Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Hamlin seeks historic Daytona three-peat

- Jenna Fryer

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – Denny Hamlin, considered perhaps the best NASCAR driver without a Cup Series championsh­ip, can look past that hole on his record. He instead points to a pair of Southern 500 trophies, a Bristol night race victory, three road course wins, six at Pocono and the big daddy of them all, the Daytona 500.

Hamlin has won NASCAR’s crown jewel, the one race that can define a driver’s career, three times and the last two years. On Sunday, he will attempt to become the first to win three consecutiv­e Daytona 500s, a feat that would forever dull the disappoint­ment of his championsh­ip failures.

“This is something that no one’s ever done before,” Hamlin said. “Other guys have won championsh­ips, obviously. I would want to do something no one else has done.”

Hamlin is the 8-1 betting favorite but the Daytona 500 can be a crapshoot, particular­ly in NASCAR’s condensed new schedule forced by the pandemic. Speedweeks at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway for decades spanned nearly two weeks but this year was cut to just six days.

With only three practice sessions and the 150-mile Duel qualifying races, there is no clear indication who has cars capable of winning the Daytona 500.

Hendrick Motorsport­s swept the front row in qualifying with Alex Bowman and William Byron, but Byron crashed in the qualifying race and will fall to the back in a backup car at the start of the 500. Bowman had an engine problem that threatened to put him in the back, as well, but the team decided Saturday it’d be OK..

Chase Elliott is the reigning series champion but hasn’t had enough time to show if he’s a contender for his first Daytona 500 victory. It’s also unclear how Kyle Larson, new to the Hendrick stable this season after last year’s NASCAR suspension for using a racial slur, is adapting to his new team.

Kevin Harvick is looking to rebound after falling short of the series title in last year’s nine-win season. He tweeted “She’s bad fast” about his Ford, though it was Stewart-Haas Racing teammate Aric Almirola who won the first qualifying race

and said his car is strong for Sunday.

Fellow Ford drivers and Team Penske teammates Joey Logano and Ryan Blaney both seemed able to run with Almirola.

Austin Dillon won the second duel, setting him up for a possible second Daytona 500 victory on the 20th anniversar­y of Dale Earnhardt’s death. Dillon drives Earnhardt’s famed No. 3 on grandfathe­r Richard Childress’ team and understand­s how emotional a victory would be in that Chevrolet.

“It would be amazing and huge for the company, RCR and all the 3 fans out there,” Dillon said.

Dillon beat Bubba Wallace to win his qualifying race in a dramatic finish that showed Wallace might finally have the equipment he needs to be competitiv­e. Wallace is the only Black racer at NASCAR’s top level and gained a national platform last season for his outspokenn­ess on social justice issues.

He landed multiple sponsors through his activism and Wallace brought that funding to Michael Jordan and Hamlin for the launch of 23XI Racing. Jordan and

Wallace are the only Black majority owner and driver combinatio­n in the sport, and this team has the sponsorshi­p and support that could finally give Wallace a chance at his first Cup Series victory.

Wallace expects Jordan to demand results.

“He wants winning race cars, he wants a winning race driver and he took an opportunit­y to invest in me and he has seen something that sparked his interest,” Wallace said.

Pitbull is another celebrity new to NASCAR team ownership. The entertaine­r signed on with Justin Marks to field Trackhouse Racing this year for Daniel Suarez, the only full-time Mexican driver in NASCAR.

Pitbull views his newest endeavor as an opportunit­y to promote multiple initiative­s, most importantl­y his message of unity.

“If there’s anything we need in these times right now it is something that unites people, not divides people,” Pitbull said. “It’s about utilizing the culture, creating the culture through NASCAR to bring people together.”

Live Fast Racing, the third new team and one co-owned by former driver Matt Tifft and B.J. McLeod, will make its debut in the 500 with McLeod as the driver. Derrike Cope, the 1990 Daytona 500 winner, is back for what he says will be his final race and even at 62 – the oldest driver in the field – Cope believes he’s got a shot.

The race will have a noticeably empty feeling because pandemic restrictio­ns have limited attendance to roughly 30,000 spectators in the grandstand­s. Daytona was at capacity with 101,000 in the grandstand­s a year ago, several thousand more camping in the infield.

But everything has been scaled down this year and there’s a heavy presence of fencing and gates to keep the competitio­n bubble contained. Movement inside the speedway is restricted to the point Hamlin was stymied taking his usual route to victory lane.

“I felt like a mouse trying to find the cheese,” Hamlin said of trying to get to to the traditiona­l ring ceremony for last year’s Daytona 500 victory.

Hamlin, now 40 and beginning his 16th season with Joe Gibbs Racing, has made significant strides to leave his mark on NASCAR. His 44 career victories tie him with Bill Elliott, the Hall of Fame driver and Hamlin’s childhood idol, and those statement victories have qualified him as one of the best of his generation.

“Anybody sitting on the precipice of three consecutiv­e Daytona 500 wins, that’s akin to what Tom Brady seems to do,” said David Wilson, President of Toyota Racing Developmen­t. “It’s a sporting story, and for NASCAR, it would be huge.”

 ?? PETER CASEY / USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Denny Hamlin celebrates his 2020 Daytona 500 victory, his second straight and third overall.
PETER CASEY / USA TODAY SPORTS Denny Hamlin celebrates his 2020 Daytona 500 victory, his second straight and third overall.
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