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AP Photo/Steve Helber  (click to enlarge)
In this photo taken on Friday, Oct. 23, 2009, driver Mark Martin (left) strains to get a view of the scoreboard as he talks with teammate Jeff Gordon (right) during qualifying for NASCAR Sprint Cup The Tums 500 auto race at the Martinsville Speedway in Martinsville, Va.
 
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Kevin Brown, Sports Editor
kbrown@heraldnet.com
 
Published: Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Johnson's Chase challengers can't keep pace

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — This season was supposed to have the most competitive title race since the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship format began six years ago.

Instead, it's once again been the Jimmie Johnson show.

With only two races remaining to crown NASCAR's 2009 champion, Mark Martin is the only driver with a realistic shot of dethroning Johnson. But with a 73-point cushion, Johnson only needs to hold steady the next two weeks to win a record fourth consecutive championship.

So what went wrong?

Here's a look at the trials and tribulations of the drivers who were expected to challenge Johnson when the Chase started eight weeks ago, only to be left behind the No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports team:

—Martin, second in points, 73 out: He opened the Chase with a win at New Hampshire, the fifth win of the season for the resurgent 50-year-old. The sentimental favorite, Martin finished second in four previous title races, stayed neck-and-neck with Johnson through the first four rounds. His trouble came at Charlotte, when he ran into the back of Juan Pablo Montoya on a restart and couldn't overcome the gaping hole in the front of his No. 5 Chevrolet.

Martin finished 17th at Charlotte, while Johnson went on to win the race and finally put a cushion between himself and his teammate.

Martin's only other setback came at Talladega, when he was collected in a last-lap accident that sent his car flipping across the track for the first time in his storied career. That 28th-place finish likely sealed his fate, even though he heads this weekend back to Phoenix International Raceway, site of his first win this season.

—Jeff Gordon, third in points, 112 out: His Chase got off to a bad start with a mediocre 15th-place finish in the New Hampshire opener that stuck him in a significant hole. But he ran great the next five weeks, grabbing five finishes of sixth or better, including two second-places. Then came Talladega, where he ran out of fuel late and finished 20th to lose more ground to Johnson.

But if Johnson struggles the next two weeks, Gordon will certainly look back at Texas as where he failed to capitalize on an opportunity to really make it a tight title race. After Johnson's early accident opened up the field, Gordon had a chance to pounce but couldn't because of his career struggles at Texas. He nearly went a lap down and wound up a frustrated 13th.

—Kurt Busch, fourth in points, 171 out: Busch ran really well most of the Chase, just not good enough to keep pace with Johnson. An 11th at Kansas caused him to fall back from the leaders, and a 17th at Martinsville in his only real off race sort of sealed his fate.

He could be closer because he ran very well at Talladega, only to be wrecked, like Martin, on the final lap as a likely top-10 finish plummeted to a 30th-place result. Busch bounced back with a victory last week in Texas, but it was too little too late for the 2004 Chase winner.

—Tony Stewart, fifth in points, 178 out: The two-time series champion is perhaps the biggest disappointment of the Chase. Although he did win at Kansas to gain some of his swagger back, he's fallen tremendously off the pace he set all season long as he cruised to a sizable "regular season" points lead.

Trying to become the first owner/driver to win a championship since Alan Kulwicki in 1992, Stewart only briefly flirted with the possibility once the Chase began. He was just OK in the opener, but came back from an earlier accident at Dover to finish ninth. Then came the win at Kansas that pushed him back into contention.

The rest of the races, though, have been memorable for Stewart only in that he didn't really stand out at all. His finishes were decent — four top-13 finishes in the past five races — but he never dominated and led just seven laps over that stretch. A disastrous 35th-place finish at Talladega didn't help, either.

—Juan Pablo Montoya, sixth in points, 236 out: The biggest surprise of the Chase, Montoya has run much better than his spot in the standings shows. He opened the Chase with four top-four finishes and hovered inside the top three of the standings all the way to Charlotte.

That's where his luck ran out. Montoya was stacked up in traffic during a midrace restart and ran into Clint Bowyer. He also got hit from behind by Martin, and the damage at both ends made it difficult for Montoya to keep pace. He spun to bring out a much-needed caution, but it didn't help as Montoya struggled the rest of the way and finished 35th.

Any chance he had to recover was lost when he ran out of gas at Talladega, finishing 19th, then wrecking last week at Texas to finish 37th.

—Denny Hamlin, eighth in points, 322 out: Hamlin is the most disappointed driver of the Chase, with good reason. He's probably been the only one to keep pace with Johnson, only to have bad luck and mechanical failures take him out of contention.

He was off at Dover to fall back in the standings, but he rallied and was back in contention at California until he wrecked while leading with about 60 laps to go. It was driver error, and it cost him considerably.

An engine failure the next week at Charlotte made his win at Martinsville a moot point — the victory was great, but it did little to help him in the standings. Then came another engine failure at Talladega, leaving Hamlin far lower in the standings than he should be.

—Carl Edwards, 11th in points, 440 out: This is the guy everyone said would beat Johnson this year. After all, he won nine races last season and was hot on Johnson's bumper as the Chase wound down.

But he's instead winless and been handcuffed by companywide struggles at Roush Fenway Racing.

His season has been so mediocre, the preseason pick to win the title wasn't even really considered a factor once the Chase began. He's only got one top-10 finish in eight Chase races, while an engine failure at Charlotte and a crash last week at Texas gave him two finishes of 39th. If he doesn't make up some ground, Edwards won't even be on the stage at the season-ending awards ceremony in Las Vegas.

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