Denny Hamlin has claimed the Busch Pole Award for Sunday’s GEICO 500 (2 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) at Talladega Superspeedway.

Hamlin will start his No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota from the pole position for the third time this season in the 500-miler at the 2.66-mile Alabama track. He finished second last weekend at Richmond Raceway and has held the NASCAR Cup Series points lead for all but one week this season.

Austin Cindric, the defending Xfinity Series champion, captured the pole for Saturday’s Ag-Pro 300 (4 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM) in the No. 22 Team Penske Ford.

RELATED: Talladega weekend schedule | 2021 Cup Series standings

As NASCAR adapted to COVID-19 protocols last season, practice and qualifying were eliminated at a majority of national-series events to limit at-track time, exposure and to cut race weekend costs. To determine starting lineups, competition officials used grouped draws, added inversions for weekend doubleheaders, and eventually adopted a performance-metrics formula. That metrics format remains in place this season, drawing on performance from both individual races and season-long results.

NASCAR’s metrics formula for 2021 weighs:

  • 25 percent: Driver’s finishing position from the previous race
  • 25 percent: Car owner’s finishing position from the previous race
  • 35 percent: Team owner points ranking
  • 15 percent: Fastest lap from the previous race

See the full lineup for Sunday’s Cup Series race below.

Start pos.
Driver Car # Team
1 Denny Hamlin 11 Joe Gibbs Racing
2 Joey Logano 22 Team Penske
3 Martin Truex Jr. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing
4 William Byron 24 Hendrick Motorsports
5 Alex Bowman 48 Hendrick Motorsports
6 Christopher Bell 20 Joe Gibbs Racing
7 Ryan Blaney 12 Team Penske
8 Chase Elliott 9 Hendrick Motorsports
9 Kyle Busch 18 Joe Gibbs Racing
10 Brad Keselowski 2 Team Penske
11 Austin Dillon 3 Richard Childress Racing
12 Kyle Larson 5 Hendrick Motorsports
13 Matt DiBenedetto 21 Wood Brothers Racing
14 Aric Almirola 10 Stewart-Haas Racing
15 Kurt Busch 1 Chip Ganassi Racing
16 Kevin Harvick 4 Stewart-Haas Racing
17 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. 47 JTG Daugherty Racing
18 Ross Chastain 42 Chip Ganassi Racing
19 Daniel Suarez 99 Trackhouse Racing Team
20 Tyler Reddick 8 Richard Childress Racing
21 Chris Buescher 17 Roush Fenway Racing
22 Erik Jones 43 Richard Petty Motorsports
23 Michael McDowell 34 Front Row Motorsports
24 Bubba Wallace 23 23XI Racing
25 Chase Briscoe 14 Stewart-Haas Racing
26 Corey LaJoie 7 Spire Motorsports
27 Cole Custer 41 Stewart-Haas Racing
28 Ryan Newman 6 Roush Fenway Racing
29 Ryan Preece 37 JTG Daugherty Racing
30 Anthony Alfredo 38 Front Row Motorsports
31 BJ McLeod 78 Live Fast Motorsports
32 Quin Houff 00 StarCom Racing
33 Cody Ware 51 Petty Ware Racing
34 Justin Haley 77 Spire Motorsports
35 Joey Gase 28 Rick Ware Racing
36 Josh Bilicki 52 Rick Ware Racing
37 JJ Yeley 15 Rick Ware Racing
38 Kaz Grala 16 Kaulig Racing
39 Harrison Burton 96 Gaunt Brothers Racing
40 Timmy Hill 66 MBM Motorsports

Practice and qualifying are tentatively scheduled for eight Cup Series races this year. Busch Pole Qualifying was held for the season-opening Daytona 500 but rain canceled the qualifying races for Bristol Motor Speedway’s dirt-track race. The next Cup Series event with qualifying scheduled is the May 23 debut at the Circuit of the Americas road course in Austin, Texas.

Jesse Iwuji has won the first ever eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series Fan Vote, as revealed on Tuesday’s NASCAR Race Hub on FS1. As a result, Iwuji is now eligible to race in Wednesday night’s Pro Invitational Series event at virtual Talladega Superspeedway, airing at 7 p.m. ET on FS1.

