Dover
notebook: Johnson focused on present, not future
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[June 03, 2017]
The Sports Xchange
Dover notebook: Johnson focused on present, not future
By Reid Spencer, NASCAR Wire Service
Distributed by The Sports Xchange
DOVER, Del. -- How concerned is Jimmie Johnson about the major
changes coming to the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series schedule in
2018?
The short answer: not at all -- yet.
Johnson has won all of his record-tying seven series championships
under a 10-race playoff format. During his phenomenal run from 2006
through 2016, there have been only nominal and incremental changes
where the venues for the final 10 events are concerned.
In 2018, however, the differences will be dramatic. Las Vegas Motor
Speedway, which has never been part of the playoff, will open the
postseason next year. Richmond, the host site for the traditional
regular-season cutoff race, moves into the playoff in the second
spot.
The third event, the elimination race at Charlotte Motor Speedway,
will move from the oval to the oval/road course combination at
track, the first time the "roval" will have been used for a Monster
Energy NASCAR Cup Series race.
Dover International Speedway, in recent years the elimination race
in the first round of the playoff, becomes the first race in the
second round.
Other than the change at Charlotte, however, Johnson hasn't thought
much about the 2018 schedule and the changes to a 10-race playoff
that, historically, has been right in his wheelhouse.
"Were there big changes besides the roval?" Johnson asked during his
Friday media availability prior to Sunday's AAA 400 Drive for Autism
at Dover (1 p.m. ET). "You can tell I've been paying attention. I
don't care where they are or what we do. I'm ready to race, and I
think this team can win regardless of where those events are held.
"I think the roval stands out the most. That's the biggest change,
in my opinion. We'll take it as it comes. And I guess I've just been
focused on this year and what we have going on."
From an unselfish standpoint, Johnson is all for injecting variety
into the makeup of the playoffs.
"I know that our sport is going through a lot of change," he said.
"So I'm not surprised. I feel like there's a lot of excitement with
other forms of sports due to the fact that playoff events change and
move around and locations change.
"So, in driver council meetings that I've been a part of and
conversations that have taken place, I've kind of sensed that change
was coming and I've been for it. I've been for it mainly because of
the excitement it can bring to the fans in our sport and much less
about how it pertains to the No. 48 car."
From a selfish standpoint, Johnson has a completely different point
of view.
"If I could have a voice I would say the 10 playoff races were all
right here (Dover), and that would benefit the No. 48 the most," he
quipped.
Small wonder. In Sunday's AAA 400 Drive for Autism, Johnson will be
trying to win his 11th Cup race at the Monster Mile.
A chance meeting between two champions
Race fans worldwide watched Austin Dillon win Sunday's Coca-Cola 600
at Charlotte Motor Speedway roughly eight hours after Japanese
driver Takuma Sato took the checkered flag in the Indianapolis 500.
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So what were
the chances of the two races winners meeting each other by
happenstance during the days that followed the races?
Purely by coincidence, the drivers were at Teterboro Airport in New
York on Tuesday during the media obligations that followed their
respective victories. Dillon had just finished an impromptu dinner
with his grandfather and team owner, Richard Childress, before
coming to Teterboro.
"Yeah, that was totally fate," Dillon told the NASCAR Wire Service
on Friday at Dover International Speedway. "We had that dinner -- it
wasn't a scheduled dinner, my grandfather was just like, 'Hey we're
in New York, let's have a dinner.' We got done, and we were headed
to the airport. Everybody was pretty tired, and we walked through
the airport and one of the guys said 'Hey, I think that's Takuma
Sato.'
"He was walking actually out to the plane and we were like 'Man,
we've got to get a picture with him.' His business manager turned
around and saw us and he was like 'Well, this is a great
coincidence.' And he pulled him back in, and we got a couple of
pictures, showed off our rings to each other. That was cool. He was
a really nice guy and you could tell he was just jacked about the
win at Indy."
No doubt the feeling was mutual.
Hulu sponsorship a major deal for Jeffrey Earnhardt
Fourth-generation Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series driver Jeffrey
Earnhardt and Circle Sport/TMG team co-owner Joe Falk paid a visit
to the Dover media center on Friday to announce a 19-race
sponsorship from premium streaming service Hulu on the No. 33
Chevrolet.
"Being a small team, it's huge for us," Earnhardt said. "Every
dollar goes a long way, and there have been races where we haven't
had sponsorship, and that's tough on anyone, but it's even tougher
on a small team like us.
"To be able to have good companies like Hulu come on board is huge
and not just being able to have more funding going to the track, but
to get us more exposure and branding is a huge plus, too."
Particularly with his uncle, Dale Earnhardt Jr., retiring from Cup
racing at the end of the season, Jeffrey feels a certain degree of
pressure to keep the family name in the public eye.
"With Junior leaving, that's a big shock to this sport," Jeffrey
said. "He has quite the fan base, but I feel like there is always
pressure to perform. Probably a little bit more now, but one of the
main goals that I want to achieve in my career is to continue the
legacy that my grandfather (seven-time champion Dale Earnhardt)
built.
"You know that means a lot to me. I know how much that man meant to
the sport and the fans and stuff. If I can continue that legacy at
some level... I mean I would like to say that I'm going to go
deliver it at its best, but those were big shoes that he made and I
don't think I could ever get close to even considering filling
those. But if I could just do a big portion of keeping that
Earnhardt legacy alive, I would be pretty happy." [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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