DOVER, Del. — Denny Hamlin balked when a surfboard he was asked to sign for charity was placed on the floor. At his age, Hamlin cracked, he might not be able to get back up. The 44-year-old driver had similar aging concerns a night earlier when the picture on the TV he watched as he started to doze off seemed a bit fuzzy.
''I'm not losing my eyesight am I?'' Hamlin said.
Hamlin's vision was on point Sunday at Dover — his sights set firmly on victory lane.
Hamlin can eliminate distractions and succeed like few drivers in the series can can do: He shook off a setback in his court battle with NASCAR, shrugged off old tire concerns once he took a late lead ahead of a rain delay, and survived a late charge from his teammate to go back-to-back at Dover Motor Speedway for the Joe Gibbs Racing driver's series-best fourth victory of the season.
''I just love that I'm able to still do it at a high level,'' Hamlin said. ''Every morning when I wake up, I just hope I still got what I had yesterday.''
Hamlin won in the No. 11 Toyota for the second straight time at Dover to add to wins this season at Martinsville, Darlington and Michigan.
Hamlin has 58 NASCAR Cup Series victories, leaving him two short of Kevin Harvick for 10th on the career list. The veteran Virginia driver might hit that mark this season as he chases his first career Cup championship.
Hamlin is on NASCAR's short list of greatest drivers to never win a championship. He won't let the void on an otherwise stellar resume full of Hall of Fame credentials define how he feels about his career.