HOMESTEAD, Fla. -- The car cover was wrapped tightly around the No. 48
Chevrolet, its driver and crew long gone for the day. All around the
garage, teams worked feverishly on their cars, but
Jimmie Johnson was nowhere to be found.
The absence of the Hendrick Motorsports team after qualifying Friday
raised eyebrows everywhere at Homestead-Miami Speedway.
Did they go home in disgust after qualifying 39th for Sunday's season
finale -- Johnson's worst starting position of the year? Or were they
playing mind games with the competition?
No one was really sure.
All that was certain was that it was unusual for Johnson to qualify so
poorly. His effort was the worst of his career, surpassing two
37th-place starting spots last season.
But even stranger was that noted perfectionist Chad Knaus, the crew
chief, wasn't tearing the car apart trying to figure out what went wrong.
"I heard him on the radio -- it didn't sound like he was disappointed in
the lap," Jeff Gordon, Johnson's
teammate at Hendrick Motorsports, said. "It sounded like the speed
wasn't there."
Johnson heads into Sunday's season finale trailing series leader
Kurt Busch by 18 points in the race for the Nextel Cup. Gordon is
third in the standings, three points behind Johnson.
Busch won the pole and Gordon qualified fifth. Johnson has a ton of
ground to make up on Sunday to even challenge for the title.
Robbie Loomis, Gordon's crew chief and Knaus' partner in strategy, said
it was way too early to count Johnson out.
"They probably are as strong as anybody in this garage when they have
their backs stacked up against the wall," Loomis said.
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