At a track where he has enjoyed more success than any active NASCAR driver, history awaits Denny Hamlin at Bristol Motor Speedway.

The Joe Gibbs Racing driver will make his 400th consecutive start in the Cup Series and the 36th of his career at the 0.533-mile oval in Bristol, Tennessee. Hamlin has a circuit-leading four victories at the short track nestled in an area known as “Thunder Valley” near the Tennessee-Virginia state line.

With its high-banked concrete surface ringed by 146,000 seats, Bristol bills itself as “The Last Great Colosseum,” and Hamlin has been on a gladiatorial roll with consecutive victories at Martinsville Speedway and Darlington Raceway. With his next win, he would become the winningest driver in Joe Gibbs Racing history (breaking a tie with Kyle Busch at 56 wins) and join teammate Christopher Bell by notching the second three-race winning streak this season.

“I try not to psych myself out too much about it because I think you sometimes put so much emphasis on those type of situations, and you end up making silly mistakes,” Hamlin said. “I just try to be as even keeled as I can. It is a new week. It is another great opportunity to win another race. If it just so happens that it is three in a row, that would be awesome and a very proud moment in my career, but it is not something that we set out to do each and every week.”

Hamlin also is tempering expectations because often “the stars have to align perfectly” as they did at Darlington. He seized the win by leading only 10 of 297 laps, including the last six after a swift pit stop catapulted his No. 11 Toyota into the lead and past Rusty Wallace into 11th on NASCAR’s all-time win list.

He has been more dominant at Bristol, winning by leading at least 142 laps in two of the past three races. After his Sept. 16, 2023, victory, Hamlin taunted the Bristol crowd with “I beat your favorite driver. All of them,” and he will be sure to hear some jeers raining down again today when he will start fourth.

“You definitely hear the cheers and the boos,” said Joey Logano, who has recovered from a norovirus bout to take aim at a third Bristol win. “They’re much more in your face. It’s cool. It kind of brings a little bit more of the stadium environment that other sports get to enjoy a little bit more.”

Hamlin, 44, has fed off that crowd energy for 20 years in NASCAR while pursuing his elusive first title.

“My drive is still there,” he said. “Obviously, the performance is there. I’m just going to keep trying to win all that I can in this window when it is still there.”

For the second time this season, Hendrick driver Alex Bowman will start from the pole position today with tire wear expected to be a major factor in the 500-lap race at Bristol.

Ricky Stenhouse Jr. qualified second, followed by Kyle Larson, Hamlin and Ryan Blaney.

“It’s going to be treacherous,” Stenhouse said after a two-hour practice and qualifying session marked by excessive tire wear.

NASCAR XFINITY

Hendrick Motorsports’ Larson dominated the NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Bristol Motor Speedway on Saturday, leading 276 of 300 laps on the way to victory lane.

“Just another really good car,” Larson said. “Thanks to Adam Wall (crew chief), HMS for what they do and JR Motorsports, as well. They’re, obviously, all really fast this year, so it makes it a lot of fun. I just love this place, especially in Xfinity. You can move around, and traffic is just a lot of fun. Just felt like when I could get to traffic, I could get to picking people off. But Justin (Allgaier) did a good job kind of hanging with me, there, that last run. The pressure was on a little bit. We just had a good enough car to get into the lead, stay in the lead, and be good enough in traffic.”

Carson Kvapil got by JR Motorsports teammate Justin Allgaier in the closing laps to finish second. JRM drivers finished second through fourth with Sammy Smith in fourth.

Brandon Jones finished in fifth with Jesse Love, Ryan Sieg, Corey Heim, Christian Eckes and Dean Thompson completing the top 10.

Larson lost the lead to Allgaier on a lap-182 restart but retook the position on lap 191.

The yellow flag waved five times throughout the race. The final caution came out on lap 212 when Madon Massey spun because of contact with Allgaier. During that caution, William Sawalich and Connor Zilisch made contact.

Sam Mayer won the 85-lap opening stage, and Ryan Sieg was second after using pit strategy to get up front late in the stage.

Larson started on the pole and led nearly the entire first stage until he gave up the position to pit during a caution.