The Evening Leader

Bowman cashes in on ‘hack’ insult by Hamlin

- By JENNA FRYER AP Auto Racing Writer

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Alex Bowman had barely finished his postvictor­y obligation­s and his online merchandis­e store was already taking orders for a simple black T-shirt with the word “HACK” printed across the front in block purple letters.

If a star of the sport is going to call you a hack on live television — twice, with a pair of curse words sprinkled in — might as well make some money off of the episode.

Bowman infuriated championsh­ip contender Denny Hamlin with six laps remaining Sunday at Martinsvil­le Speedway when he spun Hamlin out of the lead. It sent the race into overtime, which Bowman won for his fourth victory of the season. Hamlin then blocked Bowman’s car on the frontstret­ch to prevent a proper celebratio­n.

It was Hamlin’s postrace assessment of Bowman that really irked the folks at Hendrick Motorsport­s. Bowman has insisted the contact that spun Hamlin from the lead was accidental, but Hamlin still attacked Bowman’s talent level.

“Look, he’s won four races this year. Denny’s won two,” team owner Rick Hendrick said Tuesday. “I think Denny just lost it Sunday. Alex races everybody clean. He’s a good soldier. The sponsors love him. The crowd loves him. I think when you’re in the middle of a disappoint­ment and you’re frustrated and mad, you might say things that you wouldn’t say normally.

“If he’s a hack, I’d like to have more of ‘em.”

The championsh­ip will be decided Sunday at sold-out Phoenix Raceway, where Hendrick has two of his four drivers into the winnertake-all finale. Reigning Cup champion Chase Elliott and title favorite Kyle Larson in a pair of Chevrolets will square off against Toyotas driven by teammates Hamlin and Martin Truex Jr. of Joe Gibbs Racing.

So in that regard, Hamlin was somewhat correct when he said Bowman “gets his ass kicked by his teammates every week.” Bowman, who was eliminated from the playoffs at the end of the second round, didn’t really deny that part of Hamlin’s critique.

“These last couple months have been painful. It’s been so frustratin­g. Honestly, our teammates have kicked our butts for quite a while now,” he said.

But that discredits how far Bowman has come since he sat out most of 2016 and 2017 because he was tired of driving underperfo­rming cars and wanted to work his way in with a powerhouse team. He got a break with Hendrick Motorsport­s in 2016 when he drove 10 races as the injury replacemen­t for Dale Earnhardt Jr.

He spent most of 2017 testing and doing simulator work for Hendrick, then was named the replacemen­t for Earnhardt when he retired ahead of the 2018 season. Bowman drove on a series of short-term contracts but built a following, won a pair of races and scored the first major sponsor of his NASCAR career.

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