There's more to Jimmie Johnson than meets the eye
Feb. 25, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. -- Seven o'clock in the morning? Are you freakin' kidding me?
The
champion's breakfast at Daytona International Speedway has never been
scheduled that early, at least as I remember it. Until today.
So
when the alarm rang at 6 a.m. 00 after a stint in the press box that
didn't end until 8:30 p.m. the night before -- I was sorely
tempted to hit the snooze button and sleep in.
After
all, I thought, it's just Jimmie Johnson. Sure, he's a five-time NASCAR
Sprint Cup Series champion. Sure, he had just won the
Daytona 500 for the second time.
But
where Johnson's public persona is concerned, "snooze" may be a
descriptive that's too electric. Outwardly, Johnson is the functional
inverse of the Dos Equis Man. Outwardly, he may be the Least
Interesting Man in the World.
I
can almost hear him saying, "I don't always eat ice cream, but when I
do, I choose vanilla -- Blue Bunny, of course." Can't forget
that sponsor plug.
Even
those of us who go to the track every week rarely see anything beyond
the business side of Jimmie Johnson. He's like a cube, a
die, if you will, always pointing the same face at us -- so that all we
see is the square.
But
like a cube, Johnson has other faces, and a depth far beyond the
two-dimensional figure his politically correct public image might
suggest.
But
at this point in his life, Johnson has even more reason to exercise
restraint, where public perception is concerned. He has a family.
"We're
buttoned up when we come to the track, ready to work, and that may not
paint the picture that some fans want to see," Johnson
said after breakfast Monday morning. "As a parent now, it's amazing how
many parents appreciate the buttoned-up, professional approach."
One
of Johnson's special gifts is the ability to compartmentalize the
various aspects of his life and maintain a laser-like focus on
the task at hand. From the moment Johnson drives through the tunnel
into a race track until the obligatory post-race interviews are over,
he's at work.
After
Sunday's race, though, the monolithic men-at-work aspect of the No. 48
team dissolved into spontaneous celebration. It started
with Johnson's aborted attempt at a burnout on the huge white-painted
Daytona 500 logo in the middle of the tri-oval grass.
"It
was pretty bad -- I'm not going to lie," Johnson said. "I just wanted a
picture down on the Daytona emblem. I think that's every
driver's goal, to get on the emblem and do a burnout. I turned it down,
pulled it into second gear and thought I had the right angle to spin
off into the grass.
"As
I turned in, I guess the car rolling over allowed the right front to
dig in, and I knew instantly, when it grabbed the dirt, that
I had a big problem. Looking at my gauges, I still had water pressure
and water temp, so I knew the radiator was still in it, but it didn't go
as planned."
Hours
later, after the public celebration in Victory Lane and interviews in
the media center -- long after the fans had left the grandstands
-- the No. 48 transporter pulled up to the start/finish line, and the
winners' bash began in earnest.
"We
wanted to get our transporter out there and take a victory photo,
'cause it's kind of cool," said crew chief Chad Knaus. "It's a
cool backdrop, and one of the pit crew guys jumped up and he's like,
'Hey, let's do the Harlem Shake!'
"And
I was like, 'All right, let's see if we can get this thing rolling.' We
found a photographer from somewhere -- I don't even know
where this poor guy came from. He was on a motorcycle, and he went back
and got his tripod. It was funny, to say the least."
At
one point, Johnson reportedly was doing the Shake on top of the hauler,
a source of concern for those familiar with Johnson's history
on top of vehicles. After his first championship in 2006, Johnson --
having consumed the sort of product the Dos Equis Man promotes -- was
lying on top of a golf cart, flailing with his club polo-mallet style.
The golf cart turned suddenly and Johnson fell
off, breaking his wrist.
The accident kept him out of the driver's seat for a month.
"I'm
not going to lie," Knaus said. "I had flashbacks of the broken wrist on
top of the golf cart and all that, but we were keeping
everybody in check pretty good."
By "we" Knaus means the gendarmes at the track.
"The
security guys knew we were here," Johnson admitted. "They said, 'Nice
job celebrating, but you guys need to slow down a little
bit.' We had a lot of fun, just savoring the moment.
"One thing I've learned over the years now is to stop, slow down, soak it up and take it in."
We
seldom see the fun-loving, free-wheeling side of the five-time
champion. The golf cart mishap is suburban legend, witnessed by a
small circle of friends.
But now, with Johnson starting his 12th
full season in the Cup series, there's finally definitive proof of a
common assertion
among his friends and colleagues, that Johnson can be the life of the
party. The camera caught the 48 team's antics at the finish line, Harlem
Shake and all.
Johnson told us Monday morning that the video is on the way to the editing room.
Let's just hope that, for once, he lets everyone see it.
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