Category: Featured Stories

Featured stories from SpeedwayMedia.com

  • Who To Watch For In 2010 Top 12 Rankings

    Who To Watch For In 2010 Top 12 Rankings

    1.Carl Edwards: Has to be the obvious pick after winning the final two races of the season after not winning for over 70 races.

    2.Kevin Harvick: Earned most points out of every single driver in 2010. Look for Kevin to prove everyone wrong. It may get a little harder with the fourth entry, but we’ll see.

    3.Jimmie Johnson: Yes, he is a 5-time champion now under the Chase system, but he was not the best driver for the whole season. He had 23 Top 10 finishes to Harvick’s 26.

    4.Denny Hamlin: Won eight races and finished runner-up in the Chase. Third most amount of points in 2010. Won a lot, but consistency was an issue. He had only 18 Top 10 finishes. Not good.

    5.Jeff Gordon: No other man wanted 2010 to end more than Jeff. With a new crew chief in Alan Gustafson expect Gordon to get back in the winner circle.

    6.Kyle Busch: Had a decent year. Could have been better, but when you compare it to 2009, it was a huge improvement even though he won 1 less race.

    7.Matt Kenseth: Ran mediocre for first 26 races and found something over the final eight. Expect Roush-Fenway Racing to be back in 2011.

    8.Tony Stewart: Didn’t have a really Stewart like year, but he found victory lane. Stewart needs to better than that.

    9.Clint Bowyer: Won two races in the final ten, but one cost him 150 points for cheating. Don’t really know how he will do with the four car operation. We’ll see.

    10.Kurt Busch: Really seemed to have demolition-derbied his way through 2010 and then repeated acts of immaturity on the race track. If he wants to win a championship, he will have to change his attitude. Yes, I know he won in the Chase, but was that really a championship?

    11.Jeff Burton: Seemed like a championship contender early on and faded and had a pretty off year.

    12.Greg Biffle: He won 2 races and that is good progress, but needs to learn to stay consistent. You can’t win one race and finish 30th the next weekend and expect to make any progress.

  • Biggest Surprises And Disappointments

    Biggest Surprises And Disappointments

    Biggest Surprises
    1.Kevin Harvick: 19th in points in 2009 with 9 Top 10 finishes to most points earned over entire season with 26 Top 10’s. Not just that, but his entire team made the Chase.
    2.Jamie McMurray:  At the end of 2009, Jamie didn’t even know if he was going to have a job and Chip Ganassi put him in the 1 car and McMurray won the Daytona 500 and the Brickyard 400 in the same year. Great year for Jamie.

    Biggest Disappointment
    1.Dale Earnhardt Jr.: He is with the best team in the garage and has not the put numbers on the board at Hendrick Motorsports. It has a big disappointment to the fans as well.
    2.Juan Montoya: Was no where to be seen in 2010 and completely fell off the map. Montoya demolition-derbied his way through 2010. This is a guy who was a threat to win it all in 2009.

    Best Driver Of 2010 (Not Jimmie Johnson)
    1.Kevin Harvick: I think a majority of NASCAR fans would agree with me on this pick.

  • NASCAR’s Final Chapter of 2010: Horseshoes, Hand Grenades and Hope

    NASCAR’s Final Chapter of 2010: Horseshoes, Hand Grenades and Hope

    The Daytona 500 may still be months away, but fans, media and the drivers themselves are already gearing up for the 2011 season.  After the wild ride that we took in 2010, how could next year possibly compare?

    For the first time in since the introduction of the Chase in 2004, where only 18 points separated points leader Kurt Busch and Jimmie Johnson heading into Homestead, have we seen such a close battle for the Sprint Cup. Another first was seeing someone other than Jimmie Johnson sitting in the No. 1 position after race 35, a position that Johnson had majestically held since 2006.

    [media-credit name=”Barry Albert” align=”alignright” width=”300″][/media-credit]Denny Hamlin gave us hope. Hope that the winning streak the No. 48 team so gleefully basked in four times prior would be broken. Hope that maybe the Chase was not the flawed monster that conspiracy theorists declaimed. Hope that for once in a great while fans would watch every lap of the Ford 400 without changing the channel in disgust, because a champion had been crowned long before the final lap was run.

    Well, two out of three ain’t bad.

    Hamlin may not have been able to steal the golden crown from Johnson, but he did give him a hell of a fight. The trophy was Hamlin’s to lose and Johnson stole it away with calculated perfection and luck.

