Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Gibbs walking a fine line

Team owner is managing 3 title contenders heading into series finale at Homestead

- BY JENNA FRYER

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Joe Gibbs is a retired NFL Hall of Fame coach with three Super Bowl titles who changed course in his early 50s to wade into NASCAR and see if he could build a second career and a family business.

Gibbs not only developed a championsh­ip-winning organizati­on that gave both of his sons leadership roles, but he also turned Joe Gibbs Racing into one of NASCAR’s elite teams.

Gibbs is taking three drivers to Sunday’s championsh­ip-deciding finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway, where the Toyota trio of Kyle Busch, Denny Hamlin and Martin Truex Jr. will race Ford driver Kevin Harvick for the title. The highestfin­ishing driver wins the Cup.

Gibbs has an interestin­g week ahead as he figures out how to manage three teammates racing for the exact same thing.

The business model in NASCAR can be messy for multi-car teams and those with alliances with other teams. Each car has its own sponsors to keep happy, its own individual team members and drivers laserfocus­ed on winning a title. Gibbs often says that model makes teamwide orders impossible, but there have been instances that have raised eyebrows, including Hamlin’s pivotal victory Sunday in Arizona.

Hamlin had to win to make the final four, and a late restart put his chances in jeopardy. He lined up next to fellow contender Ryan Blaney for the three-lap shootout to the finish, and once he cleared Blaney to claim the lead, Busch wedged his car between Blaney and Hamlin as a buffer for Hamlin to drive to the win.

Could Busch have caught Hamlin and won the race for himself? Or did he ride it out in second for the greater good of Gibbs and Toyota?

Busch, who has grown crankier as he’s gone 22 weeks without a Cup Series victory, said he would have passed Hamlin for the win if he could have caught his teammate.

“I was racing for me at that point,” Busch said. “I couldn’t really get close enough to [Hamlin].”

In the season finale a year ago, Hamlin won the pole and had first choice of pit stall. But Hamlin was not racing for the title, Busch was, and the team had Hamlin defer so Busch could claim the position. Hamlin wasn’t happy about it but understood the team decision to give Busch every advantage possible to win the title.

Starting with the JGR team meeting Monday all the way into the final debrief before Sunday’s race, Gibbs has a pressure cooker to handle his three drivers, who have very different personalit­ies.

Busch is the regular-season champion and won the title in 2015. Truex won the 2017 championsh­ip driving for former Gibbs affiliate Furniture Row Racing and is in his first season as a fulltime Gibbs driver. Hamlin has never won a title and lost chances in 2010 and 2014.

“What I love about our sport is we work together at the race shop, try to prepare things, solve problems,” Gibbs said. “When we get to the racetrack, it will be three cars going for it. Three drivers want a championsh­ip. Their sponsors mean so much to us, each one of them, and it’s a separate story, each one of those.”

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