NASCAR feuds take to Atlanta

Darrell Wallace Jr during media day for the NASCAR Daytona 500 auto race at Daytona International Speedway, Wednesday, Feb. 14, 2018, in Daytona Beach, Fla.
Darrell Wallace Jr during media day for the NASCAR Daytona 500 auto race at Daytona International Speedway, Wednesday, Feb. 14, 2018, in Daytona Beach, Fla.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- Austin Dillon is still celebrating his Daytona 500 victory and Bubba Wallace is relishing his sudden breakout as NASCAR's newest star.

Denny Hamlin? Well, he's in the middle of another feud, and it's only the second week of the season.

NASCAR moves from the Daytona 500 this weekend to Atlanta Motor Speedway with a bit of a hangover from the biggest party of its season.

Hamlin earned a call to the NASCAR hauler for a comment he made last week on the Barstool Sports podcast in which he claimed 70 percent of NASCAR drivers take the prescription drug Adderall to help with concentration.

Adderall is on NASCAR's banned substance list without a doctor prescription.

Hamlin claimed it was a joke made on an irreverent podcast, but Wallace didn't let it go after nudging Hamlin for second place in the Daytona 500. The two raced door-to-door to the finish, and Hamlin has repeatedly said the contact cut his tire.

But after his historic second-place finish -- Wallace was the first black driver in the Daytona 500 field since 1969 -- he took a shot at Hamlin for the final lap racing that in Hamlin's mind went too far.

"He might need to take some Adderall for that one," Wallace said on the Fox broadcast after he climbed from his car.

Told of the crack in his postrace news conference, Hamlin again maintained Wallace's contact had cut his tire. He didn't respond to the Adderall mention and exited the room.

Once outside the media center, he bumped into Wallace, and the two had a brief but heated exchange.

Public sentiment is on Wallace's side -- few fans have forgiven Hamlin since he wrecked Chase Elliott at Martinsville last fall -- and Hamlin angrily took to Twitter to tell his side of the story.

Hamlin late Tuesday night called his Twitter critics "idiots," and explained he had no beef about the ending of the race. His problem was the final question of his news conference, when he was asked for a response to Wallace's remark.

"I had no issue until not only did he place blame on me but then went on to make personal comments about myself. I left the media center and saw Bubba 30 secs later," Hamlin posted in a series of tweets.

"Anyone who wouldn't take offense to the stupid things that was said has absolutely no backbone. I have one," he concluded.

Wallace was dubious of Hamlin's take on the last-lap racing Sunday night, but believed the two would move on to Atlanta and be fine. He did, however, wonder if he was going to be kicked out of the Hamlin-led recreational basketball and golf leagues.

Turns out, though, that it wasn't just NASCAR that was annoyed with Hamlin's Adderall assessment.

Kevin Harvick used his Tuesday night SiriusXM show to note plenty of drivers are upset with Hamlin.

"Those 70 percent of drivers he referred to are mad," Harvick said. "Whether he thinks it was an off-the-cuff comment and something he meant to say or not to say, it still offended most everybody in the garage. If you're going to play around, joking and think it's not something that everybody is going to take offense to. I think he's probably seeing that nobody really appreciated it and it put everybody in a bad spot."

Angry drivers are just one of many things to keep an eye on at Atlanta.

There are so far only 36 cars entered for Sunday's race, which would make it the smallest field in decades. Only 39 cars competed at Atlanta last year, and that was the smallest field in 20 years.

NASCAR had allowed a maximum 43 cars starting in 1998, and hit that number until only 42 cars showed up at a 2014 race in Kentucky. Under the charter system, with only 36 cars guaranteed spots in the field, NASCAR cut the field to a maximum of 40 each week.

But the bulk of the purse goes to the chartered teams, and it's a financial burden for "open" cars to show up every week and fight for the remaining four slots in the field.

The new charter system meant that only 40 cars tried to make the Daytona 500, which made the qualifying races pointless because no driver was battling for a spot in the field. Asked about the small car counts at Daytona, NASCAR executive Steve O'Donnell said the series prefers a strong entry list over backmarkers and field fillers.

"I think it is one of the best fields we've had, it's deep," O'Donnell said. "In the future, would we like to see more? We probably would. But when you look across all of sports now, the idea of sending someone home with a major sponsor, it just doesn't happen in sports today. It's not just a reality for NASCAR, it's all motorsports, and sports in general."

Team owner Roger Penske also wasn't bothered by the field size.

"What we need is the continuity with all the same drivers and cars running across the whole season," he said. "I think this is really a sign of the times, and that's the way it's going to be."

photo

AP/JOHN RAOUX

Denny Hamlin looks up at the leaderboard after his qualifying run for the NASCAR Daytona 500 auto race at Daytona International Speedway, Sunday, Feb. 11, 2018, in Daytona Beach, Fla.

Sports on 02/22/2018

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