Updated: Monday, 21 Sep 2009, 11:56 AM CDT
Published : Monday, 21 Sep 2009, 11:56 AM CDT
LOUDON, N.H. (AP) - Mark Martin held off Juan Pablo Montoya on a late frantic
restart to win the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship opener at
New Hampshire Motor Speedway.
It is Martin's series-best fifth victory of the season and
spoiled what could have been a blockbuster day for Montoya. Making
his 100th career start on his 34th birthday, Montoya led every
practice session while setting the stage for his second career
Sprint Cup Series victory.
Instead, Martin used pit strategy to take the lead, and after
leading a race-high 104 laps, Montoya had to chase him down.
He came up short in a three-lap sprint to the finish, which
ended under caution when AJ Allmendinger wrecked on the final lap.
NASCAR said Denny Hamlin was ahead of Montoya when the
caution came up, and was given second-place in the finishing order.
Montoya was awarded third place.
Three-time defending series champion Jimmie Johnson was
fourth, and Kyle Busch, who missed making the Chase by just eight
points, rounded out the top five.
Kurt Busch was sixth and followed by Ryan Newman, Elliott
Sadler, defending race winner Greg Biffle and Clint Bowyer.
It was a decent day for almost all the Chase drivers, who
need a strong race in the 10-race title hunt to stay in contention.
Since its 2004 inception, only one driver, Johnson in 2006,
finished lower than sixth at New Hampshire and still won the title.
That's bad news for Kasey Kahne, who lost his motor early and
finished 39th. He was posting to his Twitter account about his
crummy day from his airplane as he prepared to head home before the
halfway point of the race.
Martin, meanwhile, was setting up for a strong run to the
finish.
Considered the best driver in NASCAR without a championship,
the 50-year-old is poised to finally grab one.
Martin, who announced a contract extension Friday that keeps
him with Hendrick Motorsports through 2011, started the Chase as
the points leader because of his four "regular season" victories.
Now he's got another win and a 35-point cushion over the
competition. Hamlin and Johnson are tied for second in the
standings, and Montoya is now fourth in the standings.
"Pinch me. I am sure I'm sleeping. I am sure I am dreaming,"
Martin said in Victory Lane. "This is my hardest place, a tough
place."
Montoya wasn't pleased with how Martin raced him in the final
three-lap sprint, complaining that the veteran stopped his car to
hold him up at the start of the run.
"What he did, not cool at all. I could have wrecked him,"
Montoya radioed his crew after the finish.
"He knows we're here. He knows," crew chief Brian Pattie
replied. "This will give them something to talk about for the next
week."
Martin has consistently said that Montoya, the former Formula
One driver, is the dark horse of this championship hunt. But after
New Hampshire, Montoya said Martin is the clear favorite for the
title.
"He hasn't won a championship, and he wants one, pretty bad,"
Montoya said.