Jimmie Johnson adds another record to Hall of Fame credentials
May 19, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
A
cursory glance at Jimmie Johnson’s racing resume will tell you that the
driver of the No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet is a lock to make
the NASCAR Hall of Fame.
But
Johnson is still writing history, and in Saturday night’s Sprint
All-Star Race at Charlotte Motor Speedway, he added another gaudy tile
to his mosaic of accomplishment.
Johnson now owns the record for most All-Star Race wins with four, breaking a tie with Dale Earnhardt Sr. and Jeff Gordon.
Johnson
is the only driver in the history of the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series to
win five-straight championships, the last one coming in 2010. In fact,
no other driver had ever
won more than three straight, and only one driver—Cale Yarborough—had
accomplished that trifecta before Johnson came along.
A
winner of 62 Cup points races in 410 starts, Johnson already is eighth
on the all-time list. Remember, this is a man who got a relatively late
start, by modern standards,
to his career at NASCAR’s highest level.
He was
26 when he finished his first full season of Cup racing in fifth place
in the standings. In the 10 seasons since then, he has won the title
five times, finished second
twice, third once, fifth once and sixth once.
This
year, he tops the standings again through 11 races, with a massive
44-point lead over second-place Carl Edwards. And where four-time
champion Gordon, the man who lobbied
for Johnson’s hiring at Hendrick, is talking about losing a step at age
41, Johnson, who is just four years younger, is still exploring the
depth of his talent.
Yet we
don’t appreciate Johnson as much as we should, in part because he makes
what he does seem so effortless—and in part because he’s a legitimate
threat to the iconic records
of drivers who are revered throughout the NASCAR fan base, specifically
the record seven championships of Richard Petty and Dale Earnhardt.
Self-effacing,
non-controversial and businesslike, Johnson doesn’t have the
larger-than-life presence that Petty and Earnhardt exuded in their
heydays. Nevertheless, there’s
an enormity to Johnson’s accomplishments.
There
are those who discount Johnson’s record, citing the importance of crew
chief Chad Knaus to the equation. It’s true that Knaus is essential to
Johnson’s success, but the
same could be said of the driver/crew chief relationships of other
icons of the sport, relationships that were necessary to form the
critical mass that produced greatness.
Petty had his Dale Inman. Earnhardt had his Kirk Shelmerdine. David Pearson had his Leonard Wood. Gordon had his Ray Evernham.
There’s
justifiable pride, but no braggadocio, in Johnson. He’d prefer to let
his record do the talking, and it will. Asked about his legacy after
Saturday’s race, Johnson’s
reply was predictably modest.
“Truthfully
I don't think it's a question that I'm to answer,” he said. “I still
have a lot of years left in my career, and that's something that the
public, the mass… that's
what other people come up with. I don't think it's right for me to sit
here and say, ‘Hey, I'm this guy, I'm the guy or anything in-between.
“Very
proud of what I've accomplished, but I still feel like there's a lot
left I can do in this sport, and I'll work hard to do that. When I'm
old, sitting in a rocking chair,
hopefully people think highly of what I've done and give me a tip of
the hat.”
In all
probability, Johnson won’t have to wait that long. If the major story of
2013 is the introduction NASCAR’s new Gen-6 race car, the focus of 2014
is likely to be Johnson’s
quest for a record-tying seventh Sprint Cup title.
The King and the Intimidator may have to make room for Jimmie.
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