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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Beyond the doubt


NASCAR driver Jimmie Johnson waves the checkered flag after winning the Nextel Cup Allstate 400 at the Brickyard.
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Associated Press The Spokesman-Review

Jimmie Johnson kneeled on the Yard of Bricks with a bewildered look on his face, almost oblivious to the celebration going on around him.

His car owner, crew chief and wife were ecstatic, exchanging hugs and high-fives as they eagerly prepared to kiss the famous stretch of track surface at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

But Johnson stared straight ahead, seemingly unable to grasp Sunday’s gritty victory that ended a career of frustration at the Brickyard and made him the official favorite to win the Nextel Cup championship.

“I doubted this race track. I doubted my ability to get around this track,” he said. “We’ve been kicking ourselves for years. So to get over this hurdle, to get past it, I am just so full inside and I just want to go sit down and reflect and think about it. Just go sit down in a corner and chill out and relax.”

This win seemed doubtful from the start.

His radio wasn’t working when he climbed into his Chevrolet on the starting grid, and his Hendrick Motorsports team frantically worked to fix it before the race began.

It took him just a handful of laps to figure out his car was stout enough to challenge for the win, but a flat tire 39 laps nearly wiped it out.

“It really deflated me,” he admitted.

Stressed that his fender had been damaged and the car had been reduced to junk, Johnson was subdued when he headed to pit road. His team changed the tire, crew chief Chad Knaus gave him a quick pep-talk, and Johnson was off.

Only he was in 38th place.

He still sliced his way through the field and aggressively powered to the front with about 100 miles to go.

The race was his to lose – until a late caution for debris with 19 laps to go almost took it from him.

Johnson pitted for four fresh tires and was in eighth when the race resumed with 14 to go, stuck behind four cars that didn’t pit, two that took only two new tires and Matt Kenseth.

But the traffic was never an issue, and Johnson was back out front for the final 10.

He crossed the finish line ahead of Kenseth moments before a final caution for a last-lap accident involving Chase for the Championship contenders Kasey Kahne and Greg Biffle.

It was his fourth victory of the season, third in a major NASCAR event. Johnson won the season-opening Daytona 500 – the only event that trumps Indianapolis in prestige – and also won NASCAR’s All-Star race. He joins Dale Jarrett as the only driver to win at Daytona and Indy in the same season.

Button gets first F1 victory

Jenson Button won a Formula One race for the first time, capturing the Hungarian Grand Prix in Budapest, Hungary, while standings leader Fernando Alonso and Michael Schumacher failed to pick up points.

Button rode to victory in a Honda and was followed by Pedro De La Rosa of McClaren Mercedes and Nick Heidfeld in a BMW Sauber.

Alonso, the defending champion for Renault, went out on the 52nd of 70 laps. Schumacher, the Ferrari driver and seven-time champion, was gone with three laps remaining.

Alonso has 100 points and is followed by Schumacher with 89. Five races remain, with a victory worth 10 points. The next race is the Turkish Grand Prix on Aug. 27.

Theoret repeats to win Seafair

Canada’s Jean Theoret drove Miss Beacon Plumbing to a repeat victory in the Chevrolet Cup at Seafair race for unlimited hydroplanes in Seattle.

Theoret, last year’s defending race champion, took the lead at the start of the race and steadily increased it for a quarter-lap lead ahead of J.W. Myers in Fairweather Masonry by the end of the five-lap race.

Theoret won in the same boat last year, when under different ownership it was named Lumar Window Film.