Johnson leads Chevy 1-2-3-4-5 sweep in Fontana

Johnson is making his title run again
CIA Stock Photo

Jimmie Johnson called his shot.

For months, the three-time defending Sprint Cup champion has been saying the addition of Auto Club Speedway to the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup was a gift to his No. 48 team.

In Sunday’s Pepsi 500, Johnson proved it—and grabbed the points lead from Mark Martin in the process. Johnson’s win also left runner-up Jeff Gordon conceding that his Hendrick Motorsports teammate is in a class by himself.

After the sun came out on Lap 66 of 250, Johnson was unbeatable, and not even a succession of late restarts could derail his effort.

In a three-lap sprint to the finish that followed a massive wreck in Turn 1 on Lap 245, Johnson pulled away from Gordon to win by 1.603 seconds. Juan Pablo Montoya ran third, followed by Martin and Tony Stewart, who overcame a pit-road speeding penalty that cost him a lap.

Though he’s now the all-time leader with four Cup wins at Fontana, Johnson said the race was anything but a “gimme."

“I try not to the have the mind-set that we come back to a track that we’ve had success at and we’re expected to run well," he said. “You have to go out every week, and it’s the same thing for this championship.

“Just because we’ve done well the last three years doesn’t mean that we’re a shoo-in for the fourth. So I’ve just got to stay focused on my job and go out and earn it each lap and see where things fall into place. We needed to run well today to get points because, obviously, the 5 (Martin) and the 42 (Montoya) ran well."

Johnson, who grew up in El Cajon, Calif., said the appearance of the sun turned track conditions in his favor.

“We did work on the car some, but I think it came to us," Johnson said. “I think it made the track slick, and the lines I was running and the balance we had with the car really helped us. So it really came in our direction."

Johnson won the race off a restart with three laps left, after the multicar incident in Turn 1—which took out all four Richard Petty Motorsports entries—forced NASCAR to red-flag the race for track cleanup.

The final three-lap segment followed a restart just four laps earlier, after Kurt Busch bounced off the Turn 4 wall and collected fellow Chase drivers Kasey Kahne and Greg Biffle on Lap 239. Johnson was confident he had the strongest car, if he could just stay ahead on the restarts.

“It’s such a long straightaway, and the draft is so important that the guy who is in the second row really controls who’s in the lead going into Turn 1," Johnson said. “You almost have to get a bad restart to allow the guy behind you to hit your bumper and push you along.

“I was doing it wrong, and finally on that last restart, I got it right. We had such a good car that, if somebody did pass me, I could get back by them in a couple of laps."

Gordon couldn’t agree more about the quality of Johnson’s car.

“They’re in another category," Gordon said. “We’ve got to find out what we’re missing. The only thing I felt bad about was that we finished second, and we’re in a second-class category. We’re good, but we’re not good enough. We’re doing everything we can to be good enough, but it’s just not there. We’ve got to search and find something. We’ve got to be better than that."

With his fifth win of the season, the 45th of his career and the third straight in the fall race at Fontana, Johnson moved 12 points ahead of Martin in the standings. Montoya is third, 58 points back, and Stewart stands fourth, 84 behind Johnson. Gordon improved two positions to fifth in the standings, 105 points out.

Polesitter Denny Hamlin was a major casualty. First out of the pits under caution after a pit stop on Lap 186, Hamlin led the field to a restart on Lap 190, but before he reached the first corner, Hamlin’s No. 11 Toyota sat wrecked at the end of pit road.

Hamlin had chosen to restart from the outside lane—the leader’s prerogative—but he turned too quickly to the inside and spun across the nose of the Chevy of Montoya, who had gotten a push down the frontstretch from Johnson.

The nose of Hamlin’s car slammed into the end of the wall separating pit road from the infield grass. After extensive repairs in the garage, Hamlin returned to the track for a few laps, but his 37th-place finish dropped him to ninth in the Cup standings, 219 points behind Johnson.

Hamlin was crestfallen as his team repaired his car.

“I thought I was clear and misjudged it," he said. “I got to apologize to the team. They deserve better than that. They got me out front. It was a bad mistake."

Feeling worse than he had all weekend, Kyle Busch exited his No. 18 Toyota during the first caution period, as he had done in Saturday’s Nationwide Series race. Sixty laps into the race, Busch turned the car over to David Gilliland, who started the event in his No. 71 Chevrolet and parked it after 13 laps.

