Denny Hamlin storms back to win at
Las Vegas after early penalty
[March 16, 2026]
By JENNA FRYER
LAS VEGAS (AP) — Denny Hamlin returned to victory lane at Las Vegas
Motor Speedway on Sunday for his first win since he lost the NASCAR
championship four months ago, and first since the death of his
father in a December house fire.
“I knew it took a few weeks to feel like driving,” Hamlin said after
his 61st career victory. “Over the last couple weeks, I definitely
regained my love of it, got refocused. These are great opportunities
for us.”
Hamlin's 60th career victory was at Las Vegas last October, a win he
dedicated to his father as it locked Hamlin into NASCAR's
championship-deciding finale. His father was in poor health and
Hamlin went into the race knowing it was probably his final chance
to win a championship while Dennis Hamlin was still alive.
Then Hamlin dominated last year's title-decider at Phoenix Raceway
but the wrong call on the final pit stop cost him the Cup
championship that has eluded the three-time Daytona 500 winner.
What followed was an emotional rollercoaster: Hamlin, as co-owner of
23XI Racing, was part of the winning team in a federal lawsuit
against NASCAR last December. Weeks later, his father was killed in
a fire that destroyed the home Hamlin purchased to thank his parents
for getting him into NASCAR.
He returned for the start of his 21st season and went to victory
lane as an owner with Tyler Reddick when the 23XI Racing driver won
the Daytona 500 and then set a NASCAR record by winning the first
three races of the year.
Most of the attention went to 23XI co-owner Michael Jordan as
Reddick won Daytona, Atlanta and Circuit of the Americas.

Hamlin did his part at Las Vegas to put himself back in the
spotlight.
“It is just so satisfying, so gratifying. You just never know what
can happen year over year if you still have it or not," said Hamlin.
“I wasn’t totally locked in for the first few weeks. We’ve just been
hitting our stride now. This is our bread and butter, these are the
tracks that we know we can go win, and we executed. This is a team
win. The team did it.”
The 45-year-old Virginia driver overcome an early speeding penalty
and drove from 31st through the field in a fairly dominating win for
Joe Gibbs Racing and Toyota. He led a race-high 134 laps.
Hamlin was joined by his fiancee and their three children as he
collected the checkered flag, and he was sure his father was smiling
somewhere.
“This is a family sport. My family obviously had so much sacrifice
to help me get here,” said Hamlin. “Now that I’ve grown, generations
of Hamlins following me, it’s great Mom gets to see this. I know
Dad’s still saying, ‘That’s my boy.’ Hell of a day.”
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Denny Hamlin (11) performs a burnout after winning a NASCAR Cup
Series auto race at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Sunday, March 15,
2026, in Las Vegas. (AP Photo/Steve Marcus)

Team owner Joe Gibbs' praised Hamlin's resilience.
“He’s been through a lot. Denny seems to have the ability to
continue to work through things,” said Gibbs. “Has a way of just
really still being very competitive. I appreciate him so much. We’re
riding Denny for about 20 years. It’s been an awful good trip for
us.”
Toyota has won four of the first five races.
Hendrick Motorsports teammates Chase Elliott and William Byron
finished second and third in Chevrolets; JGR drivers Christopher
Bell and Ty Gibbs were fourth and fifth to give JGR three cars in
the top-five.
"It makes my job really easy when I can drive Toyotas that fast,”
Hamlin said.
Gibbs on a roll
It was the third consecutive top-five finish for Gibbs, who is a
central figure in a federal lawsuit filed by JGR against former
competition director Chris Gabehart. The two sides are back in court
in North Carolina on Monday as JGR seeks a restraining order to stop
Gabehart for working for rival Spire Motorsports.
“Just don't want to be in court,” said team owner Gibbs. “But we're
going to be there. I think it's important for us to follow through
with this.”
Gabehart has said his time at JGR became untenable in part because
of preferential treatment toward Gibbs, who is the grandson of the
team owner.
JGR alleges Gabehart stole proprietary information before he left
the team, and had a non-compete clause that prevents him from
joining another team. Gabehart claims JGR stopped paying him in
November and the role he now has with Spire is completely different
from what he did for Gibbs.
Gabehart was at the track Sunday with Spire, which at Las Vegas had
its trucks parked next to the JGR trucks.
Up next
The Cup Series races Sunday at Darlington Raceway in South Carolina.
Joe Gibbs Racing dominated at the track last year — Hamlin won in
April and Chase Briscoe in August.
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