RELATED: Pro Invitational Series schedule

Iwuji was one of 10 drivers in the fan vote. NASCAR Xfinity Series driver and Martinsville Speedway winner Josh Berry finished second in the vote, followed by Xfinity Series driver Landon Cassill.

Other drivers in the fan vote included Justin Allgaier, Rajah Caruth, Noah Gragson, Austin Hill, Nicholas Sanchez, Ryan Truex and Ryan Vargas.

NASCAR Cup Series driver William Byron earned victory in the first 2021 Pro Invitational Series event on the virtual Bristol Motor Speedway dirt. The triumph was his fourth career Pro Invitational Series victory.

NASCAR officials issued penalties Tuesday to three teams — two in the Cup Series and one in the Camping World Truck Series — for lug-nut violations in last weekend’s events at Richmond Raceway.

The infractions, filed under the heading of Sections 10.9.10.4 (tires and wheels) in each series’ rule book, resulted in fines for each team’s crew chief. The vehicles were each found with one unsecured lug nut in a post-race check.

STANDINGS: Cup Series | Camping World Trucks

After the Cup Series’ Toyota Owners 400, the safety violations — which carried $10,000 fines — were handed to:

• The No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet for driver William Byron (crew chief Ryan “Rudy” Fugle)
• The No. 51 Petty Ware Racing Chevrolet for driver Cody Ware (crew chief Mike Hillman)

In the Camping World Truck Series, the race-winning Kyle Busch Motorsports No. 4 Toyota team for driver John Hunter Nemechek was docked for a single-lug penalty. The infraction resulted in a $2,500 fine to crew chief Eric Phillips.

The stars of the NASCAR Cup Series are pulling double-duty at Talladega Superspeedway this week — if you count Wednesday night’s eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series event from the virtual 2.66-mile superspeedway. 

Here’s everything you need to know about the second iRacing exhibition event airing live Apr. 21 at 7 pm. ET on FS1.

This year’s format

    • Qualifying: Two-lap, three-minute solo session
    • Race: 70-lap, 2 resets
  • Field Size: 40 cars, comprised of 36 NASCAR Cup Series drivers, a NASCAR.com fan vote winner and any past Pro Invitational winners, along with special guests Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Clint Bowyer.

Entry list

Car No.

Team

Driver

0

StarCom Racing

Quin Houff

2

Team Penske

Brad Keselowski

3

Richard Childress Racing

Austin Dillon

4

Stewart-Haas Racing

Kevin Harvick

5

Hendrick Motorsports

Kyle Larson

6

Roush Fenway Racing

Ryan Newman

7

Spire Motorsports

Corey Lajoie

8

Richard Childress Racing

Tyler Reddick

9

Hendrick Motorsports

Chase Elliott

10

Stewart-Haas Racing

Aric Almirola

11

Joe Gibbs Racing

Denny Hamlin

12

Team Penske

Ryan Blaney

14

Stewart-Haas Racing

Chase Briscoe

15

Rick Ware Racing

James Davison

17

Roush Fenway Racing

Chris Buescher

18

Joe Gibbs Racing

Kyle Busch

19

Joe Gibbs Racing

Martin Truex Jr.

20

Joe Gibbs Racing

Christopher Bell

21

Wood Brothers Racing

Matt DiBenedetto

22

Team Penske

Joey Logano

23

23XI Racing

Bubba Wallace

24

Hendrick Motorsports

William Byron

28

Rick Ware Racing

Joey Gase

34

Front Row Motorsports

Michael McDowell

38

Front Row Motorsports

Anthony Alfredo

41

Stewart-Haas Racing

Cole Custer

42

Chip Ganassi Racing

Ross Chastain

43

Richard Petty Motorsports

Erik Jones

47

JTG Daugherty Racing

Ricky Stenhouse Jr.

