Martinsville Notebook
Oct. 28, 2016
Notebook Items:
·
Jimmie Johnson’s focus is on race at hand, not seventh title
·
Denny Hamlin: It doesn’t pay to be selfish
·
Matt Crafton: No mulligans in Round of 6
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
Jimmie Johnson’s focus is on race at hand, not seventh title
MARTINSVILLE, Va. – Jimmie Johnson won’t go there until he gets there.
In
other words, Johnson has opted not to contemplate winning a
record-tying seventh NASCAR Sprint Cup Series title until he reaches the
Championship 4 race at Homestead-Miami
Speedway.
Nevertheless,
Johnson acknowledges his odds are improved after reaching the Chase’s
Round of 8 for the first time since NASCAR adopted its current
elimination format in 2014.
“Gosh,
this Chase has such a different feeling than Chases I’ve won in the
past,” Johnson said before Friday’s opening practice at Martinsville
Speedway, site of Sunday’s Goody’s
Fast Relief 500 (1 p.m. ET on NBCSN). “I still feel like I have this
massive hurdle to get over to get into the final four.”
So
massive, in fact, that Johnson hasn’t entertained the prospect of
joining the seven-championship club occupied by NASCAR Hall of Famers
Richard Petty and Dale Earnhardt.
“With
that in mind, I have not gone there,” said Johnson, an eight-time
winner at Martinsville. “My chances are a lot better than they were
three weeks ago, for sure, but this
format just requires such a different mind-set and a different way to
make it to the final four to even have a shot at the championship. Not
yet.”
If
Johnson doesn’t want to contemplate rarefied air of a seventh title,
Hendrick Motorsports teammate Jeff Gordon isn’t loath to handicap the
chances of the No. 48 team.
“With
this new format I think his Achilles was that second round, and by him
getting through the second round and being in this round, this is like
an excellent opportunity for
him.” Gordon said. “I feel very confident they are going to go to
Homestead (with a shot at the title).
“This
is all predictions and things like that, guesswork. (Kevin Harvick and
Kyle Busch) are good, but, boy, when you get the No. 48 in a final race
for the championship, they
do things that are extraordinary. I think their chances are pretty
good. I feel very confident they are going to be there in the thick of
the battle.”
On the other hand, Gordon doesn’t believe Johnson needs another championship to validate his standing in the sport.
“The
other drivers that I’ve competed against, it was always, ‘Well, how
good is their car, how good is their team?’ and you always had that
question mark,” Gordon said. “With
Jimmie, I know. We are driving similar equipment. I get to see what
that team does every year and what Jimmie’s talents are. Because of
that, I think he is the best that I’ve ever raced against and possibly
the best that there has ever been.
“Even
days where I felt like I had a car that could compete with him, he did
extraordinary things to get more out of it. He’s a pretty calm, cool
guy, but, boy, when you put
that helmet on him and you get him in the race car, he just becomes
another person and takes it to another level.
“He
doesn’t have to win the seventh to prove that to me, but I also know
that stats and numbers mean a lot out there in the world of comparisons.
I think that would be great
for him to have that to show the rest of the world that he is one of
the best – if not the best.”
DENNY HAMLIN: IT DOESN'T PAY TO BE SELFISH
Ask
drivers Matt Kenseth and Carl Edwards why their performance at
Martinsville Speedway has improved so much since they moved from Roush
Fenway Racing to Joe Gibbs Racing, and
they’ll give you a two-word answer: “Denny Hamlin.”
Both
Kenseth and Edwards credit Hamlin, a five-time winner at the .526-mile
short track, with helping them find the rhythm at one of NASCAR’s most
perplexing venues.
With
defending series champion Kyle Busch joining teammates Kenseth, Edwards
and Hamlin in the Chase’s Round of 8, there might be a temptation to
start withholding vital information.
Not so, says Hamlin.
“It’s
hard not to be selfish, but you can also hurt your overall performance
these last four races if you start to get selfish,” Hamlin said.
“There’s not one thing I’ll ever
hold back from any of my teammates at any time at this race track or
any other if they ask me, and I would expect the same when we get
somewhere that I might need some help as well.
“I
think that teamwork is what got us here, and you can’t veer away from
that. We all feel like selfishly we can beat each other, and that would
be a good problem to have when
we get to Homestead – to have to beat each other for a championship.
I’m looking forward to that part of it.”
MATT CRAFTON: NO MULLIGANS IN ROUND OF SIX
Small wonder Martinsville is Matt Crafton’s favorite race track.
In
the past five NASCAR Camping World Truck Series races at the .526-mile
paper-clip-shaped short track, Crafton has won twice and finished
second, third and seventh.
With
six drivers left in the inaugural NASCAR Camping World Truck Series
Chase, and with the next-to-last round set to begin with Saturday’s
Texas Roadhouse 200 (1:30 p.m. ET
on FS1), Crafton acknowledges there’s no room for error at his favorite
venue.
“I
don’t think you’re going to be able to have a mulligan this weekend and
get onto the final round,” said Crafton, who was 12th fastest in
Friday’s final practice and third
fastest over a 10-lap average. “Without a doubt, you have to have a
good run leaving this place – if it’s a top-10 worst case – to go into
the next two to go into the final four.
“I love coming here, and if it’s meant to be, it will be. I say that each and every week, and that’s what I live and die by.”
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