Jimmie Johnson wins fourth Cup race at Brickyard; Earnhardt Jr. takes series lead
July 29, 2012
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
SPEEDWAY, Ind. -- Team owner Rick Hendrick may have had better days -- but not many.
Hendrick
joined his No. 48 team in kissing the bricks at the finish line after
driver Jimmie Johnson won Sunday's Crown Royal 400 at Indianapolis Motor
Speedway, taking the checkered flag 4.758 seconds ahead of runner-up
Kyle Busch and tying teammate Jeff Gordon for most NASCAR Sprint Cup
Series wins at the Brickyard -- four.
The
victory was Johnson's third of the season -- all but assuring he will
remain the only driver to have qualified for the Chase for the Sprint
Cup each year since the inception of NASCAR's playoff format in 2004.
Johnson won for the 58th time, leaving him eighth on the all-time list
and second to Gordon among active drivers.
"Man,
you just hope to race here -- to come here and win is a huge honor,"
Johnson said. "And to win four -- four wins! I'm at a loss for words."
A
fourth-place finish propelled Hendrick teammate Dale Earnhardt Jr. into
the lead in the series standings, after Matt Kenseth, the points leader
entering the race, wrecked out in 35th place.
The
last time Earnhardt led the Cup standings was October 2004 after
Talladega, but he held the top spot for only two days, thanks to a
25-point NASCAR penalty for cursing during a post-race television
interview. He now leads by 14 points over Kenseth.
Greg
Biffle came home third, followed by Earnhardt and Gordon. Pole-sitter
Denny Hamlin, Ryan Newman, Martin Truex Jr., Brad Keselowski and Tony
Stewart completed the top 10.
Johnson
was asked whether he was already thinking of a fifth victory at Indy --
something no one has done either in NASCAR or IndyCar -- but Johnson
prefers to take one thing at a time. Next on his list is a sixth Cup
title.
"I'd
love to be a five-time winner here, but I'd also like to win a sixth
championship this year," said Johnson, who string of titles was ended at
five straight by Stewart last year. "That's the thing that's on my mind
right now."
Each previous time Johnson has won at the Brickyard, he has gone on to win the series championship -- in 2006, 2008 and 2009.
Busch
had an exceptional car, but it was no match for the rocket ship of
Johnson, who put Chevrolet in the Indy winner's circle for the 10th
straight year.
"If
it wasn't for the 48, we were probably in our own zip code on the rest
of the field," Busch said. "But Jimmie Johnson was in his own country
today, so we couldn't keep up with him.
"He
was really, really fast, and you could see it, too, on the restarts,
when he could make it through the corners and he just put his car
anywhere he wanted and would just slam on the gas pedal and take off
from me. His car was down and digging."
Racing
side-by-side with Trevor Bayne on Lap 132, Joey Logano spun his No. 20
Toyota, bounced off the No. 47 Camry of Bobby Labonte and wiped out the
No. 17 Ford of Kenseth, who was running near the outside wall, trying to
slip past the wreck.
"The farther you got back (in the field), the dumber people drove, and it got us in some bad spots," Kenseth said.
Carl
Edwards' first race with new crew chief Chad Norris went awry nearly
from the outset. Edwards started second and contested the lead with
Denny Hamlin for half a lap, but lost power and slowed on Lap 12 and
brought his car to pit road.
By
the time the No. 99 crew had the issue straightened out -- after a
green-flag pit stop followed by another under yellow on Lap 42 --
Edwards was four laps down and effectively out of contention -- not the
sort of effort he needed in a winless season with a Chase position on
the line. Edwards finished 29th.
The
disappointing result left Edwards 12th in the standings and 61 points
behind 10th-place Clint Bowyer (15th Sunday) with six races left before
the Chase field is set at Richmond.
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