“I’m going to go lay down for a little bit and see if I can get some fluids or something in me at the infield care center," said Busch, who was suffering from the flu, bronchitis and a sinus infection. “I’m sorry I had to get out. I’m not feeling well. I was coughing real bad out there."

Gilliland finished 24th, a lap down.

Results

FIN ST CAR DRIVER MAKE SPONSOR PTS/BNS LAPS STATUS
1 3 48 Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet Lowe's / Jimmie Johnson Foundation 195/10 250 Running
2 10 24 Jeff Gordon Chevrolet Pepsi / DuPont 175/5 250 Running
3 4 42 Juan Montoya Chevrolet Target 170/5 250 Running
4 9 5 Mark Martin Chevrolet Kellogg's / Carquest 165/5 250 Running
5 20 14 Tony Stewart Chevrolet Office Depot / Old Spice 160/5 250 Running
6 11 99 Carl Edwards Ford Aflac 150/0 250 Running
7 31 6 David Ragan Ford UPS 146/0 250 Running
8 24 2 Kurt Busch Dodge Miller Lite 147/5 250 Running
9 8 33 Clint Bowyer Chevrolet Prilosec OTC / Wal-Mart 138/0 250 Running
10 7 29 Kevin Harvick Chevrolet Shell / Pennzoil 134/0 250 Running
11 16 07 Casey Mears Chevrolet Jack Daniel's 130/0 250 Running
12 22 77 Sam Hornish Jr. Dodge Mobil 1 127/0 250 Running
13 17 17 Matt Kenseth Ford R+L Carriers 124/0 250 Running
14 6 20 Joey Logano * Toyota The Home Depot 121/0 250 Running
15 36 39 Ryan Newman Chevrolet Haas Automation 118/0 250 Running
16 14 12 David Stremme Dodge Penske Racing 115/0 250 Running
17 34 55 Michael Waltrip Toyota NAPA Auto Parts 112/0 250 Running
18 42 00 David Reutimann Toyota Aaron's Dream Machine 109/0 250 Running
19 40 34 John Andretti Chevrolet Taco Bell 111/5 250 Running
20 2 16 Greg Biffle Ford 3M Scotch-Blue Painter's Tape 103/0 250 Running
21 21 82 Scott Speed * Toyota Red Bull 100/0 250 Running
22 5 1 Martin Truex Jr. Chevrolet Guitar Hero 5 102/5 250 Running
23 27 47 Marcos Ambrose Toyota Little Debbie / Kingsford / Clorox 94/0 250 Running
24 19 18 Kyle Busch Toyota M&M's 91/0 248 Running
25 37 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. Chevrolet Amp Energy / National Guard 88/0 248 Running
26 35 96 Bobby Labonte Ford DLP 85/0 247 Running
27 41 98 Paul Menard Ford Energizer / Menards 82/0 247 Running
28 26 78 Regan Smith Chevrolet Furniture Row Companies 79/0 247 Running
29 32 83 Brian Vickers Toyota Red Bull 76/0 246 Running
30 18 31 Jeff Burton Chevrolet Caterpillar 73/0 245 Running
31 28 43 Reed Sorenson Dodge Rosie Organic Chicken 70/0 244 Running
32 39 19 Elliott Sadler Dodge Stanley 67/0 244 In Pit
33 12 44 A.J. Allmendinger Dodge Dassault Systemes 64/0 244 Running
34 25 9 Kasey Kahne Dodge Budweiser 61/0 244 In Pit
35 15 113 Max Papis * Toyota GEICO 58/0 244 Running
36 29 26 Jamie McMurray Ford Crown Royal 55/0 209 Running
37 1 11 Denny Hamlin Toyota FedEx Ground 57/5 195 In Pit
38 38 7 Robby Gordon Toyota Jim Beam 49/0 121 In Pit
39 13 187 Joe Nemechek Toyota NEMCO Motorsports 46/0 29 Out of Race
40 43 36 Michael McDowell Toyota Wave Energy Drink 43/0 25 In Pit
41 33 66 Dave Blaney Toyota Prism Motorsports 40/0 22 In Pit
42 30 171 David Gilliland Chevrolet Mahindra Tractors 37/0 13 In Pit
43 23 09 Mike Bliss Dodge Miccosukee Resort & Gaming 34/0 11 Out of Race

* Denotes Rookie