    After a rear axle problem took Johnson out of the Daytona 500 on lap 185, we delighted in the notion that maybe the 48 crew’s cream would not rise to the top in 2010.

    Chad Knaus proved us wrong by whipping up a brand new batch of vanilla confection and boldly serving it atop a plate of crow, after the 48 team posted a first place finish, just one week later in California.

    On February 21, during a post-race press conference in Fontana, fans may recall a certain scorned second placed finisher, hailing Johnson and his crew for their serendipitous win.

    As luck would have it, Johnson pitted right before Brad Keselowski spun out on lap 230 and was able to restart in the first position with just 20 laps to go, all but forcing the other leaders to pit under caution. Despite a rear bumper full of Kevin Harvick’s No. 29 machine, Johnson maintained his position until the checkered flag waved.

    Once again a strange twist of NASCAR fate worked in favor of the No. 48 team, but how?

    Kevin Harvick had his own theories stating in his post-race interview, “They did a good job today in winning the race, but they have a golden horseshoe stuck up their ass. I mean, there’s no way to get around that.”

    Hmmm…so that’s where he’s been hiding that good fortune for the last five years, knowing all along it was the one place that NASCAR would never inspect. Reminds me of the story told by Captain Koons to a young boy named Butch in the movie Pulp Fiction regarding the child’s birthright, his great-grandfather’s watch.

    “He hid it (the watch) in the one place he knew he could hide something. His ass. Five long years, he wore this watch up his ass. And then he died of dysentery, he gave me the watch. I hid this uncomfortable hunk of metal up my ass for two years. Then, after seven years, I was sent home to my family. And now, little man, I give the watch to you.”

    Jeez, what does this mean? If Jimmie dies from dysentery will Chad Knaus have to hide that golden horseshoe up his own ass until the next champion comes along?

    Hey, I’m not knocking the guy, I’m just saying that it might be easier to just carry a rabbit’s foot, but to each is own. 34 races later,  The golden horseshoe proved lucky for Johnson in Homestead, just when he needed it most. In the end, the luck o’ the 48  propelled him from a 15 point deficit to a 38 point lead over Hamlin and the “Drive for Five” was in the books.

    But what if?

    What if Harvick hadn’t launched his No. 29 Chevrolet like a loose hand grenade into Kyle Busch’s bumper on lap 242?

    I know that Harvick hoped to capture the title in the end and in turn raced hard to gain points on Hamlin and Johnson after battling back from a speeding penalty on pit road at lap 188. I know he had his own frustrations with Busch on the track stating,“He raced me like a clown all day – three-wide, on the back bumper, running into me, and I just had enough. The last time I just didn’t lift”

    If he hadn’t wrecked Busch, the caution flag would not have flown with 25 laps to go. Hamlin would not have gone a lap down, leaving him in a position to restart the final leg of the race at the tail end of the lead lap in the 20th position; conclusively dashing any chance of winning the championship.

    Hamlin knew it was the perfect storm of mayhem that the 48 team needed to grab hold of the reigns and steer it home.

    “I thought it was over when the 18 (of Kyle Busch) wrecked, for sure – that trapped us a lap down,” Hamlin said. “The 29 (of Harvick) and the 48 (of Johnson) were actually just a straightaway ahead, but the way it timed out to when that caution fell, it trapped us a lap down, and so they stayed out and the cars at the back all came and got tires, so it separated us.

    “What was a straightaway turned into 15 spots when that caution flew, and that really hurt us quite a bit. But we were lucky to be in that position – our car was banged up bad and we just could not overcome that.”

    Joe Gibbs Racing President J.D. Gibbs said he wasn’t happy with the Harvick-Busch incident, saying it impacted the Chase by putting Hamlin a lap down.

    “We got wrecked by the 29 [of Harvick], so that was really frustrating – it caused Denny to go a lap down,” Gibbs said. “That was disappointing.”

    What if Hamlin had not damaged his splitter after spinning out on lap 24, was he doomed from the start?

    What if Johnson’s engine had given up the ghost on lap 200 instead of teammate Jeff Gordon’s?

    What if anyone, anyone, other than Johnson had won the championship this year, would we fans be happy with what we could have gotten in the end?

    Life continuously leaves us wondering “what if” and as we reflect on all of the different scenarios, we often kick ourselves over the “shoulda, whoulda, couldas,” but never can we go back and change the outcome.

