Johnson dominates Pocono for third 2013 victory
June 9, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
LONG POND, Pa.--It’s not a good idea to rile up Jimmie Johnson.
A
week after a penalty for jumping the final restart at Dover knocked
Johnson out of a near-certain victory, Johnson
absolutely scorched the field in Sunday’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
Party in the Poconos 400, beating Greg Biffle to the finish line by
1.208 seconds.
The win was Johnson’s third of the season, his third at the Tricky Triangle and the 63rd of his career.
Johnson increased his series lead over second-place Carl Edwards (18th Sunday) to a staggering 51 points after 14 races.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. ran third, followed by Stewart-Haas Racing teammates Tony Stewart and Ryan Newman. Kyle Busch, Kurt
Busch, Denny Hamlin, Kevin Harvick and Joey Logano completed the top 10.
"What
a race car!" Johnson said after climbing from the No. 48 Chevrolet in
Victory Lane. "Not only a great race car
but an engine. We had fuel mileage and plenty of power. It was awesome
on the straightaways today to be able to do what I wanted around other
cars.
"So hats off to chassis, aero and the engine shop for this awesome race car."
You might think winning at Pocono for the first time since he swept both races here in 2004 might assuage the sting
of last week’s penalty. You’d be wrong.
"No, but it’s OK," Johnson said. "It doesn’t make up for much, but we know we’re a great race team. Things won’t keep
us down. We had a great race car today and had a lot of fun. That was a lot of fun out there."
Johnson avoided a surfeit of action in the late stages of the race--because he was ahead of it. By the time Dave Blaney’s
spin brought out the fourth caution on Lap 138, the five-time champion already had led 106 laps.
That yellow followed a caution for an accident in the Tunnel Turn on Lap 133, when Juan Pablo Montoya drove hard into
the corner under Matt Kenseth, lost control of his No. 42 and started a synchronized spin with Kenseth.
Subsequently, Johnson had to endure four restarts but did so as the leader and quickly regained control of the race
in each instance. All told, Johnson led 128 of 160 laps.
Biffle was happy with a runner-up finish that jumped him three positions to 10th in the standings, but he
conceded that his No. 16 Ford was no match for Johnson’s Chevy SS.
"Jimmie
was in a league of his own," said Biffle, who took the green flag from
the fourth position on the final restart
with four laps left and surged past Earnhardt and Kyle Busch in the
first corner. "I was going to have to get up beside him, take the air
off him--something to try and gain an advantage.
"But I gave him such a good push on the restart I couldn’t catch back up with him... I couldn’t get him."
Though
Joe Gibbs Racing drivers Kyle Busch and Hamlin finished sixth and
eighth, respectively, Hamlin said he could
feel a reduction in horsepower in his TRD (Toyota Racing Development)
engine, after the engines were detuned in favor of reliability in
reaction to several recent valve train failures.
"Any
horsepower change is going to be a difficult thing to overcome,
especially this week and next week (at Michigan),
our two horsepower race tracks," Hamlin said. "I wouldn’t be opposed to
say that other guys probably stepped up coming to this race track, and
we took a step back.
"It’s kind of a double whammy, but it’s something TRD’s going to work through."
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