Jimmie Johnson wins 10th NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at Dover
May 31, 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DOVER, Del.—Jimmie Johnson, welcome to the club.
With
his overtime victory in Sunday’s FedEx 400 benefiting Autism Speaks at
Dover International Speedway, Johnson became the fifth driver to win 10
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races at a single track, joining Richard Petty,
David Pearson, Darrell Waltrip and Dale Earnhardt Sr. in sharing that
distinction.
Johnson’s
triumph was his series-best fourth of the season and the 74th of his
career, eighth most all-time and two behind NASCAR Hall of Famer
Earnhardt in seventh place.
Unlike
many of the six-time champion’s past victories at the Monster Mile,
this was not a dominating performance by the No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports
Chevrolet. Johnson led but 23 laps, and didn’t take the top spot until
he beat race runner-up Kevin Harvick to the stripe for a restart on Lap
383.
Johnson
quickly cleared Harvick and led the rest of the way, but not before a
caution for a wreck involving Clint Bowyer, Denny Hamlin and Kurt Busch
slowed the field on Lap 386. At that point, Johnson and Harvick were the
only two drivers to stay out on old tires, but Johnson was able to
maintain control of the race on the subsequent restart on Lap 391.
He
repeated the performance during a green-white-checkered-flag finish
that took the event five laps past its posted distance of 400, after a
wreck involving Greg Biffle, Casey Mears and AJ Allmendinger produced
the seventh caution on Lap 398 and forced the overtime.
After
the final restart on Lap 404, Johnson crossed the finish line .435
seconds ahead of Harvick, who posted his ninth top-2 finish in 13 races
this season and extended his series lead to 44 points over sixth-place
finisher Martin Truex Jr.
Johnson
said he was able to maintain the lead on old tires “just driving hard
and working that track bar adjuster as much as I could.
“I
was trying to be smart with my line and I guess guys on two tires
weren’t all that fast. (Crew chief) Chad (Knaus) said something to me
about that on the radio, and they never really came, you know? The No. 4
(Harvick) and I did just fine on old tires and held those guys off.”
Harvick, on the other hand, had no track bar to work with, because the in-car adjuster had broken during the race.
“Yeah,
we just struggled at the end of the race on restarts, really all day on
the restarts,” said Harvick, who led 91 laps but failed to get his
first victory at the high-banked concrete track. “Once the track bar
broke, we were pretty much in a box and just kind of had to hold on for
the first 25 laps (of a run), and if we weren't in the front, then we
struggled to just maintain what we had.
“All
in all, everybody did a great job, and I think when you look at Dover,
it's been a good race track for us. We've led laps and just haven't
quite finished it yet, but a good, solid day.”
Kyle
Larson ran fourth, followed by Kasey Kahne and Aric Almirola. Starting
on the outside of the front row next to Coors Lights Polesitter Denny
Hamlin, Truex led a race-high 131 laps—racking up most laps led in his
third straight Sprint Cup points race without winning.
Hamlin led 118 laps but was waylaid by the Lap 386 wreck and came home 21st, three laps down.
Notes:
Johnson has now led 2,999 laps at Dover, one shy of become the seventh
driver in Sprint Cup history to lead 3,000 laps at a single track… This
was only the second green-white-checkered-flag finish at Dover, the
first coming in the fall of 2005, and the first ever in the Sprint Cup
race at the Monster Mile… In his second race back from surgery to repair
his broken right leg and left foot, Kyle Busch was a fixture in the top
five until Brian Scott’s Chevrolet collided with Busch’s No. 18 Toyota
in Turn 3 on Lap 376. Busch finished 36th, suffering a setback to his
hopes of finishing in the top 30 in the regular-season standings. Busch
is now 40th, 168 points behind 30th-place Justin Allgaier.
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