    There is always next year, right? Yes there is! A new year filled with anticipations of what the 2011 Sprint Cup season will hold. Sure, some say that they’ll never watch another NASCAR race since it is so “obviously rigged” in Johnson’s favor, but I don’t believe you. You’ll find yourself flipping through the channels on February 20 and pause “for just a moment” to watch the green flag drop. Before you know it, you’re hooked all over again.

    While Jimmie Johnson does not top my list of favorite drivers, I do have respect and a clear understanding of his accomplishments. We witnessed something on November 21 that we will probably never see again. It was an amazing piece of history in the making and as a NASCAR fan, it is something that I am proud to have been a part of.

    The 2011 season will no doubt bring lots of hope and hype. I, along with millions of fans around the world will be there once again for the ride of our lives. So, NASCAR show me what you’ve got! Jimmie Johnson may be your “ace in the hole” for now, but I’m pretty sure we ain’t seen nothing yet.

  • The Story of Ron Malec, Car Chief for Championship Team No. 48

    The Story of Ron Malec, Car Chief for Championship Team No. 48

    When it comes down to a championship team, most people focus on the driver. Then there are some who focus on the crew chief and car owner, yet how many care to look at the car chief?

    [media-credit name=”Brad Keppel” align=”alignleft” width=”300″][/media-credit]Meet Franklin, Wis. native Ron Malec, car chief for the five-time consecutive championship No. 48 team, driven by Jimmie Johnson.

    Malec has known worked with Johnson the longest amongst anybody on the team. While some have joined recently and while some have been with Johnson since the formation of the group in 2002, Malec goes further back than that.

    The two met before Johnson even headed to NASCAR on Johnson’s off-road racing days on the SCORE circuit. Malec had a background in racing as grew up racing go-karts (including two championships), sportsman cars and late models in the Midwest.

    Their friendship grew through sharing an apartment in Pewaukee, Wis. and Malec began working on Johnson’s American Speed Association (ASA) cars in 1998.

    “Getting my first job on that ASA team with Jimmie in 1998 and being able to work on a professional race team,” Malec told HendrickMotorsports.com in speaking of his favorite racing memory. “It’s such a big accomplishment in my life because I really didn’t have a set path prior to that. Then I kind of set my path and started my career in professional motorsports.”

    They grew close during those days, teasing each other for their simple tastes in food. When money was tight and they went to Sam’s Club to stock up on food, Johnson would buy Hamburger Helper in bulk while Malec would purchase a five-gallon bucket of white rice, plus salt and Frosted Flakes.

    When it came time for Johnson to make the jump to Hendrick Motorsports, Malec would go join him, becoming the team’s rear-tire carrier.

    These days, Malec joins Chad Knaus a top the pit box, helping in running the team.

    “There are times when I definitely miss it and there are times when I don’t,” he said. “The times when you make a difference in the race, yeah. But I feel like I’m still a part of it. There are days when you wish you were a part of it, but then there are the days when your back is hurting when you get to the race.”

    The role of the car chief involves a lot of week as it’s the car chief’s responsibility to make sure the car is ready for the weekend.

    “There is a lot of preparation that goes on with the car before you get to the track,” Malec told ESPN. “On Tuesday and Wednesday, you’re loading up the truck and on Friday, it’s the longest day of the weekend. You go through technical inspection. That’s the most work that goes on. During the race, I’m more of a middle man. More hands on work during the week.”

    The role of the car chief basically boils down to making “sure that the car is prepared well and that it’s right mechanically. That it’s set up well. Nothing comes loose or breaks. That’s my concern pretty much the entire weekend.”

    During the race, Malec is a busy guy, communicating with the entire team.

    “I’m in communication with the crew chief and the pit crew,” Malec said. “I choreograph what Chad wants to do during the race and I coordinate with the pit coach and the guys who go over the wall.”

    One of the key aspects of Malec’s job is to make sure the adjustments crew chief Chad Knaus and Johnson request get done.

    “I’m pretty much a guy that’s pretty hands on with the crew,” Malec said. “I understand the pit stop procedure, because I did it for so long. I can interact with them right away and make a decision with them to make an adjustment that Chad is asking for. I’m pretty much hands on with them for 100% of the race.”

    Sometimes, at times, Malec also has a big role in the adjustments made.

