Johnson excited about return to Infineon Raceway


Riding with …

Dave Blaney

Last week: The Hartford native finished 34th in the Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips 400, earning $73,675. He started the race in the 42nd position after qualifying thanks to owner standings.

Season to date: Blaney picked up 10 points to remain in 31st position in the Sprint Cup Series standings. He’s 23 points behind David Gilliland.

This weekend: NASCAR’s top series heads to Sonoma, Calif., for Sunday’s Toyota/Save Mart 350 at Infineon Raceway. Television coverage (TNT) begins at 3 p.m.

Staff report/Associated Press

Sporting News

Self esteem and pride are built in pieces. In life and in racing. Triumphs add a small piece here, a bigger piece there. Jimmie Johnson added a huge piece a year ago at Infineon Raceway when got his first Sprint Cup victory on a road course.

This weekend, Johnson returns to Northern California’s wine country to race at Infineon. He’ll take to the 1.99-mile, 12-turn circuit intent on adding another piece.

This week, when asked about returning to the scene of twisty victory No. 1, the five-time defending series champion said, “I hadn’t thought about it in that respect, but the way we ran last year on the road course and the progression that I’ve made as a driver, I’ve been very excited about this weekend’s race coming up and look forward to a good run.”

Jimmie Johnson dropped from second to fifth in points after finishing 27th last week at Michigan. Johnson has 54 victories in 342 career starts. He’s won on superspeedways, short tracks and restrictor-plate tracks. But when he arrived at Infineon last year, he had a fat zero in the road-race column.

And that hurt. It hurt because, as many drivers will tell you, winning on road circuits tends to validate their credentials as a complete driver. And it hurt even more because Johnson considers himself a road racer trapped in a full-bodied car.

“I’d say the bottom line to it is I love road-course racing,” Johnson said after his 2010 victory. “I always have. I grew up racing off-road trucks, they were on road courses with jumps. Made a name for myself in that style of racing.

“To come into the Cup Series and not have success early irritated me. That’s why [winning Infineon] is so special to us, why it has meant so much. I just truly enjoy road-course racing, doesn’t matter if it’s our stock cars, the Grand-Am Series I run in. I’d love to run in an IndyCar someday, F1.”

Even though Johnson and his Hendrick Motorsports team have that first road victory, they really could use another on Sunday. First, to show that last year was no fluke—he got the victory when leader Marcos Ambrose bizarrely could not re-fire his engine near the end of the race after turning off the engine to save fuel—and second, to re-establish some of the momentum he lost last weekend at Michigan International Speedway.

In that last race, he was sitting second in the points and running well when he suddenly committed a rare, unforced error by spinning out. He couldn’t recover track position at big, old MIS and wound up 27th. He dropped to fifth place in points.