Jimmie Johnson ties Petty and Allison with win in "FedEx 400 benefiting Autism Speaks"
By Brian Smith, Dover International Speedway
June 3, 2012
Dover, Del. -- Jimmie Johnson won three of
the four races at Dover International Speedway in 2009 and 2010, so when
he didn’t win either event last year, it was almost a strange thing to
see.
But Johnson ended that drought and made some
history Sunday when he drove to the win in the “FedEx 400 benefitting
Autism Speaks” NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race. It was his seventh victory
at the Monster Mile, which ties Bobby Allison and
Richard Petty for the most wins ever at Dover.
Johnson shared his usual Lowes Chevrolet with the
new movie “Madagascar 3,” which comes out this Wednesday, and as part of
the promotion spent a lot of time wearing a rainbow-colored afro wig
that’s prominently featured in the film. Safe
to say that if you’re going to do a lot of that, you’d better be ready
to back it up with a win, which is what Johnson did. He dominated most
of the race, leading 289 of the 400 laps, including the final 76.
“I’m just proud of this hair,” Johnson joked after
the race. “It’s really brought some speed to the team. I could see our
engine tuner who catches the front tires as they come across on the pit
stops with [the wig] on today, and I got a
laugh every time I came on to pit road.
“It was just a fun day. Clearly we had a fast race
car, amazing pit stops. When you lead the most laps, sometimes at the
end the way the cautions fall, it can backfire on the dominant car. The
way the cautions fell today, it allowed us
to really flex our muscle and bring home the win.”
But even still, Johnson needed some luck. The one
car he couldn’t quite match was teammate Jeff Gordon, and as the race
entered its final 100 laps, Gordon quickly opened a lead of more than
five seconds over Johnson. Gordon took a green-flag
pit stop at lap 324, hoping to make it the rest of the way after that
and cycle back to the front. But the plan backfired 16 laps later when a
caution came out for debris, stranding Gordon nearly two laps down. He
couldn’t recover enough to become a threat
and finished 13th.
“The fastest car doesn’t always win the race,” Gordon said. “And we’re sitting here in 13th or whatever; it’s silly.”
Johnson, who started on the outside of the front
row, jockeyed for position with pole-sitter Mark Martin through the
first 70 laps and again after a cycle of green-flag pit stops ended on
lap 75. But once Johnson took the lead on lap 85,
he didn’t relinquish it for 126 miles.
During that time, Gordon started to creep up on his
teammate, and finally caught him on lap 211. Gordon and Johnson then
traded the lead on and off until lap 244, when Gordon was forced to pit
road by a vibration that ended up being a loose
left rear wheel.
Johnson took the next 49 laps, but after a set of
green-flag stops wrapped up on lap 298, Gordon jumped out ahead of
everyone and began to drive away – only to be undone by the cautions.
Overall, the situation left Gordon understandably
frustrated.
“I can’t wait to see that debris on TV,” Gordon
said. “I’d like to see it because I certainly never saw it. I’m not
going to make any comments until I see what their reasoning for it was.”
Gordon did try to find a silver lining in the problem with his left-rear wheel.
“It didn’t go on right to begin with and the
left-rear tire changer knew that,” Gordon said. “So when I started to
complain about it, we knew that there might be an issue there and there
was. So in some ways, we got fortunate today. I could
have stayed out there and wrecked because it wasn’t really vibrating.
It was getting real loose.”
Dale Earnhardt Jr. had a strong day, finishing
fourth. He didn’t think he had anything for his teammates though, and
felt particularly bad for Gordon.
“I don’t think anybody could [have caught Johnson]
but Jeff,” Earnhardt said, “man that 24 was fast. I know they’re
disappointed; they did a great job. That car was amazing. I’m real happy
for Hendrick Motorsports and all the employees.
We’ve got the fastest cars in the business right now and they should be
real proud.”
Points leader Greg Biffle retained the top spot in
the standings, but his 11th place finish resulted in his lead shrinking
from 10 points to a single point after Kenseth finished third.
“It was tough,” Biffle said. “We just fought
balance all day. But we finished 11th and I wish I would have stayed out
at the end. I came in and got tires and I thought more guys would come.
We pitted ninth and finished 11th, so that probably
wasn’t too smart.”
Kenseth, meanwhile, cited his high starting position (fifth) as a key to keeping his car near the front at the end.
“We really honestly struggled and didn’t have quite
the setup that we needed,” he said. “My team did a good job of getting
good pit stops and making some adjustments to keep us in the game there.
I’m happy to come home third with a car
that didn’t drive the way we wanted it to.”
Clint Bowyer finished fifth, followed by Aric
Almirola, Martin Truex Jr., Joey Logano, Kasey Kahne and Marcos Ambrose
in the top 10. Martin finished 14th despite holding the pole and leading
43 laps; he got knocked out of the top 10 at
the green flag pit stops right before lap 300 and was never able to
climb back.
The race got off to a rough start when, nine laps
in, the largest wreck of NASCAR’s season to date took place off Turn 2.
Landon Cassill was being closely followed by Tony Stewart, who in turn
was closely followed by Regan Smith, as the
trio entered the backstretch. Cassill lost his back end first, followed
by Stewart, and then followed by Smith. It touched off a crash that
collected a dozen cars and red-flagged the race for 20 minutes. Three of
the cars were able to get back out, including
Stewart, who finished 25th.
“I actually didn’t even feel [Stewart] touch me,”
Cassill said. “I don’t know if he did. Tony is one of the most patient
drivers and especially in this part of the race. If he even touched me
or he didn’t, when there’s a car there it gets
you real loose and I was already loose.”
The wreck was the only major incident – the only
other time an accident brought out the yellow was when Carl Edwards lost
a tire and hit the wall in Turn 2 on lap 165. There were two cautions
for debris, including the one with which Gordon
took issue, and three for engines that blew up – both Busch brothers
lost their power plants in spectacular and smoky fashion, as did Jeff
Burton. The seven cautions accounted for 32 laps and resulted in a race
that ran at an average speed of 122.835 mph,
which is the third-fastest race at Dover in the last 12 years.
But in the world of records, the big one belonged
to Johnson, who reflected on tying the track record he now shares with
Petty and Pearson.
“It’s just a huge honor,” he said. “I was never one
that paid attention to stats. I just never thought I’d be a guy to
build up any cool stats, but here I am with some pretty cool stats, with
legends of our sport. I’m very proud of the
seven wins here and to be in that very elite company.”
No comments:
Post a Comment