    “Chad makes most of the suggestions during the race,” he said. “If we need to make an adjustment on the race car and it will affect something mechanically, I’ll say something to Jimmie. I will give some advice if he asks me for it. I try to leave that up to Greg, the engineer. If it doesn’t affect the car mechanically, I don’t get involved.”

    Malec has been a car chief for seven years and says his favourite aspect of racing is the competition.

    “I think it’s the competition level,” Malec said. “It’s the drive to win every week. Obviously, to maintain the level we’re at right now is a lot of effort. I love the challenge to maintain the top of where we are. It’s a level of competitiveness that’s hard to reach. It’s what we have to do and expected of us, working at Hendricks.”

    There was talk that he may move up into the role of a crew chief, though Malec says he’s currently happy where he is at, making history with the 48 team.

    Another part of it is the idea of working on cars as when he’s not at the track, he’s restoring old cars in his garage.

    “That’s pretty much my hobby,” he told NASCAR Online. “It takes my mind off things. It gives me something else to focus on, to take away the stress of the job. I guess most people would say it’s not stress-free, but I guess I like pushing myself in life — and that’s how I stay driven on everything else. I drive myself to get this car project done at home, and it just keeps your drive going so you never slow down.”

    Before he got involved in racing, his first job was working at a golf course, parking golf carts and washing them.

    “I was 13 years old, and we would race the golf carts.” He said.

    Johnson says that since then, they’ve both grown a lot.

    “Ron and I, a friend of ours put us together,” Johnson said while looking back. “We kind of knew each other from the racetrack, all the racing I was doing. But a friend put us together and thought we would be roommates essentially, because I needed somewhere to live, felt like he could be a big asset to our race team. He was right.

    “We’ve come a long way. I mean, from my first time driving an ASA stock car to where we are today, we’ve been through a ton together. I deeply miss Howie and everything he taught me about stock cars and kind of being a man. Ron and I were pretty young guys trying to figure out life. Howie had a great way to keep us in check, keep us in line, did a lot for me on and off the racetrack.”

  • Wait Until Jr Shows Some Sort Of Improvement

    Wait Until Jr Shows Some Sort Of Improvement

    Dale Earnhardt Jr’s current contract is not going to expire until 2012, but Rick Hendrick has already confirmed to ESPN that he is negotiating a contract extension already. Jr. has struggled for a majority of his tenure with Hendrick Motorsports. Jr. earned the seventh most amount of points for the 2008 season, but finished dead last in the Chase. He struggled in 2009 to a 25th points finish and improved slightly this year to finish in 21st.

    [media-credit name=”Barry Albert” align=”alignleft” width=”300″][/media-credit]I just can’t seem to see eye-to-eye with Hendrick on this one. I would wait until Jr. showed some sort of improvement with his new team before negotiating a huge contract extension. Jr. will be in the same shop as Jimmie Johnson this season and also has a new crew chief, Steve Letarte. We have seen this mistake made time and time again in professional sports. You give one of the most popular athletes a big contract and he either gets hurt or he just flat out doesn’t perform. For example, Andrew Jones signed a two-year $36.2 million contract with the Los Angeles Dodgers, but only to hit .166 that season. Talk about a financial meltdown! There is no reason at this moment in time to even consider giving Dale a contract extension.

    Don’t get me wrong. I think Dale is a fantastic individual, but when you look at the stats it just doesn’t lie. He has not been performing and rewarding bad runs is definitely not an image you want for your race team and especially for such an accomplished owner like Rick Hendrick himself. He has until 2012. Wait and see how Jr. does before making any bold moves. You will be happier in the long run if you do.

  • Penske Downsizing, Future Unclear For Hornish

    Penske Downsizing, Future Unclear For Hornish

    There is no guarantee that Sam Hornish Jr. will be driving a stock car next season for Roger Penske.

    As it stands, Penske has two solid cup programs. With the addition of Shell/Pennzoil, Kurt Busch is now moving into the #22 Shell/Pennzoil Dodge and Brad Keselowski will be taking over the #2 Miller Lite Dodge. The concern of the fans after the addition of Shell/Pennzoil was that Penske was losing Miller Lite. No, that is not the case. Great move by Roger.

