Jimmie Johnson relishes his role as Chase frontrunner
Nov. 2, 2012
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
FORT
WORTH, Tex. -- Jimmie Johnson admits there's added stress in being the
Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup points leader, but the driver
of the No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet wouldn't have it any other
way.
Johnson
seized the lead -- albeit a narrow one -- by winning last Sunday's Cup
race at Martinsville from the pole. With three races
left in the Chase, Johnson is two points ahead of Brad Keselowski and
26 in front of third-place Clint Bowyer.
"I
think there's more pressure on the points leader, but there's more
control as the points leader," Johnson said Friday before the
first Cup practice session at Texas Motor Speedway. "Just a week ago, I
was sitting there seven back thinking, 'OK, if I got two (points) a
weekend or if I got three a weekend,' or how you play that game.
"Right
now I don't have to think about that. There's the pressure to maintain,
but I would much rather be leading the points than be
anywhere else. "
"OLD MAN, EH?"
Crew
chief Tony Gibson is accustomed to calling his drivers "old man" on the
radio. The team made light of it when Gibson was working
with 50-something Mark Martin.
It
might now work so well, however, in Gibson's new capacity as Danica
Patrick's crew chief, a role that starts with the AAA Texas 500
Cup race this weekend and will continue next season.
Gibson said Friday that he's not sure how or why he uses that expression.
"I
don't know -- it slips out," Gibson said Friday at Texas. "I don't
really know why I say that. For years it's just been what I say. I'm
not sure where that came from, to be honest with you."
"I don't mind," Patrick said agreeably.
"If
I do say that, I'm sorry, and I don't mean it," Gibson told Patrick. "I
was Mark Martin's crew chief and everybody is like 'Man,
that is really insulting to him.' I'm like, 'I have no idea. I don't
realize I'm saying it to him.'
"It
was a big joke. I was the crew chief for Dale (Earnhardt) Jr., and it
was the same way. I don't know. It just comes out so I'm probably
going to say it a few times, but if I do, I'm sorry -- forgive me. As
long as we're successful, we can call each other what we want to."
ENGINE CHANGE
Earnhardt
Ganassi Racing will use Hendrick Motorsports engines to power its Cup
cars next year, ending a four-year relationship with
Richard Childress Racing and Earnhardt Childress Racing Engines.
Team
owner Richard Childress, who confirmed Earnhardt Ganassi Racing's
departure, was optimistic the move would have little impact on
his ECR engine operation, which is based at the RCR campus in Welcome,
N.C.
"It
won't be any change," said Childress, who also supplies engines to
Furniture Row Racing in the Cup series. "We've got other customers
(who have) come in… I think they (Earnhardt Ganassi) had been dealing
with Hendrick for a while. It wasn't a surprise."
Childress said the engine program is as good as it ever was.
"We
just hired two new EFI (electronic fuel injection) people, and it's
still growing. We do all of the (General Motors) DP (Daytona
Prototype) engines and a lot of dirt engines. We've still got a very
strong company."
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