Johnson grabs first Cup; Biffle wins at Homestead
By Jenna Fryer, The Associated Press
November 20, 2006
03:45 PM EST (20:45 GMT)
HOMESTEAD, Fla. -- Hard though he tried, Jimmie
Johnson just couldn't give another Nextel Cup
championship away.
Johnson completed his dream season by cruising over
every speedbump in his path, overcoming debris in his
grill, a missing roll of tape, a loose lug nut,
treacherous traffic and his own nerves to finally win
the NASCAR championship that had taunted him the past
two years.
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Greg Biffle won his second race of the
season at Homestead. Credit: AP
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Ford 400 |
Results |
Pos. |
Driver |
Make |
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1. |
Greg Biffle |
Ford |
2. |
Martin Truex Jr. |
Chevy |
3. |
Denny Hamlin |
Chevy |
4. |
Kasey Kahne |
Dodge |
5. |
Kevin Harvick |
Chevy |
6. |
Matt Kenseth |
Ford |
7. |
Scott Riggs |
Dodge |
8. |
Carl Edwards |
Ford |
9. |
Jimmie Johnson |
Chevy |
10. |
Clint Bowyer |
Chevy |
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Victory Lane
Greg Biffle wins the Ford 400 in Homestead
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Top finishers
Matt Kenseth and Denny Hamlin talk about their
night
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Looking ahead
Dale Jr. looking foward to the 2007 season
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Final laps
Greg Biffle gets the checkered flag in Homestead
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Hard crash
Juan Montoya spins into flames on Lap 15
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Against the wall
Kyle Busch swipes the wall slowing him down in
Homestead
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On Sunday, the little
things that used to sink him turned out to be nothing
more than mere annoyances.
Johnson, the perpetual points leader for the past
three regular seasons who always found a way to collapse
in the Chase, finally put it all together, wrapping up
his title with a ninth-place finish at Homestead-Miami
Speedway. He finished with a 56-point lead on Matt
Kenseth.
"It's going to take a little bit of time for this to
soak in, just to think what this team has accomplished
and the year we've had," Johnson said. "Being a
champion, it's the only thing I ever wanted to be."
Greg Biffle won the Ford 400 for the third
consecutive season, beating rookies Martin Truex Jr. and
Denny Hamlin to the finish line. Kasey Kahne was fourth
and Kevin Harvick rounded out the top five. Kenseth was
sixth.
Juan Montoya, making the first Nextel Cup start of
his budding NASCAR career, ran as high as 13th, but his
race ended in a fiery wreck 15 laps from the finish.
The race was delayed nearly eight minutes to clean
the track, briefly postponing Johnson's long-awaited
celebration. No matter for Johnson, who finished lower
than second for the first time in six races.
But he didn't need to be flawless to win this one: He
started the day with a cushy margin that required him to
only stay out of trouble and finish 12th or better to
wrap up the title.
Unfortunately for Johnson, nothing is ever that easy.
His troubles started a mere 15 laps into the race,
when flying debris punched a gaping hole in the grill of
the No. 48 Chevrolet. When he went in for repairs, his
crew couldn't find any tape to patch it.
Later, he nearly pulled away from a pit stop with a
loose lug nut. Then he had to avoid Robby Gordon's
spinning car.
"We've been ducking them all day," crew chief Chad
Knaus sighed after Johnson scooted by Gordon.
But he still had heavy traffic to deal with and, of
course, his own nerves. When caution came out with 62
laps to go, Knaus wanted to change all four tires and
stretch it to the end. But Johnson wasn't convinced, and
demanded his crew copy whatever Kenseth did.
With his spotter keeping a close eye on Kenseth, who
took only two tires, Knaus quickly adjusted and ordered
the same service. It put Johnson in ninth place on the
restart with 58 laps to go, but a stack of traffic
behind him on four fresh tires.
"Drive it like you stole it, homie," Knaus encouraged
him.
Johnson held his position, then copied Kenseth again
on a final round of pit stops. Kenseth was in fifth and
Johnson was in sixth on the re-start with 16 laps to go,
and it would take only a catastrophe at that point to
deny Johnson the title.
But two late cautions -- Montoya's wreck, followed by
good buddy Casey Mears blowing an engine -- again
prolonged the celebration.
Finally, the race was restarted for a two-lap
shootout to the end.
When it was over, Johnson, a two-time championship
runner-up, had his elusive title.
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Jimmie Johnson started the season with a
victory at Daytona and finished it by
lifting the Cup. Credit: AP
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Nextel Cup Series |
2006 Driver Standings |
Pos. |
Driver |
Behind |
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1. |
Jimmie Johnson |
Leader |
2. |
Matt Kenseth |
-56 |
3. |
Denny Hamlin |
-68 |
4. |
Kevin Harvick |
-78 |
5. |
Dale Earnhardt Jr. |
-147 |
6. |
Jeff Gordon |
-219 |
7. |
Jeff Burton |
-247 |
8. |
Kasey Kahne |
-292 |
9. |
Mark Martin |
-307 |
10. |
Kyle Busch |
-448 |
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ChampionJimmie
Johnson holds on to win the 2006 Nextel Cup
title
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Good day
Jeff Gordon wins today as the co-owner of the 48
team
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"It was such a long day to
get here," he said in Victory Lane. "There were times
when we were down and out and in the back and had to
come back through. This just means the world to me, it's
the most amazing day of my life."
Jeff Gordon, the four-time series champion who
befriended Johnson and convinced car owner Rick Hendrick
to give his new protege a ride, celebrated by bumping
into the side of Johnson's car on the cool-down lap.
Knaus then received a celebratory hug from Hendrick,
who won his sixth championship as a car owner, and
another from Ray Evernham, the championship crew
chief-turned-rival car owner who taught Knaus much of
what he knows.
"This team has really come into its own over the last
year," Knaus said. "I just couldn't be prouder. We had
to battle back from a lot of weird stuff this year, and
they held strong."
It started with the season-opening Daytona 500, when
Knaus was caught cheating in race preparations. He was
sent home and forced to watch Johnson win the biggest
race of the season on TV. And he was still at home,
finishing up his four-race suspension, when Johnson
scored his dramatic win in Las Vegas.
They finally reunited in late March, but needed five
more races to make it to Victory Lane together. They did
it in Talladega, conquering a track that had tormented
Johnson throughout his career and threatened to tarnish
his squeaky-clean image with a series of Johnson-caused
accidents.
Then they won at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in
August, giving Johnson same-season victories at NASCAR's
two historic venues. It automatically made Johnson the
favorite to win the title: Five of the past eight
Brickyard champions parlayed their wins into a
championship.
Now it's six of nine, but in true Johnson fashion, it
didn't come easy.
Although he led the points for all but four of the 22
weeks of the regular season, he once again fell apart
when the Chase began by crashing out of the first of the
10 races. It dropped him to ninth in the standings and
forced him to mount a furious comeback for the third
consecutive season.
"I think we knew in our hearts we could do it all
along, we just got into some bad luck at the beginning,"
Johnson said. "That's what let us get the momentum, let
us sleep well at night, is because we knew this team was
capable of winning a championship. We just had to have
some good luck."
Hamlin finished third in the final Chase standings
and was followed by Harvick and Dale Earnhardt Jr.
Gordon was sixth, Jeff Burton was seventh and Kasey
Kahne, Mark Martin and Kyle Busch completed the Chase
field.
Reigning champion Tony Stewart, who failed to make
the Chase but won three of its races, finished 15th
Sunday and finished 11th in the standings to earn the $1
million payout.
Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. All rights
reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast,
rewritten, or redistributed.
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