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Glum-Faced Denny Hamlin Disappointed By Phoenix Finish

About 50 yards away from Victory Lane, Denny Hamlin sat glumly on the pit wall and tossed a sports drink bottle to the ground in frustration.

"This is one of the bigger letdowns I've had," he said, and it was easy to understand why.

Hamlin did everything he was supposed to do on Sunday at Phoenix International Raceway: He ran up front, led the most laps of anyone and, if things had shaken out a little differently, was in position to take a commanding lead into the season finale at Homestead.

If there had been a late caution or his team had employed a different fuel mileage strategy, Hamlin wouldn't have finished 12th and seen his points lead trimmed from 33 to 15 over Jimmie Johnson.

In fact, he may have had a lead of 70 or 80 points if things had turned out differently.

So Hamlin was pissed, disappointed, frustrated – and wore the look of someone who had just lost the championship.

As reporters asked questions to the normally talkative Hamlin, the Joe Gibbs Racing driver said little.

Will it be hard to sleep with all that's on the line this week?

"No, I'll be alright," Hamlin said. "I'll be OK."

What do you think went wrong with the strategy?

"We were short on fuel and so we had to stop," he said flatly.

This one clearly stung. This one had the potential to ruin a driver's mental game. Will Hamlin let it affect him?

"Knowing that we had a very, very good points lead with 15 or 20 to go that quickly diminishes, it hurts," he said. "It hurts when you have a car that can possibly win."

But Hamlin pledged that when the wheels of his jet parted ways with the Arizona earth, he'd leave all the emotions associated with the Phoenix race behind as well. This setback, he said, would be used as motivation to fuel his fire at Homestead.

"I couldn't control (the outcome)," he said. "I did everything I was supposed to do today. Things didn't work out for me. All I can do is concentrate on next week once Monday comes and put it behind me."

He ended his answer by revealing what bothered him the most.

"I feel like we've been the best car over this Chase," he said, "and we might not win it."

Hamlin's strategy for Homestead? Simple: Go out and win. That's the most realistic way to secure his first Cup championship, he said.

"Full court press will be on," he said. "It will be one of those things where you'll probably see me as aggressive as I've been all year."

Asked again about the fuel strategy, Hamlin said he was never alerted that he needed to save fuel in the first place – so he never tried saving any. He figured everyone was going to have to pit.

They didn't.

"Like I said, I did my job," he said.

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Denny the Diva

So is Denny implying that the team didn’t do their job? Way to throw them under the bus there Denny. Perhaps your crappy fuel mileage had to do with your driving who knows. This isn’t the first time it is someone elses fault when Denny doesn’t get the finish he wants. The 48 may have switched pit crews but no one on the 48 ever said Jimmie’s finish was all because of the pit crew.

by Newracefan on Nov 14, 2010 8:01 PM EST reply actions  

Passion vs Good Manners

OK – Denny can be a diva but the kid really does hang it out there. If Jimmie wins the Cup for the 5th time he will politely thank Mr. Hendrick and his crew and Gordon’s crew and Lowes and the fans, his wife, his baby, etc. If either Denny or Kevin win I can see the new champion jumping out of his car screaming “Hell Yeah! – That’s what I’m talking about”. Imagine Mick Jagger in his rooster strutting prime prancing around Victory Lane screaming to the world that he was number ONE. Which would you rather see on Sunday? A little bit of passion never hurt anyone and I could use a little of that right now.

by LeelaB on Nov 16, 2010 11:21 AM EST reply actions  

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