Johnson edges Bowyer by a whisker to win Talladega
Published - Apr 17 2011 04:59PM EST
By PAUL NEWBERRY - AP National Writer
(AP Photo/Dave Martin)
Nationwide driver Kyle Busch (18) is pushed by Joey Logano (20) as he makes his pass on Trevor Bayne (16) on the final lap of the Aaron's 312 auto race at the Talladega Superspeedway in Talladega, Ala., Saturday, April 16, 2011. Carl Edwards (60), Joe Nemechek (87) and Brad Keselowski (22) all drive nearby. Busch won the race.
TALLADEGA, Ala. — Jimmie Johnson won a Talladega two-step Sunday, edging Clint Bowyer by about a foot with a big push from Dale Earnhardt Jr.
The official margin was 0.002 seconds, tied for the closest finish in NASCAR Sprint Cup history.
The tag-team race came down to an eight-car sprint _ actually, four pairs of cars _ with only the guys at the front of the duos having a chance to win the Aaron's 499.
After laying back most of the day, five-time series champion Johnson came on strong at the end for his 54th career victory and first of the season.
"We were just the lucky guy at the end with a good run," Johnson said. "We had some big mo on our side, and off we went."
Coming out of the fourth turn, the No. 48 car dipped right next to the yellow line, surged past Hendrick Motorsports teammates Jeff Gordon and Mark Martin and got to the finish line just ahead of Bowyer in a four-wide dash down the long finishing straight at Talladega Superspeedway.
"What a bummer," said Bowyer, who led a race-high 38 laps. "I saw him coming."
Earnhardt, the fourth Hendrick driver, finished fourth and essentially gave up a chance to claim his first win since 2008 by deciding he was more comfortable pushing Johnson than getting pushed.
"I can't thank Junior enough," said Johnson, who gave Earnhardt the checkered flag as a reward for being such a team player. "He made the decision that my car was faster leading. And the way these things are finishing up, the lead car's going to get the win. In some respects, he was more worried about the team having a good performance than anything."
Kevin Harvick, who was Bowyer's pusher, wound up fifth. Carl Edwards almost got into the mix as well, going right up against the outside wall with Greg Biffle on his bumper but didn't have enough room to pull it off, finishing sixth.
The official margin was 0.002 seconds, tied for the closest finish in NASCAR Sprint Cup history.
The tag-team race came down to an eight-car sprint _ actually, four pairs of cars _ with only the guys at the front of the duos having a chance to win the Aaron's 499.
After laying back most of the day, five-time series champion Johnson came on strong at the end for his 54th career victory and first of the season.
"We were just the lucky guy at the end with a good run," Johnson said. "We had some big mo on our side, and off we went."
Coming out of the fourth turn, the No. 48 car dipped right next to the yellow line, surged past Hendrick Motorsports teammates Jeff Gordon and Mark Martin and got to the finish line just ahead of Bowyer in a four-wide dash down the long finishing straight at Talladega Superspeedway.
"What a bummer," said Bowyer, who led a race-high 38 laps. "I saw him coming."
Earnhardt, the fourth Hendrick driver, finished fourth and essentially gave up a chance to claim his first win since 2008 by deciding he was more comfortable pushing Johnson than getting pushed.
"I can't thank Junior enough," said Johnson, who gave Earnhardt the checkered flag as a reward for being such a team player. "He made the decision that my car was faster leading. And the way these things are finishing up, the lead car's going to get the win. In some respects, he was more worried about the team having a good performance than anything."
Kevin Harvick, who was Bowyer's pusher, wound up fifth. Carl Edwards almost got into the mix as well, going right up against the outside wall with Greg Biffle on his bumper but didn't have enough room to pull it off, finishing sixth.
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