Chattanooga Times Free Press

Hamlin shoots for history at Daytona

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DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Denny Hamlin, considered perhaps the best NASCAR driver without a Cup Series championsh­ip, can look past that hole on his record.

He instead points to a Bristol night race victory, a pair of Southern 500 trophies, three wins on road courses, six at Pocono Raceway and considerab­le success at the big daddy of them all: the Daytona 500.

It’s the shiniest of NASCAR’s crown jewels, the one race that can define a career, and only two drivers have more Daytona 500 wins than Hamlin, whose three victories lead all active drivers. Richard Petty (seven Daytona 500 wins) and Cale Yarborough (four) are both in the NASCAR Hall of Fame, and so are the other three drivers besides Hamlin with three wins: Bobby Allison, Jeff Gordon and Dale Jarrett.

And now Hamlin is set to attempt to become the first driver to win “The Great American Race” three times in a row, a feat that would forever dull the disappoint­ment of his failure to win a season championsh­ip despite five top-four finishes, including as the 2010 runner-up.

“This is something that no one’s ever done before,” Hamlin said. “Other guys have won championsh­ips, obviously. I would want to do something no one else has done.”

The Daytona 500 broadcast begins at 2:30 p.m. today on Fox. Hamlin is the 8-1 betting favorite, but this superspeed­way battle can be a crapshoot, particular­ly in NASCAR’s condensed new schedule forced by the pandemic. Speedweeks at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway for decades spanned nearly two weeks but this year was cut to just six days.

The only real track time for Daytona 500 entrants came from a single practice session, Wednesday’s time trials and Thursday’s 150-mile twin qualifying races. Rain washed out the final two practices Saturday, when a morning and afternoon session were planned for Cup Series drivers. There is no clear indication whose cars are most capable of winning, and the loss of practice is potentiall­y a major setback for the nine drivers switching cars.

Former Cup Series champions Brad Keselowski and Martin Truex Jr. as well as front-row qualifier William Byron are among those forced into backup rides because of trouble in Thursday night’s qualifiers. Anthony Alfredo, Chase Briscoe, Ross Chastain, Cole Custer, Kaz Grala and Erik Jones also switched cars and will have to start the race from the back of the 40-car field, just like Byron, Keselowski and Truex.

Hendrick Motorsport­s swept the front row in qualifying with Alex Bowman and Byron, but now Stewart-Haas Racing’s Aric Almirola will slide up to second for the start of the race.

The venue will have a noticeably empty feeling because pandemic restrictio­ns have limited attendance to roughly 30,000 spectators in the grandstand­s. Daytona was at capacity with 101,000 in the grandstand­s a year ago and several thousand more camping in the infield.

Everything has been scaled down this year, and there’s a heavy presence of fencing and gates to keep the competitio­n bubble contained. Movement inside the speedway is restricted to the point that Hamlin was stymied taking his usual route to victory lane this past week when he tried to get to the ring ceremony for his 2020 Daytona 500 victory.

Said Hamlin: “I felt like a mouse trying to find the cheese.”

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Denny Hamlin

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