The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Hamlin, Gibbs group go to Martinsvil­le as title favorites

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All the momentum is with Denny Hamlin headed to Martinsvil­le Speedway for the opening race of the third round of NASCAR’s playoffs.

Hamlin, a fivetime winner at the Virginia short track, need not look far for worthy challenger­s, including two of his Joe Gibbs Racing teammates.

JGR moved into the round of eight with three of its four drivers still racing for the Cup Series title and a reasonable shot at advancing the trio into the season finale shootout next month. Kyle Busch was the regularsea­son champion and holds a fourpoint lead over teammate Martin Truex Jr. in the standings before Sunday’s race. Truex leads the series with six wins, including two in the first round of the playoffs.

Hamlin is third in points and coming off his fifth win of the season, giving Gibbs and Toyota a tremendous 123 attack for the title. It’s only fitting the Gibbs group is in this position — the team has won 16 of the 32 races so far this season — but snagging three of the final four spots in the Homestead-Miami Speedway titledecid­ing race will be a tricky navigation inside the organizati­on.

“Right now, we have very good chemistry,” Gibbs said after Hamlin won at Kansas Speedway last Sunday. “It’s not going to buy us anything next week. I get so nervous. I was all excited about (Hamlin), then somebody mentioned next week, and I almost threw up. I said ‘You mean this doesn’t get us to Homestead?’”

No, the road to Homestead begins at the shortest track on the circuit, a tricky paper clipshaped 0.526mile oval. The middle round is at Texas Motor Speedway and then the championsh­ip field of four is decided at ISM Raceway outside Phoenix.

Busch, a fourtime winner this season but mired in a stretch of 18 races without one, is ready for this nailbiting round. He has just two topfive finishes through the first six playoff races and is eager to get back up front.

“I feel like it’s our best round. We run well at all three of those places and we’ve won a few at Texas, we won Martinsvil­le twice and Phoenix has been getting better for us, too,” Busch said. “We just need to continue to execute and do a good job and make sure that we mind our Ps and Qs.”

Truex has never won at Martinsvil­le but his performanc­e has picked up the last several years. He has finished eighth or better the last four races, was runnerup to Busch in 2017 and third last October.

“We know what we need to do,” Truex said. “Now it’s just a matter of going out and doing it. We have been fast, ran up front and led laps at all of these tracks in this round.”

A win at Martinsvil­le gives any team breathing room to focus on the Nov. 17 finale and not worry about earning a slot in the final four. Joey Logano was a longshot to win the title last year but won at Martinsvil­le, then upset regularsea­son heavyweigh­ts Busch, Truex and Kevin Harvick three weeks later to claim his first title.

Logano was nearly eliminated from title contention a week ago when he went to Kansas on the bubble, didn’t have a remarkable race and then was involved in a late accident that put him headtohead with Team Penske teammate Brad Keselowski for the final spot in the round of eight. Keselowski was eliminated, Logano kept his title defense rolling and now hopes Martinsvil­le punches his ticket to Homestead.

 ?? John Locher / Associated Press ?? Denny Hamlin, left, and Kyle Busch talk in pit lane before qualifying for the NASCAR Cup Series auto race at Las Vegas Motor Speedway in Las Vegas.
John Locher / Associated Press Denny Hamlin, left, and Kyle Busch talk in pit lane before qualifying for the NASCAR Cup Series auto race at Las Vegas Motor Speedway in Las Vegas.

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