Johnson is in a class by himself
Many factors have led to his dominance on NASCAR’s top circuit
![]() Glenn Smith / AP file Jimmie Johnson's talent and his passion for racing are among the reasons he's won three-straight Cup championship, writes Johnny Benson of NBCSports.com. |
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There’s little mystery as to why Jimmie Johnson won a third consecutive Cup title – a feat that hasn’t been accomplished in 30 years.
When it comes to winning championships, Johnson has all of what it takes to finish on top: tremendous talent, an exceptional crew chief, a superior organization, the ability to drive virtually mistake-free and the perfect disposition to deal with the highs and lows of a 36-race season.
Even though a red-hot Carl Edwards led a race-high 157 laps to win the Nov. 16th season-finale at
Homestead-Miami Speedway, Johnson's solid 15th-place run was enough to best Edwards by 69 points for the title.
Johnson joins Cale Yarborough as the only drivers in NASCAR history to win three straight Cup titles. Yarborough did it 30 years ago, under a different scoring system and in a very different NASCAR.Johnson has the kind of talent behind the wheel that has seen him finish no lower than fifth in the standings every season since he started racing full time on the Cup circuit in 2002. To many in NASCAR, it was never a question of whether the El Cajon, Calif. native would win a Cup championship, it was a just a matter of when.
Johnson does his level best every time he gets on the track but he’d be the first to tell you that all-out efforts on his part don’t alone result in trips to Victory Lane. There’s more to his unmatched success than just his superb driving.
Figuring prominently into why Johnson is so hard to beat is his employer, Hendrick Motorsports, and his crew chief, Chad Knaus, who has done the best job of anybody in a long time to fully utilize the vast resources of the organization that is also home to four-time Cup champion Jeff Gordon.
Rick Hendrick is an owner who set out to build the dominant organization in Cup racing. He brought aboard Gordon full time in 1993 and showed no hesitation to go deep into his pockets to provide his rising star with whatever resources were necessary to reach the goal of winning a championship – something Gordon did for the first time in 1995. He would take the title again in 1997, 1998 and 2001.
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Knaus’ history with Hendrick Motorsports started with a stint last decade of five years working his way up with Gordon’s team. Remember Gordon’s original Rainbow Warriors pit crew, well Knaus was a tire changer for that group. He left Hendrick Motorsports at the end of 1997 with his sights set on becoming a crew chief, something he eventually achieved with Melling Racing and driver Stacy Compton. But in 2002 he returned to Hendrick Motorsports becoming Johnson’s crew chief and that was the start of the double-barreled slingshot that began picking off competitors one by one on the track and in the standings.
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A key reason why this driver-crew chief combination contends for and wins championships is that they are never satisfied with where they are running in a race (unless it’s in front, of course). They always feel they can improve on how they are doing. Somehow, some way they believe they can find some more speed and they so often do.
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