Jimmie Johnson poised to pounce on Dover opportunity
Sept. 27, 2012: Weekend preview
NASCAR Wire Service
Jimmie
Johnson hasn't called his shot, but the five-time NASCAR Sprint Cup
Series champ has reason for hope at one of his best tracks this weekend.
Johnson,
the series points leader, leads the list of favorites at Dover
International Speedway in Sunday's AAA 400 (2 p.m. ET, ESPN), round 3 in
the 10-race Chase for the NASCAR
Sprint Cup postseason.
The
Monster Mile's punishing nature has so far spared Johnson, who is tied
with NASCAR Hall of Famers Richard Petty and Bobby Allison atop the
track's all-time win list with seven
Dover victories. The most recent of those Dover wins came in June, when
Johnson led 289 of 400 laps to pad his series-best driver rating at the
Delaware track.
"So
far, it's been a great track for us," said Johnson, who's won four of
the last seven events on the concrete speedway. ". . . If we can run up
front and control the race and
control who we're racing around, hopefully we can distance ourselves."
Johnson
grabbed the series points lead on the consistent strength of two
straight runner-up finishes to open the Chase. He currently heads Brad
Keselowski, the round 1 winner
at Chicago, by one point and Denny Hamlin, the round 2 winner in New
Hampshire, by seven.
Hamlin's
triumph last weekend resonated because of his spirited drive from 32nd
position to a dominant victory, just seven days after boldly predicting a
win through his Twitter
account. The confidence Hamlin had at New Hampshire may not be so
strong at Dover, where he has just two top-five finishes in 13 career
efforts there, including a nondescript 18th-place finish in June.
"I
think the concrete surface itself just throws me for a loop and I don't
have a good feel," Hamlin said. "I don't know. We got better at Bristol
(also concrete), so hopefully
what we learned there will transfer over to Dover."
Though
no driver has been mathematically eliminated from championship
contention, Jeff Gordon -- currently in last place in the 12-driver
postseason field -- suggests he needs
to convert a Hail Mary pass, starting this weekend. Gordon finished
third behind Hamlin and teammate Johnson at New Hampshire, but still
sits 45 points off the top.
"It's
still going to take a miracle for us to win the championship," Gordon
said after last Sunday's finish. "I mean, you've got guys like Jimmie,
Keselowski and Hamlin; I mean,
these are guys that have been strong all year. You know, Jimmie's won
five championships. These guys are not going to make huge mistakes. But
we have to go and race every race. There's a lot of racing and a lot of
different tracks that a lot can happen at."
SADLER SURGES BACK IN NATIONWIDE
One
week removed from the NASCAR Nationwide Series points lead, Elliott
Sadler is back in the No. 1 spot. With six races left in his tightly
contested battle with defending series
champ Ricky Stenhouse Jr., his perch is far from secure.
Sadler
aims to strengthen the pursuit of his first NASCAR title this weekend
in Saturday's OneMain Financial 200 (3:30 p.m. ET, ESPN) at Dover
International Speedway. He capitalized
on Stenhouse's pit-road misfortune last weekend at Kentucky to regain
the series lead by four points, but left the Bluegrass State feeling he
missed the chance to build on that cushion.
Another opportunity may present itself at Dover, where Sadler won the pole for the fall 200-miler last season.
"I
think we're going to be really good this weekend . . .," Sadler said.
"We've just got to go do our thing. We feel like we've got a lot of
speed in our cars right now. We've
just got to put all 200 laps together and hopefully be there at the
end."
Sadler
and Stenhouse are the only two drivers to have led the Nationwide
points this season, and a renewal of their 2011 title fight isn't out of
the question. The two rivals
clashed at Bristol last month, causing an angry Sadler to suggest that
hard racing would be the norm for the title contenders from here on out.
During a Tuesday news conference at Richard Childress Racing headquarters, Sadler said those rules still apply.
"There's
nothing to talk about," Sadler said. "We have always raced each other
with respect, last year and this year, and I felt like he took advantage
of that respect at Bristol.
No, it hasn't blown over at all with me. We've still got six races left
to go, and we're going to continue to race each other hard and we'll
see where it takes us from there.
"He
understands that he's got to outrun me and I understand I've got to
outrun him. We're both so fast every week that we're going to be around
each other and we're going to race
each other hard and race each other clean, but probably more taking
than giving when you get down to this part of the season. But that's
good. That's good for racing."
While
the 1-2 punch of Sadler and Stenhouse has attracted the lion's share of
attention, RCR teammate Austin Dillon has closed in. Dillon moved to
just 19 points off Sadler's
lead with his victory last weekend at Kentucky, bolstering his bid for a
title in his rookie Nationwide season.
A TY AT THE TOP: DILLON LEADS TRUCKS
For
Ty Dillon, heading to unfamiliar territory has become an old habit this
season, his first in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series. So far, it
hasn't hurt the 20-year-old
driver one bit.
Dillon
carries a narrow points lead into the truck tour's next stop, Saturday
night's Smith's 350 (8:30 p.m. ET, SPEED) at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.
While Dillon has raced on
a handful of 1.5-mile tracks this season, it's another all-new facility
for him.
"I've
had zero experience at Vegas, so I'm looking forward to it. All you can
do it look forward to it," Dillon said. "We've been fairly successful
this year, being that it's
our rookie year and pretty much all the tracks we've never been to.
We're going to hit it hard, look over all our notes, watch past races
and do the best we can to be prepared when we get there."
Dillon
has commanded the points lead for two straight weeks, logging a
runner-up effort and third-place finish on the heels of his breakthrough
truck series victory Aug. 31 at
Atlanta Motor Speedway. But his lead is a tenuous one, with James
Buescher -- who possesses a series-best four wins this season -- just
four points back.
Even
with the relative lack of experience, team owner and grandfather
Richard Childress says the younger Dillon has exceeded expectations.
"We
knew he would run good, but we didn't quite think he would be in the
position he is today," Childress said. "I felt he would win a race or
two, and he's been in contention
to win two or three races. He's really a smart racer. I think
Buescher's going to be tough to beat and there's a couple other ones
right there with him, but I think he'll give 'em a good run."
Action
sports star Travis Pastrana, who has made nine Nationwide starts this
season, is scheduled to make his NASCAR Camping World Truck Series debut
Saturday at Las Vegas. He'll
drive a ThorSport Racing Toyota as a teammate to Matt Crafton and
Johnny Sauter.
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