Dayton Daily News

Teammates’ task: Win or go home

Hendrick’s Elliott, Johnson need Phoenix victory to avoid eliminatio­n.

- By George Diaz Orlando Sentinel

A trip to NASCAR’s final race near Miami often has involved a coronation and a sip of champagne for Hendrick Motorsport­s.

Riding on the dominance of the No. 48 team and the dynamic chemistry between Jimmie Johnson and crew chief Chad Knaus, Johnson has won seven Cup titles under the Hendrick Motorsport­s banner since 2006.

The dynamics in play as the team rides into Phoenix for the penultimat­e race before the Championsh­ip 4 run Nov. 19 at Homestead-Miami Speedway are very different. Johnson and teammate Chase Elliott are still in the playoff mix, but only as long-shot outsiders. With Elliott ranked seventh and Johnson eighth in the playoff standings — and only one playoff berth still unsettled — the math is very clear:

Win at Phoenix to avoid eliminatio­n.

“We both know what our challenges are, and hopefully one of us can do it,” Elliott said Tuesday. “We have to win. We know that plain as day.”

Whatever happens, consider this a year of transition and a great deal of frustratio­n for a group that was once considered the most dominant of all the super-teams in the garage.

Dale Earnhardt Jr. is winless in his final season, grinding

out laps without much success. Maybe it’s something technical, but most likely a combinatio­n of a man who wants to start a family in good health and isn’t going to take any crazy risks for some short-term satisfacti­on on the track.

Kasey Kahne was bounced in the first round of the playoffs. He was also bounced from the Hendrick team earlier in the season when it announced that Elliott would take over the No. 5 team and bring his father’s iconic No. 9 to the Hendrick garage in 2018. Kahne has since signed a deal with Levine Family Racing.

Earnhardt will be replaced by Alex Bowman in the No. 88 Chevrolet in 2018. And William Byron will replace Elliott in the No. 24 Chevrolet in 2018, leaving Johnson as the one veteran among a group of three rising young drivers. Ch-ch-ch-changes indeed. “Alex and William have been racing long enough that there’s nothing I can tell them,” Elliott said. “They know how to do their job. They’re in the situation they’re going to be in next year for a reason. They’ve had success along the way. There’s nothing that I know driving that they don’t already know. They’ll be just fine.”

The hope remains for a walkoff home run in Phoenix.

“It’s been a good track for us,” Johnson said after finishing 27th in Texas this past weekend. “But this last half of the year has been really weird. In places where we expect to run well and traditiona­lly do, we haven’t. But I know we’re building a better race car and taking a few new ideas to Phoenix and we’ll go there and fight as hard as we can. And that’s one thing this team will never do is give up.”

Kenseth’s future

In what continues to be a year of unpreceden­ted change in the sport involving a parade of veterans leaving, Matt Kenseth announced last week in Texas that he has no plans to drive in 2018.

“I’m not committing to anything for 2018,” Kenseth said. “I’m just going to take some time off, whatever that means. I don’t know if that’s a year, two years, three months, four months. You never know what happens.

“Maybe something comes along that really makes me excited and feels like it’s going to be a fit and you might go do. I’m certainly not going to rule that out. For now, I’m not making plans for 2018. I plan on taking some time off.”

Joe Gibbs Racing bumped Kenseth from his 2018 ride in July, replacing him with Erik Jones. With a high salary and sponsorshi­ps drying up, Kenseth has not been able to secure a ride.

 ?? RICHARD W. RODRIGUEZ / GETTY IMAGES ?? Jimmie Johnson (left) and Chase Elliott remain in the playoff race, but only as long-shot outsiders with just one berth undecided entering today’s event in Phoenix.
RICHARD W. RODRIGUEZ / GETTY IMAGES Jimmie Johnson (left) and Chase Elliott remain in the playoff race, but only as long-shot outsiders with just one berth undecided entering today’s event in Phoenix.

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