    [media-credit name=”CIA Stock Photo, Inc.” align=”alignleft” width=”300″][/media-credit]Now, to the Hornish issue. Penske is in a huge dilemma when it comes to Hornish, who is currently his third Sprint Cup Series driver. Mobil 1 has moved on to greener pastures and has moved to Stewart-Haas Racing and two-time champion, Tony Stewart. If sponsorship fails to come about, then Hornish will probably be driving a fourth entry for Penske in the Indianapolis 500. Hornish won the race in 2006 in an amazing photo finish with Marco Andretti.

    There is one thing that is clear and that is Hornish will be running the Daytona 500, but from there it is uncertain. Running in the Nationwide Series is also an idea that Penske hasn’t passed up for Hornish. His teammate Kurt Busch weighed in, “We have yet to decide what’s going on with the 77, whether it’s full-time or part-time,” Busch said. “Roger loves Sam. I like Sam, too. He’s a great guy, he’s never done me wrong, he’s always treated me well, and Roger likes to take care of him. Roger’s a good guy like that.”

    Like a lot of teams in NASCAR, Penske layed off approximately 50 employees yesterday and the sign of economic instability has never been any clearer to the fans.

  • Roush’s Nationwide Program Takes A Hit

    Roush’s Nationwide Program Takes A Hit

    As many as 60 employees were layed off from Roush Fenway Racing as the need for fabricators is shrinking and its Nationwide program contracting.

    Jack Roush plans to only run three Nationwide teams next season. Carl Edwards and Trevor Bayne will have the full-time rides, but at the moment they are unsure if they can give 2010 NASCAR Nationwide Series Rookie Of The Year, Ricky Stenhouse Jr., a ride. It really all comes down to sponsorship for the young driver.

    With its affiliate team Richard Petty Motorsports downsizing from a a four car team to a two car team, Roush is plenty overstaffed especially when it comes to building the race cars that they ship to Petty. Roush ran four Nationwide cars this season.

    With the departure of Paul Menard, it was a hard knock to take for Roush. Menard drove an RPM car, but drove a Roush car in the Nationwide Series. They both had sponsorship from Menard’s, his father’s home improvement business. Sadly, Roush lost the sponsorship for both cars and will have to search again for a sponsor for 2011.

  • Jimmie Johnson Officially Crowned Champion But the Question Remains: Did We Really See That?

    Jimmie Johnson Officially Crowned Champion But the Question Remains: Did We Really See That?

    Friday night in Las Vegas during the season ending awards banquet, NASCAR officially crown Jimmie Johnson as the 2010 Sprint Cup Series Champion.

    Champion. Again. Five straight.

    [media-credit name=”CIA Stock Photo” align=”alignleft” width=”300″][/media-credit]Has it really sunk in yet what he and No. 48 Lowe’s Chevrolet team from Hendrick Motorsports has done? The records that Johnson has broken and then made and even the comparisons that he’s drawn to other sports and athletes should now be well documented as we embark on the second week of the offseason.

    But watching the driver partake in all of the festivities during Champions Week and then give yet another speech to close out the banquet brings the accomplishment to another level. Slaps you in the face almost.

    Continually staring at those five trophies in every photograph helps too.

    “As shocked as you are, I’m equally as shocked to find myself in this position,” said Johnson.

    Shocked doesn’t begin to describe it. Entering the season everyone knew it was possible that Johnson and company were again going to do something that had never been done before. It was a possibility – no one [besides Johnson fans] believed it was going to turn into reality.

    With Denny Hamlin and Kevin Harvick hot on his heels and putting up extraordinary numbers during the regular season, and then through the first half of the Chase, it was looking more likely that this was the year it all ended. This would be the year that Johnson had to handle not being on top.

    But just like the last four, he proved everyone wrong. A few weeks before Homestead, Johnson sternly replied with a “says who?” in terms of the series needing a new champion.

    With the season now over, he can say it again to all those who believed it couldn’t or wouldn’t be done.

    To repeat: that’s five straight championships. Not one title like Terry Labonte or Rusty Wallace. Not three like Cale Yarborough or Darrell Waltrip. Five like Jimmie Johnson.

    Jeff Gordon, Johnson’s teammate and co-car owner, spoke of the great accomplishment at the banquet. Saying that what the team has done is truly incredible.

    “There are so many factors that weigh into winning a championship,” he said. “There are just so many things that can go wrong. And so to win two or three or even four, I thought was amazing. But to go win five? I don’t think anybody else will ever do that. I really don’t.”

    He’s not the only one.

