Ignore Jimmie Johnson at Your Own Risk

Posted by Mike on Jul 15th, 2008
2008
Jul 15

All the attention right now is focused on Kyle Busch and rightfully so given his incredible season. That’s probably fine with Jimmie Johnson. Johnson is probably the most invisible 2-time champion in the history of NASCAR. Johnson has only one win so far in 2008, but that doesn’t mean he isn’t running well. Fans, writers and broadcasters might not notice Johnson like in past years, but when September rolls around, the #48 car will be in the thick of the championship hunt.

He began this season with a wreck at Daytona, a 2nd place at California and one race, Las Vegas, where he and the team were out to lunch. Johnson had a 47.1 driver rating at Vegas, which is totally unacceptable for a team like the #48. At that point the team realized they were behind on the Car of Tomorrow (CoT) and dedicated themselves to more testing. The Hendrick teams conceded that last year’s Chase set back the #24 and #48 cars. It cost them testing time on the CoT speedway program last fall and both teams struggled in the early months of the season.Some teams might have dismissed the poor run at Las Vegas and kept things unchanged for a few weeks, but crew chief Chad Knaus and Johnson were willing to strive for improvement based only on three races.

The testing didn’t result in wins, but the progress can be seen. He led 65 laps and had a 130.6 driver rating at Texas, the first intermediate track after the team’s intense testing. The next week he again had a driver rating of 130, led 120 laps and won the race at Phoenix. Then he led 35 laps at Lowe’s before suffering a blown engine while leading the race with 49 to go. The engine failure was the first since 2005 for Johnson. Despite his DNF and 39th place finish he still had a 94.5 driver rating, showing how strong he was.

This summer has seen Johnson have a driver rating better than 100 in 5 of 7 races. He had top three cars at Pocono, Michigan, Loudon and Chicagoland. A win is coming and it should come before the Chase begins. He has won at Indianapolis, Pocono, California and Richmond. After a sluggish spring, Johnson is back to being a threat to win on a weekly basis, regardless of the track.

Chad Knaus is the master of playing the game to his advantage. Last year they won 6 races before the Chase and took several risks in others in order to accumulate as many bonus points as possible. Many people saw Jeff Gordon with a huge points lead prior to the Chase, but Johnson and Knaus had the most wins. They also saved some of their best cars for the Chase. I suspect Knaus is running a similar plan for this year’s Chase.

Even if Johnson doesn’t win another race before the Chase, he has made up large deficits in previous years and can do it again. Since 2004 when the Chase began, Johnson has won 11 races during the Chase. Only one other driver (Greg Biffle has four wins) has won more than three races. The tracks set up incredibly well for Johnson. He has won at eight of the ten Chase tracks that account for 21 total wins. Only Homestead and Kansas have eluded Johnson, although he led the most laps at the 2006 Kansas race and finished 2nd in the 2004 Homestead race.

So go ahead, pick Kyle Busch to win every remaining race, the championship and America’s hear (just kidding). Go on and say that Carl Edwards and Dale Earnhardt Jr will pose serious threats for the title, or that Tony Stewart and Matt Kenseth will wriggle into contention, but to me Jimmie Johnson is still the champion until someone else takes it from him. And for every driver and fan that isn’t paying attention, Johnson is ready to sneak up on everyone. Again.

3 Responses

  1. Amy Says:

    I love Jimmie…I do…but I dunno…Rowdy is just ON FIRE this season.

  2. Trouble in Turn2 » Blog Archive » View From the Couch: Indianapolis Says:

    […] a class by himself at Indianapolis, leading 71 laps and winning his second Brickyard 400. As I have written before, Jimmie Johnson is still the reigning Cup holder. It is his until someone takes it from him. […]

  3. Fantasy Sports NASCAR Racing Blog » Blog Archive » View From the Couch: Three Contenders and Everyone Else Says:

    […] It is going to be a three man battle for the championship and it’s been that way since July. Granted, Jimmie Johnson hasn’t garnered the attention that Carl Edwards and Kyle Busch have […]

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