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Denny Hamlin dominated the final 22 laps before and after a late caution.

Hamlin rolls at Michigan for fifth win in past 10 races

By Sporting News Wire Service
June 14, 2010
03:13 PM EDT
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BROOKLYN, Mich. -- Denny Hamlin sucked the drama right out of Sunday's Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips 400 at Michigan International Speedway -- because his car was so vastly superior to the 42 others in the field.

"All we do is win, baby -- two in a row," Hamlin radioed to his crew just before crossing the finish line 1.246 seconds ahead of Kasey Kahne (watch and listen), the only other driver who could stay in the same zip code with Hamlin. "I can't tell you how good this car is, man."

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Mike Ford and Denny Hamlin

Heluva Good! 400

Results
Pos. Driver Make
1. Denny Hamlin Toyota
2. Kasey Kahne Ford
3. Kurt Busch Dodge
4. Jeff Gordon Chevrolet
5. Tony Stewart Chevrolet
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Hamlin was more than good enough to win for a career-best fifth time this season and for the 13th time in his career. He backed up last week's victory at Pocono with his fifth win in the past 10 races.

Pole-sitter Kurt Busch ran third, followed by Jeff Gordon and Tony Stewart. Jimmie Johnson finished sixth, with Hendrick Motorsports teammate Dale Earnhardt Jr. behind him in seventh. Jeff Burton, Greg Biffle and Joey Logano completed the top 10.

Hamlin's victory tightened the Cup points race because of mediocre results from the top two drivers in the standings, Kevin Harvick and Kyle Busch. Harvick finished 19th, one spot ahead of Busch, and leads Busch by 22 points and third place Hamlin by 47.

Stewart gained two positions to 11th in the standings.

If Hamlin stole the suspense from the race, a debris caution on Lap 182 of 200 threatened to restore it. At that point, Hamlin had a lead of more than 9 seconds over Kahne.

"That's what a 9-second lead will get you," crew chief Mike Ford radioed laconically to Hamlin after the yellow flag flew.

The caution bunched the field for a restart on Lap 187, but after Kahne dogged Hamlin for the next five laps, Hamlin began to pull away by more than a tenth of a second per lap. All told, Hamlin led 123 laps. Kurt Busch led 60 laps but showed his strength early while Hamlin was moving forward from the seventh starting position.

"We had a strong car early on," Busch said. "It seems like we lost a little bit of speed as the race went on, lost a little grip when the track rubbered in. ... Denny Hamlin, once halfway rolled around, his car had really good grip.

"The track got rubbered in, and his car just kept gaining speed, and ours lost a little bit of speed."

To Hamlin, the final caution was inevitable. Kahne said he saw a big piece of debris on the backstretch. Hamlin said he saw no debris.

"I knew a caution was coming, so I might as well back off and save my tires," Hamlin said. "I knew that debris caution was coming. We've got to do what's right for the fans, and they need to see a great race at the end. The best car won -- and that's all you can ask for."

Nine Ford teams were running the new FR9 engine Sunday. Kahne said it made a difference.

"We had the new Ford engine, and it was night and day difference to what I had last week," he said. "I'm really happy with the FR9 engine. For our first time racing it, it was a nice improvement. I think that bodes well for all the Ford teams. I think we will all run better now."

Kahne had a brief glimmer of hope when the debris caution came out. It lasted all of three laps, or as long as it took for Hamlin to run out and disappear.

"They've been doing it for the last two, two-and-a-half months," Kahne said.

And they've been doing it everywhere. Hamlin's wins run the gamut. Short tracks. Intermediate ovals. Superspeedways. Doesn't matter right now to Hamlin.

"Now I know what Jimmie has felt like the last four years," he said.

He certainly looked like Johnson on Sunday -- his performance highlighted the chasm between his team and the rest of the series at the moment -- and seems poised to make a serious run at ending Johnson's long reign.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Related:
Hamlin putting a hurting on the competition
Kahne happy with Ford's new FR9 engine
Busch strong at Michigan, eyes consistency
Speed speaks harshly after Red Bull dustup
Notes: Earnhardt happy with top-10 finish
Youth movement on display in NASCAR

Notes-n-Nuggets

• Denny Hamlin is tied with Tim Richmond and Dick Rathmann on the all-time wins list.
• Denny Hamlin started seventh; only three of the past seven Michigan races were won from a top-10 starting position.
• Joe Gibbs Racing scored its 84th Cup victory, fifth at Michigan, and seventh in 2010: Denny Hamlin (five) and Kyle Busch (two).
• Kasey Kahne scored his best finish in 2010; his previous best was fourth at Atlanta.
• Kasey Kahne has six top-10 finishes in 13 Michigan races, all top-fives.
• Kurt Busch posted his ninth top-10 finish in 2010.
• Jeff Gordon has posted top-five finishes in his past three Michigan races.
• Tony Stewart scored his third top-10 finish in the past four races in 2010.
• Jimmie Johnson scored his first top-10 finish in the past four Michigan races.
• Jimmie Johnson ended a seven-race streak of leading at least one lap at Michigan, breaking the longest current streak.
• Dale Earnhardt Jr. scored his first top-10 finish in the past seven races; he finished eighth at Texas.
• Points leader Kevin Harvick finished 19th followed by second place Kyle Busch, who finished 20th.
• Kyle Busch has scored just three top-10 finishes in 11 Michigan races.
• Ryan Newman (32nd) extended a 12-race streak without a top-10 finish at Michigan.
• Carl Edwards finished 12th, ending in a seven-race streak of top-10 finishes at Michigan.
• Powered by Racing Recall

The End

Also

Sprint Cup Series

Standings
Pos. +/- Driver Points Behind
1. -- Kevin Harvick 2,169 Leader
2. -- Kyle Busch 2,147 -22
3. -- Denny Hamlin 2,122 -47
4. +1 Kurt Busch 2,051 -118
5. -1 Matt Kenseth 2,019 -150
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