48

Hendrick Motorsports

Alex Bowman

51

Petty Ware Racing

Garrett Smithley

52

Rick Ware Racing

Josh Bilicki

77

Spire Motorsports

Justin Haley

78

Live Fast Racing

BJ McLeod

97

Trackhouse Racing

Daniel Suarez

88

Promoter’s Provisional

Dale Earnhardt Jr.

79

Promoter’s Provisional

Clint Bowyer

62

Promoter’s Provisional

Keelan Harvick

66

MBM Motorsports
Past winner Provisional

Timmy Hill

99

Fan Vote Winner

Jesse Iwuji

 

Last year’s Pro Invitational Series race at Talladega

The 2020 iRacing Pro Invitational Series race was one of the most memorable races of last spring’s seven-race season. 

For starters, Hall of Famer Jeff Gordon made his iRacing debut — but it wasn’t before long the driver-gone-broadcaster ended up in Talladega’s virtual catch fence. 

Denny Hamlin was also (now famously) knocked out by a technical glitch of sorts.

…which, by the way, has become one of our favorite GIFs. Thanks for that, Taylor.

Taylor Hamlin Turn Off Denny Computer Screen

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Birthday boy and frequent mid-race tweeter Alex Bowman ended up bringing home the win, holding off Corey LaJoie in overtime. 

Last Pro Invitational Series race: Byron wins the Bristol Dirt Race

William Byron, the most decorated driver in the brief history of the Pro Invitational Series, picked up his fourth win last month in the 2021 season opener at the dirt version of Bristol Motor Speedway.

What to expect and who to watch

They say just about anything can happen at Talladega, and that’s no different in the sim-racing world. Alex Bowman wasn’t considered a favorite to win last year’s race — after all, his opening weeks of the series were spent, to our entertainment, in-race tweeting and blaming his dog for incidents — but he managed to prevail despite Brad Keselowski and John Hunter Nemechek leading the most laps.

Of course, we’ve got our eyes on William Byron, who’s an evergreen iRacing favorite, though Talladega’s draft is known as the great equalizer. 

Like each time the NASCAR Cup Series visits Talladega, there’s a chance for an underdog story, too. Corey LaJoie finished runner-up at ‘Dega last year, just ahead of Ryan Preece and Garrett Smithley; Smithley also finished fourth at the Bristol Dirt iRacing race last month. 

Be sure to keep an eye out for Daniel Suárez’s special paint scheme, honoring 2021 NASCAR Hall of Fame inductee Red Farmer.

One more driver for the fans

Through a fan vote, fans selected one more guest entrant to round out the field: Jesse Iwuji will put on the virtual belts Wednesday to show his stuff against the Cup Series stars. Iwuji, who’s also a U.S. Naval officer, competes in the Camping World Truck Series. He competed in last year’s Saturday Night Thunder exhibition event on iRacing, held the night before the Pro Invitational Series race with non-Cup Series drivers. 

Catch the live broadcast of the eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series race from Talladega Superspeedway Wednesday at 7 p.m. ET on FS1, following NASCAR Race Hub.

Joe Gibbs Racing unveiled a retro-themed M&M’s design for Kyle Busch’s No. 18 Toyota in NASCAR’s Throwback Weekend next month at Darlington Raceway.

RELATED: Buy Darlington tickets

JGR’s paint scheme commemorates the candy’s 80th anniversary with vintage branding as part of its design. Busch will drive the throwback car as he vies for his second career Darlington victory in the NASCAR Cup Series on May 9 in the Goodyear 400 (3:30 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

JGR and Busch also paid tribute to an M&M’s milestone in May 2016, switching from No. 18 to No. 75 in the NASCAR All-Star Race to coincide with its diamond anniversary.

Darlington has two dates on this year’s Cup Series schedule. The annual throwback weekend tradition shifts to a springtime tripleheader this year, with all three NASCAR national series competing May 7-9. The Cook Out Southern 500 retains its customary Labor Day weekend slot, opening the Cup Series’ 10-race playoffs Sept. 5.

Jimmie Johnson offered Monday morning congratulations to Alex Bowman, his successor in the No. 48 Chevrolet, for his Sunday victory at Richmond Raceway. The triumph marked the No. 48 car’s first win since 2017, adding another measure of success to the number’s legacy at Hendrick Motorsports.

