Hamlin turns tables on Harvick,
gets sixth Pocono win
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[June 29, 2020]
In Saturday's first race of the
weekend's NASCAR Cup Series doubleheader at Pocono Raceway, Denny
Hamlin's shot at victory came apart when his car developed a
vibration in the late going. On Sunday, Hamlin went vibration-free
and the result was a victory in the nightcap.
Despite weather delays forcing the Pocono 350 to conclude with the
sun sunk below the Pennsylvania horizon at the light-less 2.5-mile
triangle track in Long Pond, Hamlin became the winningest active
driver at Pocono and tied Jeff Gordon for the most all-time Cup wins
at the track with six.
"I mean, six. I can't put into any words how much it means to me,"
Hamlin, who started off the season with a win in the Daytona 500.
The victory was also the series-leading fourth of the year for the
Joe Gibbs Racing driver.
Credit, he said, goes to people who were several states away.
"This is work that happens in the shop," Hamlin said. "Way beyond
what happens on race day."
In Saturday's race, Stewart-Haas Racing's Kevin Harvick held Hamlin
off to get the win. On Sunday, the situation was reversed as it was
Harvick who just could not track down Hamlin over the final laps and
had to settle for second place.
"Hoping for no caution," Hamlin said of being able to stay in front
of Harvick over the final laps. "I knew we had the car and I just
kind of maintained my gap there and didn't want to make any mistakes
like I did at Bristol and gave that one away."
The margin of victory was just over 3 seconds.
Harvick said his Sunday car was actually better than his winning car
on Saturday. But Hamlin's team strategy to stay out long before
taking his final pit stop made the difference.
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NASCAR Cup
Series driver Kevin Harvick (4) races driver Matt DiBenedetto (21)
during the Pocono Organics 325 at Pocono Raceway. Mandatory Credit:
Matthew OHaren-USA TODAY Sports
"He (Hamlin) did the opposite of what we did," Harvick said. "We
didn't want to get caught on a caution and wound up losing a little
bit too much time in lapped traffic with all the cars that hadn't
pitted and he was out there running clean laps and waited right to
the very end (to pit) and wound up in front of us."
Finishing third was Erik Jones, Hamlin's teammate, followed by Chase
Elliott of Hendrick Motorsports Aric Almirola, Harvick's teammate.
Kyle Busch's disappointing season continued when, on Lap 76, the
defending series champion who has gone winless so far this season
tangled with Ryan Blaney. Busch spun and slammed the infield wall,
ending his race.
"We're in 2020 so it doesn't surprise me to get crashed out," Busch
said on the Fox broadcast. "I don't know what happened but it
doesn't make any sense to talk about it."
Once again, bad weather forced a delay in the action. Lightning
strikes near the track during the pace laps forced the race to start
about 40-minutes later than scheduled. The cars went back on the
track but after four laps, rain started. That led to a 50-minute red
flag stoppage.
At about 6 p.m. Eastern, the cars headed back onto the track under
yellow. At 6:15, the green flag restarted the race.
--Field Level Media
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