact of us not even having a conversati­on about this issue before I was hit with a fine has something to say about our relationsh­ip. What I said was 1 sentence taken completely out of context.

“I said today I would not pay the fine,” his tweet continued. “I stand by that and will go through the process of appealing. Trust me, this is not about the money. It’s much deeper. I will now shift my focus on giving FedEx and my team what they deserve this weekend, a win.”

Hamlin actually ran well last Sunday, the second race for NASCAR’s new Gen-6 race car in Phoenix, finishing third in a fairly dull race that featured no passes for the lead in the final 189 laps of Carl Edwards’ victory.

But when Hamlin was asked on pit road how he liked the car, he said: “I don’t want to be the pessimist, but it did not race as good as our generation five cars. This is more like what the generation five was at the beginning.”

NASCAR deemed Hamlin’s remarks as detrimenta­l to stock car racing, saying that while drivers get “ample leeway in voicing their opinions when it comes to a wide range of aspects about the sport, the sanctionin­g body will not tolerate publicly made comments by its drivers that denigrate the racing product.”

That didn’t help Hamlin’s bewilderme­nt at his fine in a sport known for frank talk about every aspect of competitio­n.

“It’s an opinion. It’s not even a bad one,” Hamlin said Thursday.

“I don’t believe in this,” Hamlin added. “I’m never going to believe in it. And so as far as I’m concerned, I’m not going to pay the fine. If they suspend me, they suspend me at this point.”

Hamlin might not have a choice: According to NASCAR rules, unpaid fines may be deducted from a driver’s purse or point fund earnings.

 ?? AP FILE ?? Denny Hamlin (right) says he was ‘severely disrespect­ed by NASCAR’ by getting fined for saying the Gen-6 car did not race as well as the five previous generation models.
AP FILE Denny Hamlin (right) says he was ‘severely disrespect­ed by NASCAR’ by getting fined for saying the Gen-6 car did not race as well as the five previous generation models.

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