    From a personal standpoint it has been an amazing season. As a fan of the sport it honestly sucks watching the same driver take home the big trophy at the end of the year. To read all the same articles and hear the same speeches grows old.

    Don’t read wrong, the respect for what has been accomplished has always been there. To see a team stay on their game year after year after year after year after year, there’s nothing like it.

    As a journalist, I can honestly say this may never sink in.

    Watching Johnson win back-to-back titles in 2006-2007 was a bit refreshing; it hadn’t been done since the late 1990s. It was something new to write about. Then he goes and wins three straight and it was great to be able to talk about his tie in history and flirtation with making new history.

    It was supposed to be flirtation, Jimmie. It was supposed to end at three.

    Then came No. 4 and it was just stupid. Stupid in a good way and amazing as well, like Gordon said.

    Five though, sounds like a joke. It can’t be real.

    How in the world did this team win five straight championships? We’re not talking about winning five straight races or a five-year winning streak. We’re talking about being the best team for 36 races for the past five years.

    The 2010 season will go down as one of the most competitive in the 62-year history of NASCAR. There were 18 different pole winners. It was the closest Chase since its birth in 2004 as the top two drivers headed to Homestead separated by only 15 points. There were 55 drivers that led at least one lap this season. Talladega broke the record for lead changes.

    With the sport constantly evolving and the teams becoming more competitive, how is it that the 48 have continued to beat everyone? That’s been the burning question since the season ended. It’s what has made this so unbelievable.

    They’ve adapted to different cars. Different challengers. Different point positions but it all ended the same.

    There have been times when you think they’re going to lose, such as this year, and they haven’t. Hamlin gave it everything he had and went into Homestead with the point lead. Finally, the fans chanted. Finally.

    Except, Johnson found a way to win. Finding ways to win, whether it’s changing pit crews or capitalizing on others mistakes, and it’s driving everyone crazy.

    Can they be beat? Will they ever be beat? How much further can our jaws drop and can we ask if we really did see that?

    This shouldn’t be that hard to grasp. After all, this is a team that has done everything it was thought impossible to do. It shouldn’t be hard to watch history unfold before our eyes and see one driver take the sport and turn it upside down. Yet, here we are.

    Should Johnson go on to win a sixth in 2011, the fans might have to start picking each other up off the floor. Or at least send someone to pick me up.

  • 365 Days of Tony Stewart: The Gift That Keeps on Giving

    365 Days of Tony Stewart: The Gift That Keeps on Giving

    As we approach the holidays and begin to gear up for the 2011 NASCAR season, it’s time to celebrate our favorite big guy in red. Whoa there Santa, while you are one pretty cool dude, this time it’s not all about you, but I do know of a way that you can help to make fans of the Office Depot No. 14 team pretty happy on Christmas morning!

    [media-credit name=”Edelman for Office Depot Racing” align=”alignleft” width=”300″][/media-credit]You see Santa, we fans look forward to seeing you once a year, but Tony Stewart, well we get to spend 36 glorious weekends with that big guy in red annually. While we would appreciate even more time to spend with both of you, we understand that you are a busy fellow who keeps to himself for a majority of the year and we respect that, but in the upcoming new year, Stewart is now willing to share himself with us 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 375 days a year. Can you top that Santa? I think not.

    So Santa, what can you do for us?

    Bring us an Office Depot Racing calendar that is chock full of smokin’ photos of Tony Stewart and his team that can’t be found anywhere else. In addition to pictures of our favorite driver in his red hot firesuit, which is already awesome, because who doesn’t love a man in a uniform? The calendar also features him in casual wear as well as business attire and that really gets our hearts racing! The calendar even includes the complete 2011 race schedule, it is a winning combination for any Tony Stewart fan.

    I know, I know Santa, this isn’t exactly the kind of gift crafted at the North Pole by your team of elves, but I do know where you pick up some for your sleigh ride across the skies on Christmas Eve.

    Mr. Claus, you can get it exclusively at Office Depot, but supplies are limited, so what are you waiting for? Get on it already! Make that list of yours now, check it twice and you will see that I haven’t been naughty  at all this year, just especially nice.

    For those fans who just can’t wait until Christmas morning, get your calendar today at select Office Depot stores or online at OfficeDepotRacing.com for just $13.99, a small price to pay for the gift that keeps on giving every day of the year.

