Johnson wins at Bristol

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BRISTOL, Tenn. --- There's an aura about Bristol Motor Speedway, a track that drivers and fans love equally for its electric, throwback-style racing.

Jimmie Johnson never chalked it up as one of his favorites.

The four-time defending NASCAR champion could never get a handle on the .533-mile bullring, where he struggled far more than he ever succeeded.

Until Sunday, that is.

Johnson finally knocked Bristol off his to-do list, plowing from sixth to first in just three laps Sunday to grab his first career victory at the revered Tennessee track.

"Everything around Bristol is what people focus on. There are parties for it. The fans get excited for it. You walk into this facility and look around, and you want to run well," Johnson said. "It's really been a downer for me to walk through the gates, look around, 'Man, I'm going to (stink) today.' I really had that mind-set coming here."

That changed last season when Johnson led laps in both Bristol races, grabbing a pair of top-10 finishes while giving him a guide on how to get around the concrete track.

"I started building my confidence," he said. "Those two races gave us clear direction where to work, me a clear direction on how to drive the car."

And that's all he needed with 10 laps to go and an opportunity to deny Kurt Busch a chance to gain any ground on Johnson's championship No. 48 team.

Busch led 278 of the 500 laps and had a decent gap on Johnson when his easy drive to victory was clouded by a debris caution with 17 laps remaining. All the leaders headed to pit road, and Busch and Johnson both took four tires on the final stop.

Greg Biffle, Matt Kenseth, Carl Edwards and Tony Stewart all took two tires, giving them the first four positions on the restart. Busch was fifth, Johnson was sixth and the race resumed with 10 laps to go.

Kenseth's difficulty getting up to speed stacked up traffic behind him, including Busch, who lost his opportunity to leapfrog his way to the front.

Not Johnson, though. He weaved through the mess up to second, Stewart moved into the lead, and Johnson needed just more than one lap to pick him off, too.

"When we're winning at tracks that we're not supposed to, boys better look out," Johnson warned. "Even that 2 car (Busch) that doesn't want the 48 to win."

Busch, a five-time Bristol winner who hasn't been to Victory Lane at the bullring since 2006, was irate over his radio at the loss.

He settled for third behind Johnson and Stewart, missing his chance to win his second consecutive race of the season and prove his Penske Racing team has made enough gains to run consistently with Johnson and the Hendrick Motorsports bunch.

"I'd rather lose to any of the other 41 cars out there than the 48 car," Busch said. "I thought we had him beat."

It was Johnson's third win of the season and 50th of his career. More important, it was his first at Bristol, where his previous best finish in 16 starts was third. Nine of his previous finishes here had been outside the top 16.

Top 10 finishers

1. Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet

2. Tony Stewart, Chevrolet

3. Kurt Busch, Dodge

4. Greg Biffle, Ford

5. Matt Kenseth, Ford

6. Carl Edwards, Ford

7. Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet

8. Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet

9. Kyle Busch, Toyota

10. Jeff Burton, Chevrolet

Up next

WHAT: Goody's Fast Pain Relief 500

WHEN: 1 p.m. Sunday

WHERE: Martinsville Speedway, Va.

TV: Fox-Ch. 54

2009 CHAMPION: Jimmie Johnson

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Tufenuf
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Tufenuf 03/22/10 - 06:19 pm
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Am I the only one who thinks

Am I the only one who thinks it strange that one driver wins all the
time. There was an article in Car and Driver a few years back about
cheating and the "fixed" races in Nascar.
Maybe there was some truth to the story.

In any event there is little reason to watch a race on TV anymore, and
even less reason to attend a race.

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