Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Racing for the team

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Denny Hamlin’s Daytona 500 was dedicated to the late J.D. Gibbs.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Daytona 500 winner Denny Hamlin did it for J.D.

After all, J.D. Gibbs had done so much for Hamlin leading up to the dramatic win. This included giving a brash, promising young driver a shot, along with Gibbs’ car number, two decades ago.

“J.D.’s favorite number was 11 when he raced,” said Joe Gibbs, J.D.’s father. “That’s what he had.”

J.D. Gibbs, who died tragically last month at age 49, was not nearly the driver Hamlin would become. But few loved racing cars and hanging around the garage more than Gibbs.

Gibbs eventually joined forces with his famous father, tapping into the competitiv­e juices, organizati­onal acumen and strategic genius Joe Gibbs used to coach the Washington Redskins to three Super Bowl titles.

The elder Gibbs, now 78, found a second act on the asphalt as successful as his Hall of Fame career on the sidelines. J.D. found his calling after playing college football at William & Mary and a short career as a driver.

Gibbs was known for his incredible focus as a football coach, often at the expense of all else, including his family and eventually his health. A year before his sudden retirement in 1993, Gibbs, a native of North Carolina, joined the world of NASCAR.

Father and son shared the success of Joe Gibbs Racings together as adults.

“J.D. built our race team, was the guy that ran day-today operations for 27 years,” Gibbs said.

“He invested his occupation­al life in our race team.”

And J.D. Gibbs invested just as much of his time and effort into Hamlin as any driver, if not more.

With Gibbs as president, the company captured four Cup championsh­ips, with Bobby Labonte in 2000, Tony Stewart in 2002 and 2005 and Kyle Busch in 2015.

Hamlin might be the company’s biggest success story because Gibbs Racing was with him from Day 1.

“He went up to purchase some late model stuff from Denny and struck up a relationsh­ip with Denny, put him in a test, put him in a truck, put him in an Xfinity car at Darlington, and finally he said, ‘We need to sign this guy,’ “Joe Gibbs recalled. “And so that started the relationsh­ip and everything.”

Hamlin, a Tampa, Fla., native who grew up near Richmond, Va., said he spent his first paycheck on rims for car tires and a plasma TV.

“I was in high. That was a hit in my town,” Hamlin exclaimed Sunday night.

Gibbs countered, “And three years later, he bought a house next to me that was twice as big as my house. So, it tells you I get in the wrong end of everything.”

Hamlin ultimately would display his gratitude to the Gibbs family by putting J.D’s signature above his car door and delivering the race team numerous trips to Victory Lane.

Hamlin’s second Daytona 500 championsh­ip was his 32nd win — most among active drivers without a season championsh­ip. Three wrecks and two red flag stoppages totaling nearly 40 minutes in the final 10 laps of regulation extended the 200lap race seven additional laps before Hamlin outlasted Gibbs’ teammates Busch and Erik Jones.

 ?? Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images ?? Denny Hamlin of Joe Gibbs Racing dedicated his Daytona 500 win to the late J.D. Gibbs.
Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images Denny Hamlin of Joe Gibbs Racing dedicated his Daytona 500 win to the late J.D. Gibbs.

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