Chicago Sun-Times

Hamlin gets third win of season

- BY TIM REYNOLDS

HOMESTEAD, Fla. — Denny Hamlin found the magic at Homestead-Miami Speedway once again.

Hamlin went to the lead for the final time with 30 laps left and held off Chase Elliott for his record-tying NASCAR Cup Series victory at Homestead.

Former drivers Tony Stewart and Greg Biffle are the other three-time winners. Hamlin is in the club now, after battling Elliott most of the night.

“This one was real special,” Hamlin said. Hamlin raced to his third victory of the season and 40th overall. He opened the season with a victory in the Daytona 500 and won at Darlington last month.

At Homestead, he led 137 of 267 laps on the 1oe-mile track in Joe Gibbs Racing’s No. 11 Toyota, finishing 0.895 ahead of Elliot.

Ryan Blaney was third in the race, which was delayed by rain and lightning. Tyler Reddick finished fourth.

“I just needed to execute a little bit better,” Reddick said. “It was tough. We were just a little bit off there in the last two runs.”

Fittingly, a very long day was the capper to a very long week for NASCAR — three Cup Series races in eight days, all of them bringing drivers into hot and steamy weather conditions that left many of them exhausted, all wrapped around the ongoing national outcry surroundin­g the battle for racial equality.

Bubba Wallace, the only black driver in the Cup Series, has become the sport’s most prominent activist after he successful­ly called last week on NASCAR to ban Confederat­e flags at its events. The series quickly did just that to mostly rave reviews. So while fans — 1,000 of them, mostly invited military members who could each bring a guest — were back at a NASCAR race for the first time since the coronaviru­s pandemic started, there were none of the banned flags in sight.

Most of those fans were gone when Hamlin drove under the checkered flag at 10:46 p.m., ending the marathon day.

The race was over. So was the day. Finally. “I knew if I was just patient, ran the pace I wanted and the pace I was comfortabl­e with, we were going to be hard to beat in the long run,” Hamlin said.

Wallace finished 13th. Jimmie Johnson, the seven-time champion who had the tunnel that leads to the track named in his honor earlier in the weekend and is retiring as a full-time driver after this season, was 16th.

Hamlin won the first two stages and bucked a trend this season, where drivers who do that don’t wind up with the win.

Elliott swept the first two stages at Las Vegas before finishing 26th, Clint Bowyer did it before finishing 22nd at Darlington, Alex Bowman took the first two at Charlotte but ended up 19th and Elliott did it again and finished 22nd at Bristol.

The last driver to win the first two stages and ultimately win the race was Martin Truex Jr. at Martinsvil­le last Oct. 27. That is, until now.

“I’ll take every win I can,” Hamlin said. “Let’s just keep piling them up.”

 ?? WILFREDO LEE/AP ?? Fans stand for the national anthem before the NASCAR Cup Series race Sunday in Homestead, Fla. Up to 1,000 area military members and guests were allowed in to watch the event.
WILFREDO LEE/AP Fans stand for the national anthem before the NASCAR Cup Series race Sunday in Homestead, Fla. Up to 1,000 area military members and guests were allowed in to watch the event.
 ?? WILFREDO LEE/AP ?? Denny Hamlin claims the checkered flag after winning the NASCAR race Sunday.
WILFREDO LEE/AP Denny Hamlin claims the checkered flag after winning the NASCAR race Sunday.

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