Johnson Ends Winless Streak With Charlotte Victory

Jimmie Johnson finally got in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series win column for 2014 with a win Sunday night at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Photo by Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images

Jimmie Johnson finally got in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series win column for 2014 with a win Sunday night at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Photo by Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images

CONCORD, NC — Jimmie Johnson finally broke through with his first victory of the season, winning Sunday night’s Coca Cola 600 to collect his fourth win in NASCAR’s longest race.

Johnson edged his way past Matt Kenseth with eight laps to go and handily cruised to the finish by 1.2 seconds over Kevin Harvick.

Kenseth held on for third, followed by Carl Edwards and Sprint All Star race winner Jamie McMurray.

Johnson’s victory was the 67th of his Sprint Cup career and his seventh victory at Charlotte Motor Speedway, breaking a tie with NASCAR Hall of Fame drivers Bobby Allison and Darrell Waltrip for the most all time.

“It’s great to win, but believe me – and I promise you – all the hype and all the concern and worry, that was elsewhere. That wasn’t in my head; there are plenty of voices in my head, I’m not going to lie,” said Johnson. “We’ve had great races and we’ve had opportunities there in front us and had stuff taken away. And we’ve had bad races; I have to be honest about that too.”

After coming into Sunday night’s race without a victory to guarantee him a slot in the season-ending Chase for the Sprint Cup, Johnson finally silenced the critics who raised concern that Johnson might miss out on the championship battle.

“What the hell are you all going to write about now? We won,” Johnson asked the media following the win. “I mean, what, 12 races? Give me a break. Granted, tonight simplifies things. We’ll take it, move on. We really want to heat up and win races later in the season, especially before the Chase starts. More than anything, I just got tired of answering the question.”

Johnson not only secured a shot at a record-tying seventh Sprint Cup title, he’s also put the rest of the competition on notice that the no. 48 team is back in the hunt.

“They know we’re awake. In winning, it doesn’t matter who you are. The No. 4 (Harvick) car has had that momentum this year. They’ve been able to go out and execute and show a lot of speed and win. Hopefully this 48 is heading that way and we can get those other people thinking about us.”

There was once a time when Johnson and his team owned Charlotte, posting a staggering eight-straight top-five finishes including back-to-back Coca-Cola 600 victories in 2004 and 2005, however in his last six starts in this event, he’s managed only two top-15 finishes along with two DNF’s.

After winning the pole for the event on Thursday, it seemed like the stars had aligned for Johnson.

Johnson led a race-high 164 laps, including 72 of the first 76 laps, and very faded farther than the top 10 for most of the race.

But as the race came down to the final 75 laps, it looked to be shaping up as a fuel-mileage scenario, with several drivers, including Edwards and Paul Menard, pitting off-sequence with 55 laps to go.

When the rest of the field came around for their final pit stops with 30 to go – including Johnson, Kenseth, Harvick and Gordon – Edwards found himself back out in front with enough fuel to leg it out to the finish, but a final, late caution flag for Alex Bowman hitting the wall with 20 laps to go changed all that.

With the fuel strategy out the window, Edwards pitted, handing the lead over to Jeff Gordon, who stayed out along with Kenseth and Johnson.

On the restart, Kenseth – with four fresh tires to Gordon’s two – powered past to take the lead, opening up a one-second lead over Johnson.

With eight laps to go, Johnson had reeled in Kenseth went to the low side on the back stretch looking for the lead. Kenseth threw the block, but Johnson push the nose of his Chevrolet SS under Kenseth’s Toyota Camry and moved past on the low side to take the lead.

Once out in front, Johnson was history, moving out to a 1.2-second lead over Kenseth, who faded to a third-place to post his seventh top-10 finish in the last eight races.

“Everything kind of fell into place with us with that caution, people being under fuel strategy – everything fell into our lap,” said Kenseth. “Got a good restart, got out front. Unfortunately didn’t have enough speed to hold off Jimmie and Kevin and hang on to win. I thought we had a top-five car all night. Great pit stops, great adjustments. Just couldn’t hang on to it at the end.”

Harvick rallied from a loose wheel early in the race to pull out a runner-up finish, moving past Kenseth for second on the final lap, but still vented his frustration over another missed opportunity.

“We shot ourselves in the foot again,” said Harvick. “We left two wheels loose and played catch up the rest of the night. We’re just shooting ourselves in the foot on pit road. We have to clean that up because we obviously can’t win races with the fastest car if we make mistakes continuously on pit road. It’s frustrating but everyone on this Budweiser Chevrolet has done a great job.”

Kurt Busch, who finished sixth in the Indianapolis 500 earlier in the day, came up short in his to bid pull off the Indy-Charlotte double after the engine expired in his no. 41 Chevrolet on lap 271, ending with a 40th-place finish.

“It was really a lot of fun. It was a dream come true to run at Indy and post a really good finish there. I can’t let what happened down here dampen the mood,” said Busch. “Today is a memory I’ll have forever. It was a challenge I put forth for myself. I enjoyed it.

