Albany Times Union

Drivers who have been eliminated from postseason playoffs are still fighting to achieve goals.

Drivers no longer in playoff picture still hope to achieve goals

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Jimmie Johnson made one thing perfectly clear when he walked out of the Indianapol­is Motor Speedway’s infield medical center.

He might be out of the playoffs but his season is not over.

“I think everybody can see the performanc­e is on its way up,” Johnson said Sunday after a late crash ended his last-ditch hope of making the 16-car field. “Just keep drilling that and trying to get ourselves higher in points and then also back to victory lane.”

It certainly would be a start. Johnson hasn’t won an official Cup race since June 2017 at Dover, one of the primary reasons he must wait until 2020 to resume the chase for a record-breaking eighth series title. He has finished outside the top 15 in seven of the last eight races and in the 30s four times during the same span.

Daniel Suarez started Sunday even with Ryan Newman in points and holding the tiebreaker. Things went wrong quickly.

Suarez’s first big hit came when the No. 41 Ford brushed the wall, forcing him to pit just 12 laps into the Brickyard 400. He spent the rest of the race trying to work his way back up even when he thought others, such as Matt Tifft, got in his way. Tifft was knocked out of the race with 13 laps to go after hitting the wall in the first turn.

Suarez contended Tifft, whose postseason fate was sealed long before the Brickyard, blocked his faster car for at least four laps before the crash — costing him an opportunit­y to pick up precious spots and points.

The result: Suarez finished four points short of becoming the first Mexico-born driver to make the playoff field. Stewarthaa­s teammate Clint Bowyer clinched the No. 15 qualifying spot.

“We’re still racing,” Suarez said. “I feel like as a team we have to keep getting better. Yeah, we’re not in the playoffs, but we have plenty of things to (clean) up. If we can win a race that would be like making the playoffs or even better.”

Then there’s Bubba Wallace, who flirted with the win. He finished a distant third behind race winner Kevin Harvick and runner-up Joey Logano, allowing Newman to take the final playoff spot.

Unlike Johnson and Suarez, the 25-year-old Wallace was beaming with pride.

“It’s a confidence booster, a mentality booster, knowing we can run with these guys when all is on the line,” Wallace said. “We needed this. We needed this weekend.”

 ?? Mike Fair / Associated Press ?? Jimmie Johnson (48) is hit by Parker Kligerman (96) in the second turn on Sunday, ending Johnson’s hope of making the 16-car playoffs.
Mike Fair / Associated Press Jimmie Johnson (48) is hit by Parker Kligerman (96) in the second turn on Sunday, ending Johnson’s hope of making the 16-car playoffs.

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