Originally published on Mar. 14, 2025
By Zane
Miller
First
round
(8) #11
Denny Hamlin v. (1) #16 Greg Biffle
(7) #15
Clint Bowyer v. (2) #88 Dale Earnhardt Jr.
(6) #56
Martin Truex Jr. v. (3) #48 Jimmie Johnson
(5) #2
Brad Keselowski v. (4) #17 Matt Kenseth
Despite
Greg Biffle being the #1-seed for the opening race at New Hampshire, it would
be his competitor Denny Hamlin who stole the show. The Virginia native led
nearly two-thirds of the race’s 300 laps on the way to a comfortable victory
while Biffle underwhelmed in 18th. Clint Bowyer also had a strong
run, sneaking into the top-five for a fourth-place finish as Dale Earnhardt Jr.
finished 13th. Jimmie Johnson also ended up towards the front,
taking the runner-up spot as Martin Truex Jr. took the checkered flag in 17th,
while Brad Keselowski put together a solid race in sixth to outdo Matt
Kenseth’s 14th-place run.
Keselowski
would build onto his effort from New Hampshire by grabbing the race win at
Dover, while Kenseth fell multiple laps down after a couple incidents and wound
up in 35th. Meanwhile, Hamlin also took out Biffle in a surprising
upset, grabbing the eighth spot while Biffle was an uncharacteristic three laps
down in 16th. Despite both Bowyer and Earnhardt Jr. failing to
finish on the lead lap, Bowyer was able to eliminate his adversary with a ninth-place
run as Junior was just outside the top-10 in 11th. Finally, Johnson
completed the full round sweep with a fourth-place finish, as Truex Jr.’s
postseason efforts came to an end in sixth.
Semifinal
(8) #11
Denny Hamlin v. (3) #48 Jimmie Johnson
(7) #15
Clint Bowyer v. (5) #2 Brad Keselowski
Bowyer
seized control of the semifinal round at Charlotte, leading the final 25 laps
for what would be his final race win until six years later, while Keselowski
was unable to take advantage of a fantastic run in which he led a race-high 139
laps and dropped back to 11th. Hamlin and Johnson battled tooth and
nail for the early victory, but Johnson was ultimately unable to keep pace as
Hamlin scored the runner-up spot with Johnson in third.
Bowyer backed
up his performance at his home track of Kansas Speedway, as he led a few laps
on the way to a strong sixth-place finish. This was enough to punch his ticket
to the championship finals as Keselowski could only get back up to eighth after
a 25th-place starting spot. Hamlin was unable to put away Johnson,
as he finished 13th while Johnson took the ninth spot to keep his shot
at a third championship afloat. Johnson made his statement loud and clear at
Martinsville, dominating for 193 laps led and taking the race win, as Hamlin was
knocked out of contention with mechanical issues and was saddled in the 33rd
spot.
Final
(7) #15
Clint Bowyer v. (3) #48 Jimmie Johnson
Johnson
resumed his winning ways at Texas, leading 168 laps and getting around
Keselowski for the race win on a green-white-checkered restart. Despite an
impressive showing, Bowyer could only manage a sixth-place run as he quickly
found himself behind the 8-ball going into Phoenix.
The
Phoenix race would easily be the strangest undertaking of the entire
postseason, starting with Johnson smacking the wall with 77 laps to go after
suffering a blown tire. Despite the heavy damage to the #48 car, the team was
able to get it back rolling, albeit several laps down. Bowyer looked as though
he had an easy path to pushing the series to Homestead, but Jeff Gordon, both
in retaliation for an on-track incident with Bowyer a few laps prior and
possibly in an attempt to assist his teammate, intentionally crashed Bowyer and
himself with just two laps remaining. Despite Bowyer’s car being completely
demolished, there wasn’t enough time left for Johnson to make up the necessary
laps. The checkered flag fell with Bowyer out of the race in 28th,
while Johnson was credited with 32nd. However, Bowyer would get the
last laugh.
Now
emboldened by extra motivation, Bowyer stayed near the front throughout the 267
laps around Homestead-Miami Speedway. In contrast, Johnson’s night was over
after his rear gear failed, putting him behind the wall in 36th.
Meanwhile, Bowyer cruised to a runner-up finish and, most importantly, scored
his first career Cup Series title as well as the first championship for Michael
Waltrip as a team owner.
Bowyer’s
stats for 2012 included three victories, 10 top-fives and 23 top-10s, ending
the season second in the real-life point standings to champion Jimmie Johnson.

No comments:
Post a Comment