Boston Herald

Johnson’s two-way road

Couple options for shot at No. 8

- By STEPHEN HAWKINS

MONSTER ENERGY CUP

FORT WORTH, Texas — Jimmie Johnson still has two very conceivabl­e options for a chance to race for his record-breaking eighth NASCAR Cup Series championsh­ip.

Win one of the next two races, or just be in the top four in points after that, and Johnson will get one of four championsh­ip-contending spots in two weeks.

“I do feel good about getting in,” Johnson said.

Johnson is a seven-time winner at Texas, where the Cup Series races today. He won there in April in the first race after the 11⁄2-mile track was completely repaved and restructur­ed in Turns 1 and 2. And in the current driver standings, he is only three points out of the top four spots.

As for Chase Elliott, his Hendrick Motorsport­s teammate is probably in a mustwin situation after being ohso-close to being locked into a title shot at Homestead.

Elliott arrived in Texas eighth among the eight championsh­ip contenders, and 26 points out of the top four, after being wrecked by Denny Hamlin when leading two laps shy of the scheduled checkered flack at Martinsvil­le last week. His first Cup victory would have locked him into a championsh­ip chance, and a top-five finish could have been a points boost. But he finished 27th.

“As long as the week has gone along, it has given me a lot of time to think about how close we were to going to Homestead,” Elliott said. “I think if anything else that will drive you up the wall more if you think about it.”

Making things even more difficult and frustratin­g for Elliott in Texas, the No. 24 didn’t make it through tech inspection in time to make a qualifying run Friday. He will start 34th while all the other seven championsh­ip contenders qualified in the top 10.

Martinsvil­le winner Kyle Busch, who held off points leader Martin Truex Jr. for the race that needed five extra laps, is the only driver who has clinched one of the four championsh­ip-contending spots in the season finale.

Kurt Busch, out of championsh­ip contention and with his Cup status for next season still unsettled, is on the pole at Texas after being one of five drivers with qualifying laps of more than 200 mph. He is now with Stewart-Haas Racing, though doesn’t have a deal settled for 2018 with that or any other team.

“No updates for me. We are in negotiatio­ns,” Busch said, without elaboratin­g after qualifying. “Days like today help quite a bit.”

Hamlin, who is seventh in points, qualified second after going 200.617 mph. Kevin Harvick, now holding down the fourth spot, starts third. Points leader Truex starts seventh, two spots behind Kyle Busch.

“Definitely confidence is high. Feel good about it. Mile and a half is — obviously they’ve been good for us this year, but honestly, I feel like everywhere we go this year, right now especially, we can run up front and have a shot at winning,” Truex said. “Being able to come here with a pretty nice points cushion feels good, and hopefully we’ll be able to go out here and take care of business.”

Brad Keselowski, the other driver currently in the top four spots, starts 10th. That is a spot lower than Johnson, who has gone 20 races without a win.

“Comfortabl­e here, we’ve stayed alive. It hasn’t been pretty, but we’ve stayed alive,” Johnson said. “And we’re at one of our best tracks. … We want to win. If we can’t do that, we understand where we are at the points. Hopefully we can do it.”

Hamlin has apologized publicly on social media to Elliott, but that didn’t change the frustratio­n for Elliott, who said in Texas that he wouldn’t answer any questions about whether he was going to try to get Hamlin back on the track.

That led to Johnson being asked if he had to be extra careful if he found himself behind Hamlin and his teammate today.

“Yeah, you stay aware. There is no doubt about it you don’t want to be caught up in something that you don’t need to be,” Johnson said.

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