Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Hamlin still winning despite his new role as most polarizing driver

- By Mark Long

Denny Hamlin was booed in celebratio­n again.

The Joe Gibbs Racing superstar, a driver whose 52 wins in the Cup Series rank as the 13th most in NASCAR history, heard another heaping of disapprova­l and contempt when he climbed from his No. 11 Toyota at Bristol Motor Speedway on Sunday.

Victor and villain. Hamlin stopped short of egging the hostile crowd on this time, though. After winning his second consecutiv­e victory at the famed short track — his fourth overall inside the concrete coliseum — Hamlin skipped his catchphras­e “I just beat your favorite driver” and simply flashed his index finger in every direction to remind everyone who finished No. 1.

Surely some of his detractors responded with a different finger.

It's become the surreal norm for Hamlin and shows no signs of quieting even as he continues to rise NASCAR's all-time win chart. Hamlin has Hall of Famers Lee Petty (54) and Rusty Wallace (55) within reach this season and has closed the gap on Kyle Busch (63) for the most wins by an active driver.

He may already have surpassed Busch as the most hated driver in the garage.

“I don't mind it. I really don't because it's just noise,” Hamlin said before the race. “There were many moments mid-career where there was just claps; that's just not a needle mover one way or the other. A lot of it comes with success as well. If you are a contender each and every week, you are going to get more noise typically.”

The “noise” seems to be getting louder, and Hamlin knows why. He's had altercatio­ns with two of NASCAR's most popular drivers, the first coming in 2017 with

Chase Elliott and the latest coming last year with Kyle Larson.

Hamlin first drew a strong negative reaction seven years ago at his hometown track in Martinsvil­le, Virgina, after he wrecked Elliott in a playoff race. It knocked Elliott out of contention for the championsh­ip the following week.

Hamlin seemed to reignite those memories last May when he publicly and loudly called for Elliott to be suspended after Elliott intentiona­lly wrecked him in the Coca-Cola 600. NASCAR did, and fans blamed Hamlin even though the punishment was in line with similar altercatio­ns.

Back in the public crosshairs, Hamlin forced Larson up the track and into the wall at Pocono Raceway last July while they battled for the lead with less than 10 laps to go. Hamlin went on to win and was loudly booed after exiting his car on the frontstret­ch.

“When you've got all the things that I've got in that box in the negativity checked, you are just going to have to live that life,” he said.

Actor/profession­al wrestler Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson offered Hamlin some advice at the seasonopen­ing Daytona 500. Johnson, the grand marshal, told Hamlin to lean into the villain role like Johnson has in his return to the WWE.

“The rare air is when you have the opportunit­y and you grab it by the throat and you don't let it go and that's the opportunit­y to be a great bad guy,” Johnson said.

The best bad guys win, and Hamlin did that Sunday for the 21st time in the last six seasons — more than anyone else.

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