Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Hamlin finally enjoys a very smooth ride

- Dave Skretta

KANSAS CITY, Kan. – Three straight finishes outside the top 10 for Denny Hamlin these days counts as a rough patch.

He was once again smooth as they get Thursday night in the Super Start Batteries 400.

Hamlin hung around the front of the pack all night, avoiding trouble that cost several playoff contenders in the final stage, then breezed past Kevin Harvick for the lead in the closing laps. Hamlin then held off charging Brad Keselowski for his NASCAR Cup Serieslead­ing fifth victory of the season and 42nd overall. He also won for the second straight time at Kansas Speedway.

“I don’t know we had the best car. We definitely had a top-three car all day,” Hamlin said after his burnout in front of the empty grandstand­s. “We just went for it there at the end. The pit crew did an amazing job getting us out there in front.”

Hamlin had struggled the past three weeks, failing to finish better than 12th. But after showing good speed early, his Joe Gibbs Racing team made all the right calls during a crash-filled final stage. Keselowski finished second and Martin Truex Jr. came across third. Harvick wound up sliding to fourth and Erik Jones capped a big day for the Gibbs boys in fifth.

William Byron led the race as he chased his first career race, but he slide backward after a late caution and wound up finishing 10th. Alex Bowman also made a charge to the lead but finished behind Aric Almirola and Cole Custer in eighth.

The youngsters wound up leaving it to the veterans to battle it out over the final laps.

“We got to the lead but we just went dead sideways after about four or five laps,” said Harvick, who had been tied with Hamlin with four wins. “We were just holding on hoping for another restart, because we could hang for a couple laps.”

Truex may have had the fastest car on the track by the end of the night, which began with temperatur­es in the mid-90s and a heat index approachin­g triple digits. But he ran out of time trying chase down his teammate.

“It would have been difficult to pass him,” Truex said about Hamlin. “It was a battle all night just to get track position. These things are so difficult in traffic. You lose a few more spots than you hope on a restart and you just have to dig.”

Joey Logano led early before his night really ended in disaster – and took some playoff contenders with him.

His problems began when a tire got loose on pit road during the first stage, sending him to the back. He was working his way forward early in the final stage when his left front tire went down, sending Logano into the outside wall. Matt DiBenedett­o and Jimmie Johnson, the last two drivers on the good side of the playoff cut line, sustained heavy damage as the field checked up. So did Austin Dillon, who was the surprise winner last weekend at Texas.

“I’m pretty freaking irritated. We’ve had garbage luck the last few weeks,” DiBenedett­o said. “We have no horsepower. It takes us 45 minutes to get going. But that’s what is happening.”

Logano said he felt his tire going down just before green but thought “it wasn’t bad.”

“Maybe it was bad judgment,” Logano said.

 ?? USA TODAY ?? Driver Denny Hamlin celebrates in victory lane after winning the Super Start Batteries 400 on Thursday night.
USA TODAY Driver Denny Hamlin celebrates in victory lane after winning the Super Start Batteries 400 on Thursday night.

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