Cool-Down Lap
Jimmie Johnson feeling the heat as Chase heads for Dover
Sept. 23, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
LOUDON, N.H. -- Why is Jimmie Johnson feeling pressure when the statistics say he shouldn't be?
After
all, Johnson posted a fourth-place finish in Sunday's SYLVANIA 300 at
New Hampshire Motor Speedway, the second race in the Chase
for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.
Combined
with his fifth-place result in the Chase opener at Chicagoland, that's
an average finish of 4.5. The best average finish for
any driver in a 10-race Chase is the 4.9 Carl Edwards pegged in 2011.
Edwards,
of course, lost that championship to Tony Stewart on a tiebreaker
because Stewart won five races in the Chase and used the
accompanying bonus points to forge the tie. That underscored the
importance of victories in the Chase, and that may be one reason why
Johnson enters Sunday's race at Dover with a Victory-Lane-or-bust
attitude.
Another concrete reason is that Matt Kenseth won the first two Chase races and holds an 18-point lead over third-place Johnson.
"Yes,
to open with a five-four is great," Johnson said after Sunday's race.
"One-one, like Matt has, is a lot better, but we're in a
good spot. We haven't given up too many points, and we're going to one
of my best race tracks next week in Dover.
"So I certainly hope to have this Lowe's Chevrolet in Victory Lane over there."
Kenseth
started the Chase with a three-point edge over Johnson, based on five
wins in the first 26 races to Johnson's four. In the first
two Chase races, Johnson has dropped 15 more points to the series
leader, but should he really be worried?
History says no.
Never
mind that Johnson has been through the pressure cooker of the Chase
more often than any other driver. Never mind that he won five
straight championships from 2006 through 2010 and has never finished
worse than sixth in the final standings.
Never mind that Johnson is the most prolific winner of races in the Chase -- ever.
Here
are the stats that should comfort him. At only one of the final eight
tracks in the Chase does Kenseth have a better career average
finish than Johnson. That would be Texas, where Kenseth edges Johnson
8.5 to 9.1.
At
every other speedway, Johnson has the advantage. Cumulatively,
Johnson's average finish at the final eight tracks in the Chase is
10.2, which trumps Kenseth's 14.9 decisively. Take the average
difference of 4.7 positions, multiply it by 8 races, and you have 37.6
points -- more than enough to overcome Kenseth's 18-point lead.
Small
wonder that Johnson was pointing out the positives after Sunday's race,
noting that his performance at New Hampshire bodes well
for the penultimate Chase race at Phoenix, another one-mile flat track.
"We're
getting into the meat of the Chase where there are some great tracks
for this Chevrolet that I'm driving, and all these (crew)
guys (are) working so hard to make it fast," Johnson said.
So why is Johnson feeling the stress of chasing Kenseth, and why does he feel a victory at Dover is essential?
Simply put, Kenseth's past statistics are meaningless, because Kenseth isn't having an average year.
Four
of Kenseth's series-best seven wins this season have come at tracks
where he had never won before, including the first two Chase
venues, Chicagoland and New Hampshire. When Kenseth moved from Roush
Fenway Racing to Joe Gibbs Racing this year, he brought with him a
wealth of experience and knowledge.
At
JGR, he has benefitted from new science, not to mention input from
talented teammates Kyle Busch and Denny Hamlin. Crew chief Jason
Ratcliff has blossomed in partnership with a driver of Kenseth's
stature, and the two have formed a juggernaut that's greater than the
sum of the parts.
That's
why the history that should comfort Johnson brings no joy. That's why
the five-time champ knows that victories and their accompanying
bonus points are essential to eat into Kenseth's lead.
Rumor has it that there's a new device installed on the dashboard of Johnson's car for the Dover race -- a panic button.
If he doesn't win at the Monster Mile and doesn't make a dent in Kenseth's advantage, it may well be time to push it.
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