Jimmie Johnson Celebrates Sixth Title With Eye On A Seventh
Dec. 4, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
LAS VEGAS, Nev. -- Let the debate begin.
Even
as Jimmie Johnson speeds through Champion's Week and enjoys his
coronation in Las Vegas, the focus
of those who compete in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and those who
follow it, even peripherally, already has begun to move toward 2014.
The
sport will fete Johnson throughout the week, culminating in Friday
night's 2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup
Awards at Wynn Las Vegas (9 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 2). The drivers who
finished second through 10th in the final standings will express the
appropriate respect and admiration for Johnson's milestone sixth
championship.
But the real milestone lies ahead, and everyone knows it.
Now that Johnson has won a sixth title, can he add a seventh? Can he tie the series record shared by
two of the sport's icons, Richard Petty and Dale Earnhardt?
If Johnson does tie the record, next year or thereafter, will he be revered at the level of the two
legends who preceded him?
The debate is certain to be lively, as with other sports. Was Hank Aaron the equal of Babe Ruth? Could
Muhammad Ali have beaten Rocky Marciano? Was Bobby Jones the greatest golfer of all time? Or was Jack Nicklaus? Or Tiger Woods?
Questions
of Johnson's rightful place in racing history will surface again and
again as he celebrates
his sixth championship in eight seasons. They will dog him at
Wednesday's Fanfest at the Fremont Street Experience. They will follow
him to Thursday's NASCAR NMPA Myers Brothers Awards Luncheon and the
interview sessions that follow.
Doubtless the subject will come up during the popular NASCAR After the Lap at the Palms Casino Resort
on Thursday afternoon. And you can be certain the questions will be raised at Friday's awards ceremony.
Nonetheless, Johnson would prefer to defer the discussion, at least for a little while.
"I
don't want to focus on that yet," Johnson said Nov. 17 after the season
finale at Homestead-Miami
Speedway. "It's not time. I want to unplug, enjoy the sixth, let it
soak in. We'll get to Daytona for testing soon enough (Jan. 9). I guess
by then it's probably appropriate to ask the question.
"I'm
humbled by the nice things that have been said by competitors and
owners, my peers in this industry. I
think their opinion is very important. I don't think my opinion
matters. It's not for the athlete, the driver. It's bestowed upon you.
It's passed down from others."
Those others already have started to speak. Homestead race winner Denny Hamlin allowed that Johnson
might be the greatest ever.
Kyle
Busch, who finished fourth in the 2013 Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup,
admits he's still searching
for a way to beat Johnson, crew chief Chad Knaus, the No. 48 team and
the exceptional performance of the entire Hendrick Motorsports
organization.
"It's
really tough, when you end the Chase (55 points out), or something like
that, and you go back
and you make up your 'fake' finishes," Busch said the day after the
final race at Homestead. "Give us 10th at Kansas. Give us fifth at
Martinsville. Give us second at Texas.
"If
you give us those finishes back, we're still 20 short of the
championship. Legitimately, if we could
have ran and finished how well we could have done -- perfect scenario
-- we were still 20 short of the championship. We would have finished
right behind Matt Kenseth, third in points."
Small wonder Busch and fellow NASCAR Sprint Cup competitors are singing Johnson's praises
.
"If
others are saying it, I'm not going to deny it, chase it away," Johnson
said. "Sure, I would love
to be considered (one of the greatest). If you look at stats, there's
still numbers out there that I need to achieve. That's why I say, until I
hang my helmet up, it's not necessarily a fair conversation to have."
Those numbers, with the clear exception of Petty's unassailable 200 NASCAR Sprint Cup victories, are
well within Johnson's reach. The most obvious is the seventh title, but Johnson has other milestones within his reach.
In
his first 12 full seasons, Johnson has accumulated 66 wins, eighth most
all-time and within striking
distance of all but Petty and David Pearson (105 wins). In addition to
winning six championships, Johnson has finished second twice, third
once, fourth once, fifth once and sixth once, a remarkable run of
sustained excellence in NASCAR's most competitive era.
Whether
it's in celebration or in competition, Johnson prefers to stay in the
moment, but that will
become increasingly difficult if he makes a concerted run at a seventh
championship in 2014. As usual, Johnson plans to combat the distraction
with a singleness of purpose.
"To have expectations to win championships is unfair," Johnson said two days after the season finale.
"I think it's more realistic to expect an opportunity at a championship. To win, that's a whole different story.
"I
made the Chase every year it's been around (starting in 2004), so I've
had that opportunity. I take
a lot of pride in that. My motivation to follow through this year and
to work as hard as I can really is the same motivation I've always had
to succeed in this sport.
"I've
worked so hard and long to get to this point, I'm finally on top of my
game. I've worked a lifetime
to get here. There's more motivation staying on top for those reasons
than chasing stats and the historical things that are out there in front
of me now, it's really something that comes from within."
And yet, with all the buzz surrounding a possible seventh championship, Johnson allowed himself a moment
to reflect on what a seventh title might mean.
"I could never have dreamed this big," Johnson said during a tour of Las Vegas media outlets on Tuesday.
"When I hear my name mentioned alongside Petty and Earnhardt, it still feels surreal."
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