Baltimore Sun Sunday

Drivers look for answers

- By Eddie Pells

More consistenc­y. That’s what NASCAR Cup Series drivers want, not only from their pit crews and engineers but also from the governing body and how decisions are made in the race command center.

After NASCAR said Denny Hamlin jumped the overtime restart at Richmond Raceway last Sunday night and won the race, senior vice president of competitio­n Elton Sawyer acknowledg­ed the early start and said had it been earlier, it would have been more closely scrutinize­d. Instead, there were only two quick laps and a pretty exciting finish.

“Obviously Denny took the liberties of going a little early there. And again, if it’s lap 5, if it’s lap 10, it’s lap 50, if it’s lap 350,” he said, NASCAR would have more time to assess whether any penalties should be handed out. “The last thing you want to do is get that call wrong.”

NASCAR tracks have a single line to start the restart zone and a double line to end it, and the race leader has the prerogativ­e to be the first to get on the throttle and take off. Hamlin said he thought Martin Truex Jr., to his outside, was going faster, so he was protecting his advantage.

“He’s not the first person that’s ever taken off before the zone,” Kyle Larson said Saturday at Martinsvil­le Speedway. “So it’s always been a game. And, I don’t know. I don’t really know how I necessaril­y view it.”

And perhaps, Kyle Busch said, NASCAR is loathe to wipe away a stirring finish.

“They are a lot more prone to let things go when it comes down to the end of the race. We look at bump and runs. We look at dumping runs, right? I mean, a guy flat blatantly takes out another guy and gets to score the win because they’re not going to strip that for rough driving or something else. So I feel like that’s kind of their mentality a little bit, of just not wanting to be involved in a finish that’s stripping a win,” the two-time series champion said.

Hendrick at 40

Hendrick Motorsport­s’ yearlong celebratio­n of its 40 years in NASCAR takes on special significan­ce at Martinsvil­le, where its 28 wins are the most for any team at any track. The first came in 1984 when team owner Rick Hendrick, who was considerin­g abandoning the enterprise, was convinced by driver Geoff Bodine and crew chief Harry Hyde to enter.

Bodine won the race and HMS has gone on to become the best organizati­on in NASCAR.

It’s also the track where, 20 years ago, a plane carrying Hendrick’s son and brother were among 10 killed when their plane crashed in fog on its way to the race. The race was won by Hendrick’s Jimmie Johnson, but once news of the crash came, the postrace was very somber.

Larson, who won this race last year, said there’s no additional pressure to win for him or other HMS drivers Chase Elliott, William Byron and Alex Bowman. They’ve all won at Martinsvil­le.

“I wouldn’t say I feel any more pressure to win. And I don’t think probably any of us four drivers feel any more pressure to win, but we know the magnitude of a win this weekend would mean for the company,” he said.

 ?? JARED C. TILTON/GETTY ?? Denny Hamlin looks on during qualifying for the Cook Out 400 on Saturday at Martinsvil­le Speedway in Martinsvil­le, Virginia.
JARED C. TILTON/GETTY Denny Hamlin looks on during qualifying for the Cook Out 400 on Saturday at Martinsvil­le Speedway in Martinsvil­le, Virginia.

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