Denny
Hamlin had to overcome major back pain to win at the Glen
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[August 08, 2016]
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
Distributed by The Sports Xchange
WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. -- As crew chief
Mike Wheeler put it after Sunday's Cheez-It 355 at the Glen, Denny
Hamlin wouldn't have driven his car if the schedule simply called
for a practice session.
But since Sunday was a race day, Hamlin was in the car, overcoming
persistent pain to win his first road course event at the 2.45-mile
Watkins Glen International track.
Hamlin, who has had disc problems exacerbated by a hard wreck at
Auto Club Speedway (Fontana, Calif.) in 2013, had no explanation for
the onset of the back pain on Sunday morning. He woke up, and it was
there.
"I don't know what causes it," Hamlin said. "It just happens every
now and then. It's never happened on a race day, for sure. Usually
I'm in the car, and things get looser as the weekend goes on. ...
But just today, you know, slept wrong -- something. Woke up and knew
I was in pretty big trouble. We worked on it all day to try to make
it better. We really didn't make it much better.
"No doubt, if it was Friday or Saturday, no question I wouldn't have
turned one lap today. It was by far the worst conditions I've ever
had to drive in, over the knees (Hamlin has had surgery on both),
anything else. This was by far the worst pain wise I've had to go
through."
It didn't help that the race had two stoppages for a total of 30
minutes. As Hamlin sat in his motionless car, he suffered.
"It didn't get any better throughout the day," Hamlin said. "Trust
me, I'm sitting there, even though I'm joyed that we're leading the
race, I was thinking under the red flag, 'Let's get this over with
so I can get out of this car.'
"I don't know why it did it today. But I'll just continue to go to
work on it and try to get in the gym and try to make things a little
bit better overall. I've missed my routine because I've had to
travel over the last few weeks. I kind of got off-sequence of my
routine that's helped my back.
"It will go away. By Tuesday, I'll be back fine again. It's just a
pain right now."
Taking the checkered flag, however, was enough of a tonic to get
Hamlin through a lengthy burnout to celebrate the win.
Uescher creeps toward top 30 in Sprint Cup standings
Chris Buescher, last week's unexpected winner at Pocono Raceway,
made up half of the six-point deficit that stood between him and a
spot in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.
Collected in a Lap 84 wreck near the exit from the Inner Loop at
Watkins Glen, Buescher finished 30th on Sunday and gained three
points on David Ragan, who is 30th in the series standings. With a
win in hand, Buescher must finish in the top 30 in the standings at
the end of the 26-race regular season to be eligible to compete in
the Chase.
In the aftermath of the wreck, Buescher wanted to stay in his car,
which had nosed into the outside barrier, but he couldn't keep it in
reverse. Finally, as NASCAR red-flagged the race for nearly 17
minutes, Buescher exited the car and made a trip to the infield care
center while the car was towed to the garage.
"From where I was, we barely caught the wall on the inside,"
Buescher said of the wreck. "Basically, the splitter hooked up in
the mud. I know when I ran off course, trying to avoid the 4 (Kevin
Harvick), it swung all kinds of grass over the car. I knew what the
issue was. I was just trying to get them (track workers) to push.
"We were sitting downhill. Splitter is caked up under mud. Actually
broke it loose. It was pretty packed. My hope was that we could be
pushed backwards (so he wouldn't have to leave the car). They don't
have any straps or anything to be able to hook to the back.
Basically, they're depending on being able to push the back bumper
to get you moving. We didn't have that opportunity.
"I get it. I mean, I get why they made me get out. I was just really
frustrated and tried really hard to stay in it so we could keep
rolling without losing any spots."
As it turned out, after NASCAR withdrew the red flag, Buescher's
crew repaired the car to the point where he could return to the
racetrack, and Buescher gained two positions -- and two points -- he
otherwise would not have had.
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Allmendinger disconsolate after wreching Kyle Larson
If it hadn't been for the final corner of the final lap on Sunday at
Watkins Glen, AJ Allmendinger would have enjoyed a proud moment,
battling back from an early pit road speeding penalty for a top-five
finish.
But the afternoon ended on a sour note when a tap from Allmendinger
sent Kyle Larson spinning into the inside barrier as the drivers
were battling in Turn 7 on the last lap. Allmendinger finished
fourth, but Larson dropped to 29th, with his Chase hopes taking a
serious blow.
"I turned him -- not on purpose," a rueful Allmendinger said after
the race. "The No. 78 (Martin Truex Jr.) started to spin, and Kyle
and I were racing for fifth there. He defended on the inside, which
he should have. And I tried to cut under him off of the last corner,
and the No. 78 was coming back across the racetrack. I was under
him. He turned. And I just clipped him.
"I'm just not very happy with myself on that. I don't want to do
that, especially for fourth place. And he did a great job. It's on
me. I never meant to do it. It's not going to help the case.
I know he's going to be ----ed off, and he should be ----ed off. I'd
be. I definitely cost us a chance to win this race (with the
speeding penalty). I tried to give everything I had to get it back.
I was going to be pretty happy with the drive back -- until I did
that in the last corner."
As Allmendinger predicted, the accident didn't sit well with Larson.
"We were about a 10th-place car, and we were going to get a top-five
day out of it," Larson said. "We were running sixth coming to (Turn)
7; the No. 47 was behind me. He is always aggressive. I figured he
would be smart. Obviously, the No. 78 was spinning in front of us.
That is a free spot for both of us, and (he) just dumped me. He had
already ran me down to the frontstretch wall once with about 15
(laps) to go or so.
"Pretty dumb move right there, too, but I was the smarter one racing
for points, lifted, could have wrecked him, but didn't. I don't
know. I don't know. He wrecked me earlier in the year at Vegas. He
has ran me hard, but we always race pretty well, but today was flat
out stupid.
"I love his crew chief (Randall Burnett) to death; he was our
engineer last year. It just sucks they are going to have to start
building some more race cars because he's got a few coming."
Watkins Glen announces sellout
During the driver meetings before Sunday's Cheez-It 355, Watkins
Glen International president Michael Printup announced a grandstand
sellout for the second consecutive season.
"This is a great testament to the passion and dedication our fans
have for Watkins Glen International," Printup said. "We're looking
forward to a great race and delivering an incredible experience that
keeps our fans coming back year after year."
In addition, the track also announced plans for a new viewing deck
outside the Esses (turns 2-4) in 2017.
Joe Gibbs, owner of the winning No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota,
acknowledged the massive turnout during a post-race interview
session with reporters.
"First of all, it's great to be able to come to New York and Watkins
Glen and race," Gibbs said. "I want to say congratulations to
everybody here. What impressed me a lot was that crowd. To have a
sellout crowd here is huge for our sport. It's big for all of our
sponsors. We had a number of them here with us this weekend."
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