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Crew blunders hamstring Hamlin

LOUDON, N.H. - Denny Hamlin has had the fastest car in New Hampshire all weekend during practice for the second race in NASCAR's Chase for the Sprint Cup.

He has moved quickly in reverse, too.

Shortly after backtracking from a tweet in which he seemed to guarantee a win, Hamlin went out for qualifying with the wrong pressure in his tires. Although that left him 32nd in today's starting grid, Hamlin tried to sound positive about the second gaffe by his Joe Gibbs Racing crew in the Chase's first two weeks.

"If there was nothing wrong, then I would really be shaking my head," he said. "At least we identified what the problem was."

Tied with Brad Keselowski for the season victory lead with four, Hamlin is fourth in the points race after running out of gas and finishing 16th because his gas man failed to fill up the tank on the final pit stop in the Chase opener in Chicago. Hamlin brushed off the error, saying on Twitter: "This is week 1 of 10. We will win next week."

The tweet was interpreted as a bold guarantee of victory; one reporter compared it to Babe Ruth "calling his shot." But Hamlin said he simply was trying to put the mistake behind him and look forward.

"I feel like I can go win each and every one of them. Really it's nothing more than that," he said. "People were just taking it a little further than that, but I'm racing - doing the best I can - and that's all I'm going to do."

Hamlin has done pretty well in New Hampshire, winning in 2007 and finishing in the top three in four of the past six races. In July, he led 150 laps, but a miscommunication with crew chief Darian Grubb on the final pit stop over whether to change two tires or four left him mired deep in traffic.

Still, he made his way back to the front of the field before finishing second to Kasey Kahne.

"He was really strong here in July," said Jimmie Johnson, who is second in the points race and starting 20th today. "I've kind of put him down as the favorite."

Hamlin, the fastest in practice Friday and Saturday, will need a mistake-free run today to remain competitive in the Chase, especially heading into next week's race in Dover, Del. He never has finished better than fourth in 13 starts there, with more results in the bottom five than the top five.

"That's why Chicago was so disappointing, because we wanted to maintain or extend our lead there ... extend our lead here and then damage control at Dover," Hamlin said. "I think it's tough from my aspect that I have one weak racetrack in the Chase, but that's just part of it. I hope to excel that much better on my personal racetracks."

Jeff Gordon won the pole after barely qualifying for the Chase, then crashing with 80 laps left in Chicago to finish 35th. He was the only one of the 12 Chase drivers who didn't finish in the top 18.

"I think we surprised ourselves a little bit with this pole. ... So this was a big one. And, certainly, good timing," Gordon said. "We've had a lot of problems that have been frustrating, and we've had to battle through them. But our cars have been really, really fast. So that keeps your confidence as a driver in knowing that you can rebound."

Kyle Busch, who is not in the Chase, will join Gordon on the front row. Other Chase competitors starting near the front include Tony Stewart (third), Kasey Kahne (sixth) and Martin Truex Jr. (ninth).

Keselowski, the Chicagoland winner and points leader, will start in the eighth row. Hamlin is the farthest back of the 12 drivers competing in the Chase after the tire pressure issue in qualifying.

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