“The mood down here, we’re not going to let it dampen things. There is still wind in our sails and we’ll still sail on off into the sunset after today.”

Brian Vickers came home in the sixth position ahead of Jeff Gordon, who retains the points lead by 11 points over Kenseth. Paul Menard, Kyle Busch and Brad Keselowski rounded out the top 10.

NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
Charlotte Motor Speedway – Concord, NC
Coca-Cola 600 – May 25, 2014
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1. (1) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 400, $465626.
2. (11) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 400, $304313.
3. (12) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 400, $249941.
4. (22) Carl Edwards, Ford, 400, $174980.
5. (26) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 400, $186219.
6. (16) Brian Vickers, Toyota, 400, $166870.
7. (27) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 400, $169906.
8. (21) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 400, $150834.
9. (7) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 400, $164761.
10. (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 400, $166653.
11. (13) Aric Almirola, Ford, 400, $154546.
12. (8) Joey Logano, Ford, 400, $151501.
13. (18) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 400, $148468.
14. (3) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 399, $131660.
15. (42) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 399, $121260.
16. (32) Austin Dillon #, Chevrolet, 399, $156696.
17. (5) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 399, $146026.
18. (25) Kyle Larson #, Chevrolet, 398, $134680.
19. (10) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 398, $115460.
20. (14) Trevor Bayne(i), Ford, 398, $103435.
21. (24) Greg Biffle, Ford, 398, $146385.
22. (6) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 398, $112985.
23. (20) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 398, $121518.
24. (34) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 398, $126643.
25. (15) Martin Truex Jr., Chevrolet, 398, $129593.
26. (23) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 397, $137310.
27. (31) Cole Whitt #, Toyota, 397, $96960.
28. (39) Michael Annett #, Chevrolet, 396, $113893.
29. (9) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 396, $126255.
30. (30) Michael McDowell, Ford, 396, $97685.
31. (35) David Ragan, Ford, 395, $118793.
32. (19) Brian Scott(i), Chevrolet, 395, $108457.
33. (29) Alex Bowman #, Toyota, 392, $98760.
34. (38) Joe Nemechek(i), Toyota, 390, $106135.
35. (43) Blake Koch(i), Ford, 390, $95485.
36. (40) Landon Cassill(i), Chevrolet, 382, $95385.
37. (17) Justin Allgaier #, Chevrolet, 378, $103154.
38. (36) Ryan Truex #, Toyota, Engine, 303, $89350.
39. (4) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, Engine, 281, $95850.
40. (28) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, Engine, 271, $81350.
41. (37) Josh Wise, Chevrolet, Accident, 229, $77350.
42. (41) Reed Sorenson, Chevrolet, Engine, 162, $73350.
43. (33) David Gilliland, Ford, Accident, 160, $77850.

Average Speed of Race Winner: 145.484 mph.
Time of Race: 4 Hrs, 07 Mins, 27 Secs. Margin of Victory: 1.272 Seconds.
Caution Flags: 8 for 44 laps.
Lead Changes: 34 among 9 drivers.
Lap Leaders: J. Johnson 0; B. Keselowski 1; J. Johnson 2-47; B. Keselowski 48-49; J. Johnson 50-75; K. Harvick 76-95; J. Johnson 96-97; K. Harvick 98-108; J. Johnson 109; K. Harvick 110-149; J. Johnson 150-164; B. Keselowski 165-191; K. Harvick 192-212; J. Gordon 213; D. Earnhardt Jr. 214; J. McMurray 215; K. Harvick 216-223; J. Johnson 224; D. Earnhardt Jr. 225-236; J. McMurray 237-240; M. Kenseth 241; J. McMurray 242-270; M. Kenseth 271-276; J. Gordon 277; J. Johnson 278-293; M. Kenseth 294-311; J. Johnson 312-330; B. Keselowski 331-343; A. Almirola 344; J. Johnson 345-373; J. Gordon 374-375; C. Edwards 376-379; J. Gordon 380-383; M. Kenseth 384-391; J. Johnson 392-400.
Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Lead, Laps Led): J. Johnson 10 times for 164 laps; K. Harvick 5 times for 100 laps; B. Keselowski 4 times for 43 laps; J. McMurray 3 times for 34 laps; M. Kenseth 4 times for 33 laps; D. Earnhardt Jr. 2 times for 13 laps; J. Gordon 4 times for 8 laps; C. Edwards 1 time for 4 laps; A. Almirola 1 time for 1 lap.
Top 16 in Points: J. Gordon – 432; M. Kenseth – 421; Kyle Busch – 408; C. Edwards – 408; D. Earnhardt Jr. – 394; J. Johnson – 388; J. Logano – 378; B. Vickers – 365; B. Keselowski – 361; R. Newman – 361; G. Biffle – 351; K. Harvick – 345; K. Larson # – 344; D. Hamlin – 340; A. Dillon # – 334; P. Menard – 328.

 

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