    Photo courtesy of Edelman for Office Depot Racing

  • Jimmie Johnson: The Real Deal Behind the 2010 Sprint Cup Champion

    Jimmie Johnson: The Real Deal Behind the 2010 Sprint Cup Champion

    To understand how much a championship means to someone, they say that you should know the road that they took to get to where they are. So hold on as we travel back in time and learn about 2010 Sprint Cup champion Jimmie Johnson.

    [media-credit name=”CIA Stock Photo” align=”alignleft” width=”300″][/media-credit]Johnson was raised in a small town by the name of El Cajon. El Cajon is located in California on the foothills of Laguna Mountain, 15 miles north of San Diego. Johnson was raised by parents Gary and Cathy in a two-bedroom house with his two brothers Jarit and Jesse.

    It was not easy for Gary and Cathy, who worked hard to raise their little boys. Gary would get up at four in the morning to drive a truck for B.F. Goodrich, while Cathy drove a school bus for extra money.

    Even though they did not have the money, Gary managed to scavenge some old parts together and gave Johnson his first bike at the age of four, with training wheels of course, on Christmas Day.

    He started his journey to championship stardom by traveling around the area with his brothers, racing against friends. He turned out to be successful at racing, winning his fist local championship at the age of eight.

    However, some of his friends were killed in accidents, so Gary pushed his son toward off-road truck racing, hoping it would be safer. Instead, Gary’s worst fear almost came true.

    Johnson went and entered the Baja 1000 at the age of 19. Over nine hours into the event, he was leading, yet he was also tired. Just for a second, he dozed off and rolled it down a cliff.

    Lost in the middle of nowhere, Johnson had no hope of rescue. This turned out to be a good thing, as he thought over his career and how things had gotten to that point.

    “I was young, and all I thought about was going fast and being aggressive,” Johnson was quoted in the article The Soul of a Champion. “Well, I realized that night in the desert that I needed to be smarter. I still needed to push the car, but also I needed to bring it home clean. I needed to find that balance, and I began to find it that night in Mexico.”

    This incident in Mexico began Johnson’s true journey to the champion he is known as today.

    His journey to stock car racing truly began, though, when Johnson had moved to Charlotte, North Carolina, to live with then two-time Craftsmen Truck Series Champion Ron Hornaday Jr.

    Also living at the house was fellow Californian Kevin Harvick. Jimmie, at the time, could not pay rent money so he did chores and cooked his specialty, barbecued shrimp tacos, for those living there at the time.

    “Jimmie was a clean-cut kid who just wanted to race,” Hornaday explained in the article The Soul of a Champion. “He was the kind of kid you wanted to help out.” Hornaday did exactly that.

    Hornaday told fellow NASCAR owners and friends about Johnson, eventually landing Johnson a ride in the American Speed Association (ASA) Late Model division. Johnson went on to win rookie of the year in 1998, propelling him to the Busch Series in 1999.

    The biggest stepping stone though was when he went to four-time cup champion Jeff Gordon for advice. Gordon noticed Johnson’s desire and passed the name over to his boss Rick Hendrick.

    “I just found out that his contract is up soon, and he is shopping around for a ride,” Gordon said. “When I heard that I ran and grabbed him and said, ‘Don’t sign anything with anyone until you talk to me first!’ He’s going to be the next big thing.”

    The result was Johnson getting a Cup ride in the new No. 48 Lowe’s Chevrolet, co-owned by Jeff Gordon and Rick Hendrick.

    Jimmie Johnson began racing at the Cup level in 2002, where potential was seen right away. He won his first race at California Speedway in the Auto Club 500 and finished fifth in points, which was not normal at all for a rookie.

    In most cases, rookies of this caliber would be recognized, yet all Johnson found himself known as was Gordon’s protégé.

    However, four years later, as the series back-to-back champion, he had his boss/teammate stunned at what he had accomplished. “I had no idea that Jimmie would develop into a champion,” Gordon said.

    “A lot of fans think everything has been handed to him on a silver platter because he’s so smooth, but they don’t understand his background. It’s made him hungry (for a championship).”

    Of course his background and road to stardom was not the only thing that made him hungry; the disappointment he had to suffer through first promoted him to be even more determined to win the championship.

    In 2003, Johnson finished fourth in points to Matt Kenseth. In 2004, he won four races in a row late in the season and tried to win the championship in honor of the 10 fallen heroes involved in a plane crash late in October.

