Knaus
an integral part of Johnson's record-tying effort
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[November 22, 2016]
By Reid Spencer, NASCAR Wire Service
Distributed By The Sports Xchange
HOMESTEAD, Fla. -- All Jimmie Johnson
and crew chief Chad Knaus wanted was another shot, and when Dylan
Lupton hit the Turn 2 wall on Lap 252 to bring out the fifth caution
of Sunday's Ford EcoBoost 400, Knaus clenched his fist in
anticipation.
At the time, Johnson was running sixth, trailing the three
Championship 4 drivers--Joey Logano, Kyle Busch and Carl Edwards--he
needed to beat to claim a record-tying seventh title. But the
caution with 15 laps left in the scheduled distance breathed life
into the No. 48 team.
Three restarts later, Johnson passed Kyle Larson for the victory and
earned his seventh championship, tying NASCAR Hall of Famers Richard
Petty and Dale Earnhardt for the series record.
Knaus tied a record, too, winning a seventh title with the same
driver. Knaus, however, has one championship to go to tie Dale Inman
for the series record. Inman won seven championships with Petty and
another with driver Terry Labonte.
"I'm pretty speechless right now," Knaus said after the race. "It
has been an awesome, awesome journey, but it has been a very trying
season. We've had a lot of good things. We've had some difficulties
along the way. But to be able to be where we are at today with
Lowe's, one team, one driver, one crew chief, one sponsor...to be
able to win all seven championships is just awesome.
"I can't thank everyone at Hendrick Motorsports and Chevrolet
enough. All of our other corporate partners. The guys and gals at
HMS have buckled down and worked so hard to be able to give us the
race cars we needed to have to be able to compete. It definitely
showed. That we got three wins in the second half of the season is
pretty phenomenal."
One of the hallmarks of the No. 48 team has been its ability to
recover from adversity, and Sunday night was no exception. Johnson
started the race from the rear of the field after NASCAR discovered
unapproved modifications to the "A" posts during pre-race
inspection.
"It happens," Knaus said with typical terseness. "We rectified it.
We moved on. We started 40th and won the race and won the
championship."
Stewart finishes his long goodbye to Sprint Cup racing
Sunday started better for Tony Stewart than it ended.
Before the Ford EcoBoost 400, Stewart was greeted warmly by crew
members from every Sprint Cup team as he drove down pit road. He was
mobbed by well-wishers before he started his final laps on the
track.
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That Stewart finished 22nd, two laps down, may have been
anti-climactic to the uninitiated, but it marked the end of an
enormously successful career for the three-time series champion, who
finished his Sprint Cup tenure with 49 victories at NASCAR's highest
level.
"I raced," Stewart said. "I did what I do every time I get in the
car. I didn't think of anything else other than just racing the
race. We got behind there, and we tried something to make ground and
got caught out and had to run 60 laps on a set of tires."
Stewart derived more enjoyment from seeing Jimmie Johnson win his
record-tying seventh championship.
"I'm proud," Stewart said. "It's been an awesome 21 years racing in
NASCAR with the XFINITY Series and the Cup Series. That's really
cool to see that No. 48 (Johnson) up there making history. Now we've
got three guys in the seven-win club. Pretty proud day. I was glad I
got to race with him on the day he got his seventh."
Kyle Larson is snookered on final restart
Kyle Larson led 132 of 168 laps in Sunday's Ford EcoBoost 400 at
Homestead-Miami Speedway, but he didn't lead the one that counted.
And though Larson didn't begrudge Johnson's seventh NASCAR Sprint
Cup Series championship, Larson felt Johnson gained an edge by
laying back on the overtime restart that decided the race.
"Congrats to Jimmie for winning the championship," Larson said.
"That's pretty cool that Jimmie could win seven there. We had the
car to win there, and I know that I did everything in my power to
win the race. But rules are rules and I have to work in the box."
"You're supposed to be side-by-side entering the (restart) box, and
he was all the way behind me. So not really anything I could do to
maintain his distance behind me. But it's whatever--I'm happy for
him."
Larson wasn't wrong. Knowing other championship contenders would
also try to lay back behind him, Johnson admitted he did the
same--just not enough for NASCAR to call him on it.
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