That might not seem to be a good thing for Jimmie Johnson’s team, heading into tonight’s Sprint Cup race at Charlotte Motor Speedway, the opening event in the Round of 12.
No Chase team had as many pit road 
penalties in the first round or as many penalties in the last 10 races. 
Despite those totals, Chris Krieg, pit coach for the No. 48 and 88 teams
 at Hendrick Motorsports, remains confident in the group.
Johnson has had two pit road penalties in
 the Chase. He was caught speeding in the Chase opener at Chicagoland 
Speedway, and his crew was penalized at Dover when the jackman jumped 
off the wall too soon.
In the last 10 races, Johnson’s team has 
had 10 pit road penalties. Four have been for speeding, two have been 
for not controlling the tire in the pit box. The team also has been 
penalized for the crew over the wall too soon once and for a body 
modification during a pit stop another time.
The Dover penalty was a result of Johnson having to slow as he headed toward his pit stall when Aric Almirola exited his stall. That threw the timing of the pit stop off and the team’s jackman jumped over the wall too soon.
While that incident can be viewed as a fluke incident for the crew, Krieg looks at it another way.
“It’s awareness before you get to that 
point,’’ Krieg told NBC Sports. “Before you get to that millisecond 
where you’re up on the wall and your weight is forward, it’s all those 
seconds that led up to that. The 10 seconds before that we get up on the
 wall and we see our surroundings. (Crew chief Chad Knaus) and myself as
 a coach go, ‘Hey, be aware, we may get checked up here.’ It’s all the 
seconds before you get to that point where we keep learning and getting 
better.’’
Krieg, who is in his fourth year as a 
coach, isn’t worried about the crew bouncing back from a penalty or 
mistake. That’s why Hendrick Motorsports seeks former college athletes 
and those who have competed professionally in another sport.
“They’ve had negative plays or things 
happen their whole athletic career,’’ Krieg said. “They’re used to 
bouncing back. It’s what they’ve done their whole life from an athletic 
standpoint. If you were to take a regular person and have that happen to
 them, they may be in a dark room all week.’’
As he examines the performance of Johnson’s pit crew this season, Krieg sees improvement.
“Last year the 48 (pit crew) was quite 
possibly the best pit crew on pit road,’’ Krieg said. “This year may 
have started out slower on the stop watch then we would have liked. So 
we dug in, the guys did a great, great job. They worked harder than any 
other group than I’ve seen in a very long time. 
“Our times on the stopwatch have went down considerably in the last two months.’’
   
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