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WEEK IN REVIEW
Thursday


After teen golfer's heart stopped, life gave hi...
Rising oil prices mean county's paying more to ...
Ferry fans hope it'll be given second life
Wednesday


Sultan man's 9-year fight over cleanup ends in ...
Worker accused of faking cancer to steal from s...
Could an earthquake disaster like China's happe...
Tuesday


Without $75,000, Everett Theatre faces closure
Man accused of stealing $450,000 from Coinstar ...
Dino Rossi leads fundraising race in Snohomish ...
Monday


A man without a heartbeat: Everett firefighter ...
Everett man accused of running sex ring faces t...
Republican's YouTube ode to superdelegates
Sunday


My life and bylines: Stories of a lifetime in news
Marysville teenager killed amid chase was sober...
Sent to cheer U.S. soldiers, teddy bear is lost...
Saturday


Heroism emerges from Everett apartment fire
Snohomish rapist surrenders in Arkansas
At 100, he's still throwing a lot of strikes
Friday


Ailing boy makes a wish, and Boeing delivers
Construction set to begin on 'giant cow's stoma...
Barack Obama wins Rick Larsen's backing
 

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Kevin Brown, Sports Editor
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Published: Friday, May 2, 2008

NASCAR Nationwide: Hamlin surges after late-race tire call

RICHMOND, Va. — Local favorite Denny Hamlin used a late pit stop for tires to foil the strategy of fellow NASCAR stars Kevin Harvick and Carl Edwards, blowing by them to win the Nationwide Series race at Richmond International Raceway on Friday night.

Harvick and Edwards dominated the race all night, but when the sixth caution flew with 22 laps to go, Hamlin gave up his fourth-place position to head to pit road for tires. When everyone behind him followed, leaving Harvick, Edwards and No. 3 Mike Bliss as the only cars still out on the track, Hamlin emerged still running fourth and with brand new traction.

He didn't waste any time, blowing by Bliss and then Edwards on lap 241, the first after another restart, and then ducking underneath Harvick at the start-finish line on lap 242.

Hamlin quickly built a huge lead, but when another caution came out with three laps left, it allowed Kyle Busch to get right up on Hamlin's bumper for a two-lap dash to the finish.

It didn't matter, and the resident of nearby Chesterfield again pulled away with ease for his sixth career victory in the series and his first at the track 15 miles from his home.

"It's unbelievable," Hamlin said after climbing from his Toyota in a storm of confetti in Victory Lane. "This is my biggest win, Cup, anything. It doesn't matter. This is my biggest win by far. It means a lot to finally break through in Richmond."

Earlier Friday, Hamlin also won the pole for Saturday night's Sprint Cup Series race and said winning the pole at his home track was like winning a race anywhere else.

The victory was also the third in a row in the series for the No. 20 car fielded by Joe Gibbs Racing, and Hamlin was the third different driver to win in the Camry. Kyle Busch won in the car in Mexico, and Tony Stewart won in it last week at Talladega.

Harvick wound up second, followed by Busch, David Ragan and Steve Wallace.

Series points leader Clint Bowyer was never a factor in the race, finishing ninth, and saw Edwards close to within nine in the standings. Busch is third, just 12 off the pace.

Busch and Wallace had words after Wallace nudged Busch out of the way on the last lap and then went wide as Busch passed him back. They exchanged sharp barbs when it was over.

"I basically told him if you mess with a bull, you're going to get the horns, and then he wanted to grab my helmet, which is pretty childish," Busch said of his confrontation with Wallace at Wallace's car. "If he wants to play those games, he's going to get hurt."

Wallace said he didn't know what Busch was saying during their confrontation.

"He's just a little girl about it. I don't know. I think it's pretty bad when they call driver introductions and everybody in the grandstand boos you. He's a sore loser," he said.

For most of the night, it looked like a two-car race.

Harvick edged Edwards off pit road with 107 laps to go and was dominant until the sixth of eight cautions came with 22 laps to go, and he, Edwards and Bliss stayed out.

"I've been caught on both sides of that," he said of the strategy call. "I figured more would stay out, and it only wound up being three or four."

Edwards, the defending series champ, wound up seventh, just behind David Stremme.

"They had like 10 cars between us and the guy behind us, so they all got time to think about what they were going to do," Edwards said of the decision to pit. "By watching the leaders stay out, it's an easy decision then. I should have pitted. It's just a mistake."

Pole-sitter Kasey Kahne led the first 17 laps before Edwards, who started second, passed for the top spot. He kept it until the leaders headed for the pits after a spin in the second turn, seeing a lead of more than 2.6 seconds over Harvick evaporate in a cloud of smoke.

Shortly thereafter, Harvick grabbed the lead by beating Edwards off pit road.

Kahne, meanwhile, was running in the top 10 when he spun with 84 laps to go.


1. Illegal subsidies in Air Force tanker deal?
2. Police investigate shooting on Highway 99 in Lynnwood
3. After teen golfer's heart stopped, life gave him another shot
4. Alleged police impostor arrested
5. Free today: Southern-style chicken sandwiches at McDonald's
6. Remaking Casino Road
7. Ferry fans hope it'll be given second life
8. Man gets 30 years for death of cellmate at Washington State Reformatory in Monroe
9. PREP 4A BOYS TRACK: Snohomish High's Marlyn Anderson outthrows the field to win the shot put and follow in the footsteps of his father and uncle
10. Rising oil prices mean county's paying more to pave
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