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Monday, November 11, 2013

Cautious Optimism Riding Along With Johnson In Season's Final Week

Cautious Optimism Riding Along With Johnson In Season's Final Week

Nov. 11, 2013

By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service

Jimmie Johnson knows two things:

After Sunday's NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway, he'll likely be a six-time champion.
 
But … it's dangerous to think that way.

That's why Johnson is circumspect in assessing his title chances, despite having expanded his lead over second-place Matt Kenseth to 28 points with a third-place finish in this past Sunday's AdvoCare 500 at Phoenix International Raceway.

"We're heading into Homestead in the position we want to be in," Johnson told reporters Sunday night. "I'll have to go down there and run 400 miles. It's far from over. You've got to finish that race. Although we have a nice cushion, we still have to go down there and take care of business."

Or as baseball great Yogi Berra once said, much more succinctly, "It ain't over till it's over."

Johnson knows all too well how much can happen in 400 miles. A part can fail at the most inopportune time. An engine can explode. A tire can blow. A random wreck can wipe out anyone at any time -- something that came perilously close to happening to Johnson on Sunday.

Johnson and Carl Edwards were racing side-by-side down the frontstretch at Phoenix when Kevin Harvick saw an opening and dived to the inside, making it three-wide, with Johnson's No. 48 Chevrolet on the outside.

Edwards' Ford broke loose in Turn 1 and knocked Johnson's Chevy up the track and out of control. But for the five-time champion's extraordinary reflexes, the 48 would have hit the wall, and Johnson likely would have left Phoenix with a deficit rather than a lead.

If Johnson gets in harm's way at Homestead, he might not be as fortunate.

Yes, Johnson has a clearly defined target. He will clinch his sixth championship if:
 
·      He finishes 23rd or better;
·      He finishes 24th and leads a lap;
·      He finishes 25th and leads the most laps.

In essence, he'll be racing against a number and not against either Kenseth or third-place Kevin Harvick, who trimmed his deficit to Johnson from 40 to 34 points with his victory at Phoenix.

In the last two races at HMS, Johnson has failed to hit any of those clinch numbers. He ran 32nd in 2011 when Tony Stewart and Carl Edwards battled for the championship. Last year, in a head-to-head contest for the title against Brad Keselowski, Johnson appeared to have the upper hand before a pit road mistake and mechanical failure dropped him to 36th at the finish.

"If we have a hiccup or some type of mistake in Homestead, it'll be a race between the 20 (Kenseth) and the 29 (Harvick)," Johnson acknowledged. "But I feel like if we go down there and run as we should, we should be able to take care of business."

At Homestead, business starts on Friday. Johnson will need a strong run in time trials to avoid the potential pitfall that cost Denny Hamlin the championship in 2010.

Hamlin led Johnson by 15 points (in the last year of the Latford scoring system) entering the season finale but qualified 37th, spun and slid through the infield grass off Turn 2 while working through heavy traffic on Lap 25 and finished 14th. Johnson ran second and claimed his fifth straight title by a 39-point margin.

Before Johnson can claim championship No. 6, he will have to cross a minefield of random, unpredictable circumstances and hope that good fortune is on his side.

Sure, it's likely that another Yogi Berra quip will be apt next Sunday, namely that Johnson's championship will be "déjà vu all over again."

But until the checkered flag waves in the Ford EcoBoost 400, the nagging notion "It ain't over till it's over" no doubt will occupy the thoughts of the would-be six-time champion.

HENDRICK QUASHES RUMORS

Team owner Rick Hendrick said before Sunday's race at Phoenix that there's no basis to rumors of impending crew chief changes among his four NASCAR Sprint Cup teams.

"That's right -- no changes," said Hendrick, who swapped crew chiefs among three of his teams at the end of the 2010 season, leaving only the combination of driver Jimmie Johnson and crew chief Chad Knaus intact. "I don't know where any of that came from, but there's not going to be any changes.

"Nobody's even discussed anything. Everybody's pretty happy with what we've got… good momentum in the Chase and winning races. Take the things like blown tires and engines out of the equation, and it's one of the best Chases we've had, so there's no reason to change anything."

BIG BOOST FOR BUSCH

The Phoenix weekend hardly could have gone better for Kyle Busch, whose low point was a seventh-place finish in Sunday's race.

On Saturday, Busch won his sixth NASCAR Nationwide Series race at the one-mile track. A day earlier, 17-year-old Erik Jones notched his first victory in a NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race in the No. 51 Toyota Tundra fielded by Kyle Busch Motorsports.

That marked the second time in three weeks a driver other than Busch himself had won in a KBM truck. With his victory Oct. 26 at Martinsville, NASCAR Drive for Diversity graduate Darrell Wallace Jr. became the first African-American driver in 50 years to win a race in one of NASCAR's three national series.
Both Jones' and Wallace's victories were welcome news to KBM, which is working to solidify its program for 2014.

"It shows that our team is capable of running up front, capable of winning with younger drivers, younger talent, not just Cup guys like myself or Denny [Hamlin]," Busch said after his NASCAR Nationwide win. "I think it proves our capabilities and what KBM is all about. We've understood and now recognize that the trucks is a capable playground for us that we can be competitive at.

"We feel like we have a good handle on the trucks, and that's where we're going to put our focus. We're really looking forward to bringing Darrell back next year. It's not final yet, but we're close and looking to have two of those trucks."

Busch expects to run Wallace full-time next season and to split time with Erik Jones, who can't be approved for tracks longer than one mile, with the exception of road courses, until he turns 18 on May 30.

"My idea in the grand scheme of things, in a perfect world, would be me run 10-12 races and then Erik Jones fill in the other 10-12, whatever those race tracks are that he can run, mile and under and however the schedule lays out. Then, see Darrell full-time in the 54 truck."

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