RELATED: Bowman wins Richmond | Cup Series standings

Johnson was occupied with his own racing efforts Sunday, making his IndyCar debut at Barber Motorsports Park in Alabama. The seven-time champion was gracious in his warm salute to his former teammate from the NASCAR world.

Bowman paid his own tribute to Johnson in acknowledgment of his tweet. The No. 48’s current driver made a fashion statement with a T-shirt reading “I’m far from done JA,” referring to a 2018 social-media clapback to critics that became a Johnson catchphrase and rallying cry.

Alex Bowman’s understated summation of his team’s season so far said so much with so little. “It’s been a lot,” Bowman said, shortly after sealing his first NASCAR Cup Series victory of the year Sunday at Richmond Raceway.

A lot, meaning: His first triumph in the No. 48 Chevrolet that seven-time champion Jimmie Johnson had made famous, putting that car number back in Victory Lane for the first time since 2017; his win that coincided with a big day for his predecessor, who made his IndyCar debut Sunday in Birmingham, Alabama; his contribution to Hendrick Motorsports’ winning efforts this year, joining teammates William Byron and Kyle Larson among the victors and acquitting the team for a measure of its early season inconsistency.

RELATED: Official results | Bowman breaks out at Richmond

The occurrence that added the most emotional weight is what caused Bowman to break down in interviews shortly after his triumphant burnout. The 27-year-old driver dedicated the victory to former crew member William “Rowdy” Harrell, who died last November in a traffic accident that also claimed the life of his wife, Blakley, on the couple’s honeymoon in Florida.

Nearly five months later, Harrell’s impact on the organization remains strong. Greg Ives, the No. 48 team’s crew chief, called Harrell “the heart and soul of our team” in his tribute. Bowman recalled that Harrell was among those who made him feel comfortable in his first stint with Hendrick Motorsports, when he subbed in for an injured Dale Earnhardt Jr.

Harrell’s influence went beyond his eight years of over-the-wall duty with Hendrick Motorsports. Instead it’s a legacy best illustrated by the fond recollections of his former teammates.

Sean Gardner | Getty Images
Sean Gardner | Getty Images

“I mean, our group has a lot of personalities, a lot of awkward people, I guess. Greg and myself are a bit awkward,” Bowman said post-race. “We have some normal personalities. Rowdy was that big, outgoing personality that really kept the group pumped up in any situation, really held us all together. He was always happy, no matter what the circumstance was.

“He meant a ton to our race team. He’s probably the first guy when I filled in in the 88 (car) back in the day to really make me feel super welcome, feel like he had my back. He was just a huge part of our team.”

Harrell came to Hendrick Motorsports as a small-town transplant who used his tireless work ethic to earn a walk-on spot with the University of Alabama football team. He won three national championship rings as a non-scholarship standout on the Crimson Tide defense, bucking the notion that a kid from a one-stoplight hometown — Moundville, Alabama, in his case, not far from the Tuscaloosa campus — was somehow less of a prospect.

MORE: Rowdy Harrell’s path to NASCAR (from 2016)

When Harrell went from big-time college athletics to NASCAR’s big leagues, Hendrick Motorsports did its own scouting report. The feedback from Alabama’s staff was glowing: big motor, strong build, natural leader, punctual, detail-oriented. One other trait carried over from sport to sport — his desire to excel, which in turn pushed those around him to do the same.

“I mean, at this level, motivation is never necessarily needed any more than anywhere else,” Ives said. “All the guys are motivated to win, motivated to do their best, to do their jobs. The offseason added some definitely unneeded motivation in the loss of Rowdy and Blakley. It’s been hard. Every morning we wake up, we’re reminded of the energy that he brought to the team. We just try to bring part of that, that will to never give up.

“I think you saw in Victory Lane how emotional Alex was about it. I think every lap he runs, that’s on his mind, to drive him, to motivate him, to never give up as Rowdy was, give 100%. It’s a special win for us to be able to do that. Yeah, we don’t need the added motivation. We’re already right there, trying to get everything we can. That’s a tribute to Rowdy. Just happy we were able to get it done.”

