Tick Tock: A confident Johnson aims to strike nine at Martinsville
October 24, 2013: Weekend Preview
Staff Report
NASCAR Wire Service
Jimmie Johnson has enough grandfather clocks to open a small store.
He,
however, hasn't collected these masterfully crafted timepieces with the
intent to sell. Instead, he's earned them by hard racing in close
quarters
against the fiercest of competition and coming out victorious. This
Sunday, Johnson looks to add a ninth to his collection in the Goody's
Headache Relief Shot 500 (1:30 p.m. ET, ESPN) at Martinsville Speedway,
where it is a tradition to present the winner
with a Ridgeway grandfather clock -- one of the coolest trophies in the
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series.
Although
Johnson will certainly be excited to receive another clock, he's
probably going to be more excited to see what the win does for his
position
in the standings and how much of a gap he's able to open up between him
and his closest rival, Matt Kenseth.
"He's
won a championship; he knows what it's like to experience the
pressure," Johnson said about Kenseth. "When I look at the tracks on the
schedule,
Martinsville, if you look at stats over a career, I'd say there's an
opportunity although when we were there in the spring he ran really
good. So, I think Matt has a lot of confidence moving forward for these
next four events, as do we. So, his maturity, his
mindset, I don't think I can do much there. He's pretty rock solid in
that department."
In
Kenseth's first trip to the .526-mile track with his new No. 20 Joe
Gibbs Racing Toyota team back in April, he finished a respectable 13th.
Johnson,
however, won the event after leading 348 of the event's 500 laps. The
win was his second consecutive victory at Martinsville, after winning
last fall's race. Overall, five of Johnson's eight victories have come
in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup with three
of them (2006-08) in seasons that he won the championship.
Heading
into the postseason, Kenseth carried a three-point advantage over
Johnson and Kyle Busch on the strength of five victories. Kenseth held
on to the top spot until last weekend at Talladega when neither he nor
Johnson finished in the top 10 for the first time in the postseason.
Kenseth entered the weekend with a four-point lead, but left Alabama
trailing Johnson by four points.
"When
we're leading the points it's certainly helpful. It's a place we want
to be," Johnson said. "I'd rather be in the lead defending than trying
to get points and get ahead. I like the position we're in.
"In
years past, the pressure has weighed on me differently and I think
through the experience of winning those five and being in the sport as
long
as I have now and maturing that I'm really in the position I want to be
in and hope to stay in the rest of the year."
Johnson
has history on his side. The leader after six of 10 Chase races has
gone on to claim the championship in six of nine seasons, including
Johnson in 2008-10. His eight victories at the paper-clip-shaped track
is most among active drivers, trailing only Richard Petty and Darrell
Waltrip on the all-time wins list at Martinsville.
In
23 starts at the track, Johnson has 16 top fives, 20 top 10s and three
poles with a series-best finishing position (3.9), running position
(5.9),
passing differential (296), laps in the top 15 (7,849), laps led
(2,156), green-flag speed (91.569 mph) and driver rating (123.8). He
also has the second-most fastest laps run (889) and quality passes (596)
at the short track.
This
season, he has collected five wins, 13 top fives and 20 top 10s along
with two poles. He has led 20 races for a total of 1,606 laps. Prior
to the Chase, he held the top spot in the standings after 24 of the 26
races. After the first six weeks of the Chase, he's returned to his
familiar perch and hopes to stay firmly seated there until he's hoisting
his sixth series championship trophy at Homestead
less than a month from now.
"Martinsville
has been good to us in the past," Johnson said. "We've got to go there
and race. There is going to be a lot of strong competition.
We will make sure we get buttoned up and ready to go for this weekend's
race and go up there to that paperclip and see what we can do."
IS THIRD TIME A CHARM FOR BURTON?
In
Jeb Burton's debut in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series at
Martinsville Speedway in March 2012, he finished a respectable 13th.
This past
April, Burton returned to the .526-mile paper-clip-shaped track as a
full-time driver in the second race of the season and almost pulled off
the victory.
He
improved upon his previous finish at the track by 10 positions,
finishing third behind veterans Johnny Sauter and Matt Crafton. He led a
race-high
154 of 250 laps. This weekend, Burton and the rest of the truck series
return to Martinsville for Saturday's Kroger 200 (1:30 p.m. ET, FOX
Sports 1).
"I
can't wait to get back to this track. It's my favorite track on the
circuit," Burton said. "We dominated last time we were here and
unfortunately
just gave it away towards the end.
"We have a really good truck and I think we have a good shot at getting another pole award and, hopefully, another win."
Burton
was able to get the most out of his good starting position by running
at the front or near the front of the field for most of the race. The
Virginia native has become quite adept at starting on the front row in
his first full year of competition capturing the pole a series-high six
times in the first 18 races, including last weekend at Talladega.
In two career races at the track, Burton has an average start of 4.0 and average finish of 8.0.
He
is having a solid season, which includes his first national series win
at Texas; however, he's currently in fourth place in the championship
standings, 82 points behind leader Crafton. In the Sunoco Rookie of the
Year race, he trails Ryan Blaney and Darrell Wallace Jr.
Although
he might not take home the champion's hardware at the end of the
season, one thing is apparent -- Burton is a talented driver with a
bright
future.
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