NASCAR

Winner lauds champ, warns he's coming

- jutter@charlotteobserver.com
Sunday, Nov. 22, 2009
Full Slideshow
Loading Loading
previous next
  • Denny Hamlin

    Denny Hamlin crosses the finish line to win at Homestead-Miami Speedway on Nov. 22, 2009. (Photo by Chris Graythen/Getty Images)

  • Ford 400

    HOMESTEAD, FL - NOVEMBER 22: Jimmie Johnson drives the #48 Lowe's Chevrolet during the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Ford 400 at Homestead-Miami Speedway on November 22, 2009 in Homestead, Florida. (Photo by Chris Graythen/Getty Images)

  • Ford 400

    HOMESTEAD, FL - NOVEMBER 22: Jimmie Johnson, driver of the #48 Lowe's Chevrolet, races Mark Martin, driver of the #5 Kellogg's/CARQUEST Chevrolet, during the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Ford 400 at Homestead-Miami Speedway on November 22, 2009 in Homestead, Florida. (Photo by Todd Warshaw/Getty Images)

HOMESTEAD, Fla. – Sunday’s Sprint Cup Series season finale capped one championship season and may have jump-started another.

With a fifth-place finish, Jimmie Johnson easily clinched his NASCAR record fourth consecutive Cup title. He has now won championships in four of his eight full-time seasons of competition.

The biggest hudle for Johnson to a fifth title may have been lurking in Victory Lane, where Denny Hamlin was celebrating his win in Sunday’s Ford 400 at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

And Hamlin all but guaranteed it.

“I tell you, we’re going to be there, I promise you,” Hamlin said after collecting his fourth win of the season and second in the Chase for the Sprint Cup.

“I promise you, in the next couple of years we’re going to win a championship.

“With three DNFs – you look at the final points standings and call a DNF 100 points and we were right there,” said Hamlin who ended up fifth in points, 317 behind Johnson. “But those guys have been the standard.

“Four in a row for them, and I couldn’t be happier for (Johnson). There’s no more deserving champion than them.”

Johnson entered the race with a 108-point advantage over his Hendrick teammate, Mark Martin, the only other driver mathematically still in the hunt.

Johnson, who started from the pole, wasted no time adding to that margin by leading the first lap and gaining five bonus points.

As the race wore on, it became apparent that unless Johnson blew an engine or got caught up in a wreck, he would claim the title as he had a better car than Martin. But that wasn’t a guarantee.

Johnson showed his agitation more than once over his team radio as other drivers – Juan Pablo Montoya and Clint Bowyer – nearly got into him on the track.

“There were two times we almost got pinched in the wall (by Montoya),” Johnson said. “Then when Juan and (Tony Stewart) spun, I could see it coming.”

Stewart and Montoya had a second run-in on Lap 156. Montoya came back out after repairs were made from his first incident with Stewart and he wrecked Stewart. NASCAR penalized Montoya two laps for rough driving.

Both drivers left the track Sunday night without comment.

In the end, Johnson avoided trouble and as the race neared its conclusion, he asked crew chief Chad Knaus if there was an opportunity to challenge Hamlin for the win. Knaus said, “You can’t.”

"Is that a dare?” Johnson replied.

“No, that is not a dare. That is a fact,” Knaus answered.

Johnson received loud cheers from the fans in the stands while celebrating his championship.

Hendrick team owner Rick Hendrick was not on hand for Sunday’s season finale as he remained in North Carolina, where a niece awaited a liver transplant.

Alesha Gainey, 29, is the daughter of the team owner’s late brother, John Hendrick, who was among those killed in a 2004 plane crash near Martinsville, Va.

Hendrick became the first owner in NASCAR history to take the top-three spots in the Cup standings. Martin finished second in points and Jeff Gordon third.

Disclaimer