This year’s edition of the No. 48 team has the former No. 88 team’s pairing of Bowman and Ives as its core. The car was renumbered after Johnson’s retirement from full-time driving, but the No. 88 personnel remained largely intact.

While operationally a different unit, Bowman and Co. still inherited the magnitude of Johnson’s legacy when the torch was passed in the offseason, both with his new car number and sponsorship from Ally, which has thrown its support behind Seven-Time’s successor. Sunday’s victory at Richmond fulfilled at least the first step in that transition, restoring the No. 48 to the ranks of winners for the first time in nearly four years and putting the number back on the postseason grid for the first time since 2018.

The No. 48 Chevy’s awakening for the final green-flag run at Richmond makes Bowman’s return to the playoffs a virtual lock, meaning he can breathe a little easier for next weekend’s race at Talladega Superspeedway and the balance of the regular season. But the incentive remains high to honor Harrell’s spirit again at Talladega, just a couple of hours away from his rural hometown.

“That would be pretty special. Not really for any reason aside from the fact that it’s Rowdy’s home track,” Bowman said. “Winning means a lot to get our car in Victory Lane, we miss him and Blakley a lot. Going to his home track, we’re able to win there, I know that would mean the world to him. We’re going to try our best to make it happen.”

It’s an entirely different half-mile format for the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour this weekend.

After opening the season at Martinsville Speedway, and being subjected to the long straightaways and tight turns of the Virginia track, the tour returns to one of its most hallowed venues for the 49th Annual NAPA Auto Parts Spring Sizzler (5 p.m. ET, TrackPass) at Stafford Motor Speedway.

NOTE: Impending inclement weather postponed the race from Sunday, April 25, to Friday, April 30.

It will be one of three stops the tour makes at the Connecticut track.

RELATED LINKS:

Paddock passes are available for Stafford (buy tickets), while General Admission ticket sales are paused due to Covid-19 capacity limits.

Fans can watch the race live on TrackPass on NBC Sports Gold.


NAPA Auto Parts Spring Sizzler

WHAT TO WATCH FOR:

2021 Sizzler Logo

You may have heard this before: Justin Bonsignore hasn’t won a tour race at Stafford.

Since 2011, he’s 0-for-34 with 12 top fives and 23 top 10s.

Bonsignore is certainly tired of hearing about it.

The 33-year-old from Holtsville, New York, is a two-time tour champion thanks to his success at Thompson Speedway (12 wins in 36 starts since 2011, 33% winning percentage) but also EVERY other track not named Stafford (17 wins in 77 starts, 22% winning percentage).

He hasn’t been bad at Stafford- three top 10s with two Mayhew Tools Pole Awards in four starts in his 2018 championship season and a third-place finish in the lone event there last year. and he’ll get a chance to add a 10th track to his win resume with Sunday’s 150-lap event.

The flip side of that, the drivers looking to challenge Bonsignore for the 2021 title have been very good at Stafford.

Six-time champion Doug Coby has a dozen wins at his home track, while Ron Silk has three wins — including two of the last three races — and Eric Goodale and Craig Lutz each have one.

Max McLaughlin, who was fourth at Martinsville in the opener, returns in the No. 77 and was fourth at Stafford in last year’s Fall Final. And 2018 Fall Final winner, Kyle Bonsignore, is coming off a fifth-place run at Martinsville. Tyler Rypkema, the 2020 Sunoco Rookie of the Year, closed out the season with four straight 10th-place finishes (including Stafford) before starting 2021 with a runner-up finish in Virginia.

