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BackRoad-course victory still tops Johnson's to-do list (cont'd)

He's come close -- Johnson finished third at Watkins Glen two years ago, and might have won here last season had he not suffered a cut tire and been forced to make a pit stop that placed him at the rear of the field. His fourth-place result at Infineon earlier this year was a career-best at the Northern California track. His peers see an eventual trip to Victory Lane as an inevitability.

"He's the guy I just called Superman," said Mark Martin, Johnson's teammate at Hendrick Motorsports, referring to comments he made at Pocono Raceway last week. "I don't think he needs a road-course win to continue to be Superman in my book. He's fast. He's fast on a road course. But that's OK, we'll push him anyway. I think he's very competitive, and it's one of those matter-of-time deals. Everything has to line up just right."

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I was shocked when I learned that Jimmie hasn't won on a road course, because he's as good as anybody. I'm surprised that he hasn't managed to close the deal.

-- MARCOS AMBROSE

"I'm sure, in his mind, he's won at everything, but he hasn't won a road race. I think that's probably on his bucket list, and he wants to tick it off," added road-course ace Boris Said. "His teammate [Jeff Gordon] is one of the best in the business, so I'm sure he gets a lot of advice from him. And just by the fact of how he ran at Sonoma, I think he's getting better and better. I don't think it's if he's going to win a road race, it's just when and how many."

Gordon is indeed the most successful road-course racer at NASCAR's premier level, with a record nine career victories on the serpentine tracks. Yet even Gordon hasn't won at Watkins Glen in seven long years, and he concedes that Hendrick's road-course package hasn't exactly been the best during that span -- perhaps one reason that Johnson has come up short on road courses to this point.

"I'm sure in his mind, he'd like to add [a road-course victory] to his resume. I know he's worked really hard at it. That's what makes a good road-course driver, someone who's challenged by it, and enjoys that challenge and goes after it. He certainly has," Gordon said. "Other than maybe the first couple of years he was at Hendrick, I'm not so sure we've had the best package out there on the road courses the last three or four years. And when I won, when we were winning all our road-course races, I felt like we had the best road course package, and I did my part. I think if we step up our package a little bit, and hopefully that will happen this weekend, I think Jimmie can definitely challenge for a win."

No one seems to think that the lack of a road-course victory somehow renders Johnson's illustrious career incomplete. But Johnson clearly places an emphasis on getting that first road-course victory, to the point where it's on his short list of things to accomplish at the beginning of every season.

"Truthfully, it's been on my list far before winning a Cup championship," he said. "I was just able to get the championship stuff done before getting a road-course win. I had no idea that this type of success would come and I would be experiencing stuff at the championship level. So, there were a lot of other steps and goals on my sheet before a championship, but I was very fortunate to get those first. Winning championships is what the season is based on and what the ultimate goal is, but when I look at the little battles through the course of the year, a road course is at the top of that list right now."

Sound off: Johnson from Watkins Glen

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