    He did not accomplish that feat, though, as he ended up finished second, nine points behind Kurt Busch. In 2005, he finished forth to Tony Stewart, due to a wreck in the final race of the year at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

    As co-owner Rick Hendrick said, “It took some disappointment for Jimmie to get here, but he is matured, and now, as a racer, he is the whole package.” That entire package finally began to come together in 2006.

    Johnson showed right off the bat that he was the driver to beat winning the sport’s biggest race, the Daytona 500. Of course it all began to come together, thanks to some guidance from Hendrick.

    As we know, every bit of big success in Nextel Cup comes thanks to a good driver and crew chief combination. Hendrick saw that Johnson and crew chief Chad Knaus had some issues and needed some guidance.

    Johnson’s description of it states the fact that they both wanted it so bad that they were “butting heads in the process.” So Hendrick pulled them into his office, ready to discuss things between them and if needed, separate them.

    “It was getting to the point where Chad and Jimmie were having more bad days than good days,” Hendrick said. “I called them into my office…and said ‘If we’re going to act like kids, we’re going to have cookies and milk and we’ll have some down time where we can talk about what you don’t like about each.”

    With a play on what was seen as “childish behavior,” he set the room up as if it was a kid’s room and served them Mickey Mouse cookies and milk. This meeting allowed both Knaus and Johnson to get all their feelings about each other.

    “The meeting was supposed to be how we split the guys up,” Hendrick said. “But in this meeting, these guys really put their heart on the table and they talked specifically about what they didn’t like. Instead of holding it in, they were able to become closer friends and still respect each other’s professional position in the team.

    “I’m real proud of them because I would have bet money that we couldn’t fix it. I think both of those guys would be successful in their own right, but I think they’re stronger together.”

    “It took a lot of effort on each other’s parts,” Knaus later on said in a different article. “At that point, we were both tired and very frustrated. We were on the cusp on winning a championship for the first three years and we weren’t able to pull it off. Expectations were high. We weren’t able to deliver. There’s a lot to wanting to deliver for Rick and Jimmie and I felt that I laid down a little. I didn’t make the right decisions.

    “It takes maturity, wisdom and you have to learn. We learned over a period of time. You have to go over life experiences and race car experiences to get what you really need. There was a point there that we had to make a decision whether we wanted to do this or not.

    “We just had to learn to rededicate ourselves to the cause—and that’s what we did.” This conversation with Rick helped their relationship a lot, allowing them to now be the driver-crew chief pair to beat.

    “Jimmie and Chad have something very, very special together,” Gordon said in the article One More with Feeling. “I know everything that goes into their cars and everything about their set-ups, and they’re still beating us. It’s frustrating but you’ve got to give them credit. They’re the best right now.”

    “My relationship with Chad has been unlike any relationship I’ve had before with a crew chief,” Johnson said in November of 2008. “We’re close in age, which is a first for me, and we share a lot of things in common. We have two completely different personalities, and his strengths fit my weaknesses and my strengths fit his weaknesses. So I think the pairing of us both has been really good.”

    Since them fixing their differences, they have gone to create a dynasty as they have won the past five championships together.

    Despite Johnson being the champion he is, there are some that don’t like him for who he is on the surface, but that’s something that’s unimportant to Jimmie right now.

    “It takes maturity, wisdom and you have to learn. We learned over a period of time. You have to go over life experiences and race car experiences to get what you really need. There was a point there that we had to make a decision whether we wanted to do this or not.

    “We just had to learn to rededicate ourselves to the cause—and that’s what we did.” This conversation with Rick helped their relationship a lot, allowing them to now be the driver-crew chief pair to beat.

    “Jimmie and Chad have something very, very special together,” Gordon said in the article One More with Feeling. “I know everything that goes into their cars and everything about their set-ups, and they’re still beating us. It’s frustrating but you’ve got to give them credit. They’re the best right now.”

    “My relationship with Chad has been unlike any relationship I’ve had before with a crew chief,” Johnson said in November of 2008. “We’re close in age, which is a first for me, and we share a lot of things in common. We have two completely different personalities, and his strengths fit my weaknesses and my strengths fit his weaknesses. So I think the pairing of us both has been really good.”

    Since them fixing their differences, they have gone to create a dynasty as they have won the past five championships together.

    Despite Johnson being the champion he is, there are some that don’t like him for who he is on the surface, but that’s something that’s unimportant to Jimmie right now.