RACING REFERENCE:

RACE FACTS

RACE NAPA Auto Parts Spring Sizzler
PLACE Stafford Motor Speedway in Stafford, Connecticut
DATE Friday, April 30, 2021
TIME 8:30 p.m. ET
TV/LIVE STREAM TrackPass on NBC Sports Gold (live) / NBCSN – TBD
TRACK LAYOUT Half-mile paved oval
LAPS 150
MILES 75
EVENT SCHEDULE Friday, April 30: Garage opens: 1 p.m. ET; Practice: 3:30-4:30 p.m.; Qualifying: 6:30 p.m.; NAPA Auto Parts Spring Sizzler: 8:30 p.m.
TWITTER @NASCARRoots, @StaffordSpeedwy, @_TrackPass

RELATED:

CREW CHIEF HANDOUT: The starting field for the NAPA Auto Parts Spring Sizzler is limited to limited to 32 starters including provisionals. The field will be set by qualifying (1-26) and provisional process per the entry blank (27-32) for the NAPA Auto Parts Spring Sizzler. In the event that qualifying as stated on the entry blank does not take place for any unforeseen circumstance, the field will be set in accordance with the 2021 NASCAR Touring Series Rule Book.

QUALIFYING: Two consecutive qualifying laps. Faster lap determines qualifying position. Adjustments or repairs may not be made on the vehicle after the vehicle has taken the green flag at the start/finish line. NASCAR reserves the right to have more than one vehicle engage in qualifying runs at the same time.

RACE PIT STOP: Live pit stop procedure – Teams may not take tires and fuel in the same stop. Maximum five crew members over the wall.

The maximum tire allotment available for this event is as follows: The maximum tire allotment available for this event is eleven (11) tires per team. All tires used for qualifying and the race must be purchased at the track and scanned by Hoosier, unless otherwise approved in advance by the Series Director. Four (4) tires must be used for qualifying and to begin the race. All qualifying tires must remain in impound until released by NASCAR Officials. The remaining tire allotment may be used for practice and/or change tires during the event.

The tire change rule is four (4) tires, any position.

QUALIFYING AND SPECIAL AWARDS

$400 Phil Kurze Halfway Leader Award presented by Josten’s per event award to the race leader at the halfway point of the event, regardless if the race is running under green or yellow.

$600 Hoosier Tire “Lap Leader” per event award to the eligible car owner whose driver leads the most laps in each event. In the event of a tie, the award will go to the highest finishing car in the event.

$500 Hoosier Tire “Hard Charger” per event award to the highest finishing eligible driver who advances the most positions during the course of the race. In the case of a tie, the highest finishing driver will receive the award.

$500 Hoosier Tire “Most Improved” per event award to the eligible new team/organization whose driver improves the most positions during the course of the race. In the event of a tie, the award will go to the highest finishing car in the event. If money is not awarded during this event, funds will rollover to the next event and will continue to rollover until an eligible new team/organization claims the money.

$1,000 Mayhew Tools Dominator Pole per event award to the driver with the fastest qualifying time eligible to participate under the Manufacturers’ Prize Money Conditions.

$550 Sunoco Spec Fuel award divided: 1st-$300 5th-$150 10th-$100.

$3,500 Whelen Engineering “Winner of the Race” award to the winning driver.

Whelen Non-Starter award will be paid to the first 15 competitors throughout the season who pass inspection, practice, attempt to qualify, but fail to make the feature event.

Last five races for Active Drivers prior to 2021 Race – Ordered by Average Finish

