Saturday Michigan Notebook
Notebook Items:
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Johnson relishes return to Michigan
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Still on top
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Still smiling
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Roush rebound?
Aug. 16, 2014
Johnson Relishes Return to Michigan
By Scott Held
NASCAR Wire Service
BROOKLYN,
Mich. - Jimmie Johnson finally found his way to victory lane at
Michigan International Speedway two months ago. Since then, it's been a
rocky road.
Johnson,
who won here in June for the first time in 25 starts, has led just six
laps and has finished 39th or worse three times in the seven races
since.
He’s glad to be back.
"We've
had the craziest luck over the last six or seven races," said Johnson,
who finished 28th last weekend at Watkins Glen (N.Y.) International and
dropped a spot to seventh
in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series standings.
“Although
we’ve only won here once, it’s been a very strong track for the No. 48
and there is a lot of room on this racetrack, so I think I can be out of
harm’s way.”
The
six-time Sprint Cup champion left the June race on cloud nine. His
victory was his third in four starts and vaulted him to second in the
season standings behind teammate
Jeff Gordon. He’s already guaranteed a spot in the revamped Chase for
the NASCAR Sprint Cup and didn’t seem concerned about a lack of momentum
when the playoffs begin Sept. 14 at Chicagoland Speedway.
“It’s nice to have momentum entering the Chase,” he said. “If it doesn’t happen, we’ve won championships that way, too.
“So, we’re taking it as it comes, but it has been a very challenging year.”
Johnson
will have a long ride to the front of the field in Sunday’s Pure
Michigan 400 (1 p.m. ET on ESPN), where he’ll start 30th.
Still on top
It wasn’t a record, but Gordon still was the fastest man at Michigan International Speedway on Saturday.
A day
after turning the fastest lap in track history and seventh fastest pole
speed in NASCAR history, Gordon was the only driver to record a lap
faster than 200 mph in the
final practice session for Sunday’s Sprint Cup Series Pure Michigan
400.
Gordon,
seeking his first win here since June 2001, had a lap of 200.156 on
Saturday, eight-hundredths of a second faster than Kyle Larson. It came a
day after he shattered
the track record with a 206.558 circuit in the final qualifying session
in the same car he drove to victory last month at Indianapolis.
Gordon
and his Hendrick Motorsports teammates have to be hoping for the same
kind of luck they had here in June, when Johnson recorded his first
career win here and Kasey Kahne,
Gordon and Dale Earnhardt Jr. finished sixth through eighth.
All
four drivers are in the top 16 of the standings with three races to go
before the start of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup. Only Kahne, who
started the weekend 13th
in the standings, has yet to guarantee a spot in the grid with a
victory.
Joey Logano, who’ll start next to Gordon on Sunday, had a lap of 198.785—sixth-fastest overall—in the final practice session.
Still smiling
No one came to MIS happier than A.J. Allmendinger.
A week
removed from his first career Sprint Cup victory and the automatic berth
in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup that came with it, the No. 47
Chevy driver still was
flying high.
“Just
enjoying it,” he said of the last several days. “Having my parents there
was so special to be able to share that with them in victory lane.
“I’ve
put so much pressure on myself whether it’s this year or the last few
years to go out and try to be at my best and I felt like at times if I
didn’t win it was a negative
on me.”
The win
came in his 214th career start and closed the book on a chapter of his
life that saw him lose a job with Penske Racing after a positive drug
test in 2012. He was reinstated
later that season and started 2014 with JTG-Daugherty Racing.
He won’t be a favorite to win the championship and he doesn’t care.
“It can
only help us to keep getting better,” he said of the win at Watkins
Glen. “We know when it comes to the Chase as a championship contender,
obviously our names aren’t
going to be the first ones that are brought up. We know that.
“So when we get to the Chase, hopefully we can make just a little bit of noise in it as well.”
Roush rebound?
Roush Fenway Racing has won 13 times at Michigan, but June’s stop here was a nightmare.
Greg Biffle’s Ford was the only of the team’s three to finish on the lead lap—in 20th— and Carl Edwards and Rick Stenhouse Jr. were 23 and 27, respectively, at the
track that’s about 90 miles from Roush Industries’ headquarters.
Edwards,
who already has secured a spot in the Chase, is finishing his final
season with the team but still wants to give his bosses and crew
something to remember.
“This
race is special,” he said. “Right now my goal is to go represent Ford
and drive as hard as I can for Jack Roush the same way I always have and
to get us a championship.”
Edwards,
who’s won twice here, will start third and Stenhouse has the 10th spot
on the grid Sunday. Biffle, who won last season’s June race to collect
his fourth career MIS
victory, starts 11th. A win would be especially sweet for Biffle, who
could lock up a spot in the Chase. He’ll start the day 12th in the
series standings.
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