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Wallace and Hamlin: A Necessary Conversation After Kansas
- May 28, 2022; Concord, North Carolina, USA; NASCAR Cup Series driver Bubba Wallace (23) and driver Denny Hamlin (11) talk during Nascar Cup qualifying at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Mandatory Credit: Jim Dedmon-USA TODAY Sports

When Bubba Wallace walked into the media center at Charlotte Motor Speedway, you just knew the questions were coming. Last weekend in Kansas was a rough one. Getting put into the wall by your own team’s co-owner, Denny Hamlin, while you’re both fighting for a win? That’s the kind of thing that stews. Wallace tried to break the ice with a joke about getting in trouble in class, but you could see the frustration was still there, simmering right below the surface.

“It was definitely a somber week, for sure, and I hate that it got to that point,” Wallace admitted, and the room seemed to exhale with him. The incident wasn’t just another racing deal; it felt personal. It was a tough pill to swallow for the whole 23XI Racing team, and honestly, for the entire Toyota camp. They had a real shot at a win, and it slipped away in a mess of tangled emotions and bent sheet metal.

Wallace on That “Heart-to-Heart” with Hamlin

Just when everyone was ready to dig into the drama, Wallace threw a curveball. He and Hamlin had just talked. Not a quick “we’re good” nod on pit road, but a real, sit-down, man-to-man conversation.”Denny and I just talked 30 minutes ago and it was a good heart-to-heart conversation, came from a place of peace,” Wallace explained.

He even admitted it went better than he expected. It sounds like Wallace went in ready for a fight but found common ground instead. He told Hamlin straight up, “Just so you know, I’m not mad about getting fenced going for the win.” That probably threw Hamlin for a loop. One minute he’s bracing for an earful, the next he’s trying to figure out where the conversation is actually going.

Wallace gets it. Racing is racing. He said, “I don’t fault Denny Hamlin for racing for a win, racing for his team, his sponsors.” When you’re on the track, your boss is just another competitor you need to beat. That’s the mindset of a winner. But the real issue wasn’t the fence. It was the silence that followed.

How Post-Race Actions Fueled the Fire for Wallace

The week between Kansas and Charlotte was a long one. Hamlin went on his podcast, and the headline, “I won’t apologize,” spread like wildfire. For Wallace, that just added insult to injury. It wasn’t about the on-track move anymore. It was about respect and how things were handled afterward.

“It was just the way it was kind of handled behind the scenes. Just kept going, kept adding fuel to the fire,” Wallace said. He needed that conversation. He needed to clear the air so he could focus on the massive task ahead: making it to the next round of the playoffs. Being 26 points out is a deep hole, and you can’t climb out of it with a “dark cloud” hanging over your head.

For his part, Hamlin seemed to finally get it. “I didn’t know he was upset,” he admitted. He thought a simple acknowledgment on pit road was enough. But after listening to Wallace, he understood. “It just took a 15-minute talk to kind of hear each other’s perspectives, and truthfully, I understand his perspective after listening.” Sometimes, just listening is the most important thing you can do.

What This Means for Wallace and the Playoffs

Now, the two of them have to move forward. Wallace has a mountain to climb at the Roval. It’s an elimination race, and he needs a miracle performance on a road course to keep his championship hopes alive. The talk with Hamlin was a necessary reset, a way to shed the baggage from Kansas and get his head back in the game.

It’s a tough spot for Hamlin to be in, juggling his own ambition for a 60th win against the success of the team he co-owns. As Wallace put it, “There’s a lot of layers to all of that.” In the heat of the moment, a driver is just a driver, going for the win. However, the consequences of those split-second decisions can ripple out and affect a great deal more.

The conversation happened. They aired it out. However, the fallout from Kansas is not yet over. One of their playoff runs could very well end this weekend, and the ghost of that final corner will be lingering, a stark reminder of how quickly things can change in this sport. Wallace has to put it all behind him and drive the race of his life.

This article first appeared on Total Apex Sports and was syndicated with permission.

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