Mechanical issue abruptly ends Johnson's championship aspirations
Oct. 4, 2015
By Seth Livingstone
NASCAR Wire Service
DOVER, Del.—Jimmie Johnson has had so many memorable and triumphant days at Dover International Speedway.
He’d
won three of the previous four NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races at the
Monster Mile and taken the checkered flag in 10 of his 27 Sprint Cup
starts.
But
when it came to securing a place in the 2015 Contender Round of
NASCAR's playoffs, the six-time premier series champion and his team
were literally unable to seal the deal
on Sunday.
A
faulty axle seal on the No. 48 Chevrolet sent Johnson to the garage,
creating an obstacle he could not overcome, in the process
short-circuiting his attempt to match Richard
Petty and Dale Earnhardt Sr. as seven-time Cup champions.
Crew
chief Chad Knaus and the 48 crew elected to replace the entire rear end
assembly in the hope of saving time. Still, the major operation dropped
Johnson to the back of
the pack, 37 laps behind the leaders.
He finished 41st, ahead of only crash victims Jeb Burton and Brett Moffitt, in the AAA 400.
Entering
the day, Johnson appeared to be in excellent position to advance in the
Chase. He was fifth in points, 27 ahead of the dreaded 13th-place
elimination point.
Although
he was 16th in the running order, thanks primarily to a speeding
penalty on pit road, he was doing what he needed to do when his racing
luck turned sour after his
100th lap.
“It
was instantaneous,” Johnson said of the moment he experienced trouble.
“I was coming down the front stretch and it started vibrating. The right
rear hub started seizing
up and it was just metal-on-metal.
“It’s
part of racing. It shows how critical everything is on a race team and
how important every component is. You just can’t take anything for
granted.”
Still, a rear end seal was one of the last things on Johnson’s mind at Dover.
“As
I worry about things, I worry about a flat. I worry about a pit call.
You worry about hard racing and something going on,” he said. “You don’t
worry about an axle seal
failing and the rear end burning up. It’s just not on your radar.
“Maybe
five in my career have ever gone (failed). I know it’s a delicate piece
and, obviously, a very important piece. But I don’t think it was due to
anything on the track.
It’s inside the hub. … Not being at the root cause of the mistake, I
guess I’ll sleep a little bit better.”
That
was small consolation. Sitting in his car in the garage as his team
made the necessary repairs, Johnson knew his Chase hopes were in
definite jeopardy.
“Once
you’re behind the wall and you get more than one or two (laps) down,
you know it’s out of your hands,” he said. “I was trying to run through
scenarios. Chad updated me
a couple of times of what needed to happen. We needed a few big pileups
to get us back in that thing and I just didn’t see it happening.”
Back on the track, with laps ticking down, the sickening feeling only intensified.
“I
really didn’t have anything to fight for,” Johnson said. “It was
completely out of my control how many laps we were down. Within 20 or 30
minutes of being back on the track,
I could see the flow of the race. Guys were minding their manners
(with) a lot of green-flag runs and I knew we were in trouble.”
Just
out of his car on pit road, Johnson had yet to digest the day with his
team. But he knew Knaus and his crew would take this one hard.”
“We
pride ourselves on no mechanicals (issues),” he said. “Stuff doesn’t
fall off our race cars. Our cars don’t break. So, this stinks for sure.
“We
take for granted how indestructible these cars are. But a very simple
and inexpensive axle seal took the rear end out of our car and cost us.”
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