Driver Name Races Wins Top  5 Top 10 Points Laps Led Avg. Start Avg. Finish
Denny Hamlin 5 1 4 4 150 44 15.2 9.6
Aric Almirola 5 1 3 4 150 40 7.4 10.8
Ryan Preece 4 0 1 2 105 3 29.0 11.5
Joey Logano 5 0 2 2 172 131 11.0 12.6
Ryan Newman 5 0  1   3  126 4 18.4 12.8
Tyler Reddick 2 0 0 1 61 21 23.0 13.5
Erik Jones 5 0  2   3  123 18 17.4 13.6
Ryan Blaney 5 2  2   2  163 118 12.2 14.2
Ricky Stenhouse Jr. 5 0 2 3 130 53  14.2 15.4
Chase Elliott 5 1  2   3  143 108  7.6 16.6
Austin Dillon 5 0  0  1 122 14.2 17.6
Kurt Busch 5 0  0   2  128 124  9.6 17.8
William Byron 5 0  1   1  128 30  15.2 17.8
Alex Bowman 5 0  1   2  130 19  6.0 18.6
Corey LaJoie 5 0  0   1  91 32.6 18.8
Chris Buescher 5 0  0   1  110 20  23.2 19.8
Quin Houff 2 0  0    0   34 32.5 20.0
Brad Keselowski 5 0  0   0  125 59  8.2 20.4
Ross Chastain 3 0  0  0 0 10  34.7 20.7
Kevin Harvick 5 0 0 1 92 50  9.4 22.6
Kyle Busch 5 0 0 1 93 17  13.2 22.8
Martin Truex Jr. 5 0 0 0 83 21  10.6 23.0
Bubba Wallace 5 0 0 0 73 12  24.6 24.0
Daniel Suarez 5 0 0 0 78 23.2 24.4
Kyle Larson 3 0 0 0 39 18.7 24.7
Cole Custer 2 0 0 0 25 23.0 26.5
Matt DiBenedetto 5 0 0 0 48 14  24.0 27.6
Michael McDowell 5 0 1 1 54 19.6 27.8

 

With one notable performance exception, Denny Hamlin made the absolute most of back-to-back short-track races in his home state, leading the most laps at each Martinsville Speedway last week and in Sunday’s stop at Richmond Raceway. In both instances, though, his dominance was not rewarded with his first checkered flag of the 2021 NASCAR Cup Series season.

RELATED: Official results | At-track photos

The circuit’s points leader ended the afternoon as the runner-up in Sunday’s Toyota Owners 400, surrendering the lead for the final 10 laps to a suddenly surging Alex Bowman. The outcome marked Hamlin’s eighth top-five finish in nine races this season, but his remarkable consistency hasn’t yielded a victory.

“Yeah, we should have won,” Hamlin said post-race. “Certainly the 48 (Bowman) wasn’t better than us all day. Just got to lead the last lap. You’ve got to figure out how to lead the last lap, that’s pretty much all that matters. Today, I don’t know if we had a dominant car. It was definitely top two.”

Hamlin established the strength in his No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota early, sweeping both stages and trading the lead with another contending teammate in Martin Truex Jr. But his control of the race began to slip down the stretch as Joey Logano briefly took command on a long green-flag run in Stage 3.

Hamlin regained the top spot with speedy pit service in the No. 11 team’s final stop, edging Logano’s No. 22 Team Penske Ford to the pit exit by half a car-length. But shortly after the green flag flew for the final restart, Bowman bolted on by and stretched his lead to the finish.

“We just didn’t take off very good there,” Hamlin said of the final stint. “Definitely was worse when our car took off after the restart. The 48 had his tires pumped up, he was able to take off there, get the lead, build a lead big enough I didn’t have enough time to get back to him.”

Hamlin led 207 laps Sunday at Richmond, one week after pacing 276 of the 500 laps and fading to third at another friendly venue in Martinsville. He has led more than half the laps at Richmond on five occasions but prevailed on only two of those dominant days.

With the sting from Sunday still fresh, the irritation was evident post-race from a driver who won seven times in 2020 and six times the year before.

“Yeah, I mean, there’s frustration, for sure,” Hamlin said. “But it doesn’t change my attitude or work ethic. I’m going to work just as hard to win next week and the week after that. You’re a competitor, you want to win. Especially when you have a great opportunity to win. It just didn’t happen. I just got to digest it, look at it and see where we could have been a little bit better. But ultimately there’s nothing I can do. My effort was as high as it could be. There’s nothing that’s glaring that I feel like I could have or should have done different.”

Even with the losses starting to mount and Bowman hoisting the trophy in Victory Lane, Hamlin was able to take some solace in his current lot, leading the tour by a whopping 81 points more than second-place Truex. In fact, he suggested he wouldn’t trade places with Bowman, who has scratched the win column but hasn’t demonstrated the week-in, week-out performance JGR’s No. 11 bunch has produced so far.

“I don’t care that he’s got a win,” Hamlin said. “We’re smashing everyone. I’d still rather be where I’m at.”