“The common-sense approach to this should have been obvious.” But is it always? Ty Gibbs is one name who often does not care about what the obvious is. There are instances when the racers put the team position over self-glory throughout, such as in the Atlanta race this season, when Hendrick Motorsports’ Alex Bowman not only gave his teammate Chase Elliott a chance to win the race but also helped Elliot pass Brad Keselowski on the last lap, which gave the No. 9 car the victory. Such self-sacrificing actions show the fine line between personal ambition and group ambitions in a game where affiliations are capable of winning championships. However, once that equilibrium breaks, it creates a lot of suspicion throughout the garage.
The last playoff race at the New Hampshire Motor Speedway reversed the order of things when the Joe Gibbs Racing teammates Denny Hamlin and Ty Gibbs collided on lap 110. Fifth in the standings with five wins in the year, Hamlin drove with playoff intensity in search of his first title, and Gibbs, in need of his maiden Cup win, fought back, shooting ahead like his Sonoma pit-road collision with Brad Keselowski’s crew. This conflict roused the keen attention of the legends of the sport, like the Hall of Famer and two-time Daytona 500 winner Dale Earnhardt Jr., whose incisive insight gets to the nub of the team-building process. His reflection is still new, but there is more going on below the surface.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. was not afraid of tearing the New Hampshire event between Denny Hamlin and Ty Gibbs into tiny fragments, laying the blame squarely on the history of Gibbs’ questionable teammate decisions on his dirtymomedia Instagram post. “Was it necessary for Denny to wreck him into the wall? Um, nah, probably not, but damn it gotta look at Ty’s history. He’s not been a great teammate at times,” Earnhardt said. He highlighted the 2022 race at Martinsville, where Gibbs crashed his teammate, Brandon Jones, in the final lap to secure the victory, despite the fact that Jones was fighting to be in the race for the championship, even forcing the team owner Joe Gibbs to comment on internal etiquette.
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This, Earnhardt contended, was a trend where Gibbs puts himself above the squad, but this is particularly detrimental when Hamlin is in the playoffs, fighting to earn points. Earnhardt sided with Hamlin and pointed out that non-playoff drivers such as Gibbs were expected to give way to their teammates in pursuit of a title because it was in the best interest of the entire organization, including crew chiefs and engineers. “You’re our teammate like you’ll totally let him go. If I’m racing my teammate and he’s in the playoffs and I’m not, like, I’m not even thinking about him in the car; I’m letting him go.”
With his playing experience and playoff insurance of 27 points above the cutline, Hamlin had to have all possible advantages at NHMS, and a mid-race scuffle over mid-pack position seemed unnecessary. Earnhardt referred to the entire episode as “silly” because Gibbs would not relent, and even though Gibbs had a faster car before, the greater good of Joe Gibbs Racing being championship contenders was overlooked.
This was reiterated by co-host TJ Majeski, who continued to press on the subject of team loyalty: “At the end of the day though, don’t you look at the big picture and be like, ‘Hey, at the end of these are my teammates.'” reinforcing that Gibbs’ mindset clashed with NASCAR norms where playoff contenders get deference.
Afterwards, Gibbs did not give it much thought, informing the media that “it’s unfortunate, but I’m excited to go race next week,” avoiding the rift within the team. This reaction merely fueled worries of his development, and this was further heightened when the Martinsville precedent was reached when he confessed to “selfish actions,” but there was no action taken against him, and in this case, JGR must find a way of dealing with this kind of tension in the Cup Series.
This dust-settling skirmish of a teammate brings up larger issues of loyalty and growth in powerhouse teams. All the same, behind the frustration, the storyline is interesting enough, NASCAR-wise, with its implicit innuendoes.
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