Johnson and Montoya still hold different views of Dover restart
June 7, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
LONG
POND, Pa.--Five days after the fact, drivers are still talking about
the fateful restart at Dover that earned Jimmie Johnson a
race-killing penalty.
Johnson
is convinced that race leader Juan Pablo Montoya deliberately
manipulated a restart with 19 laps left in last Sunday’s FedEx
400. With Montoya progressing slowly between the restart zone and the
start/finish line, Johnson, the second-place driver, surged ahead,
beating Montoya to the stripe.
Other
drivers behind the front row braked hard to allow Montoya to get to the
line first, leaving Johnson out front through Turns 1
and 2 and beyond. NASCAR black-flagged the five-time champion and
issued a pass-through penalty that relegated Johnson to a 17th-place
finish.
NASCAR
vice president of competition called the penalty an easy decision, but
on Friday at Pocono Raceway, Johnson still wasn’t conceding
the point.
"Not
for me," Johnson asserted. "Not for the 15 (Clint Bowyer), not for the
99 (Carl Edwards), not for the 18 (Kyle Busch). I mean all
these guys have talked to me, and I just saw Clint, and he was like,
‘Dude, I was on the brakes, like I stomped on the brakes to stop because
I knew you were in trouble.’
"I
said I knew I was, too, (and told Bowyer) ‘I was just hoping that that
they would see the rest of you check up.’ It is what it is.
I can’t change it and can’t do anything about it, but moving forward, I
think we can prevent that situation from happening again."
Johnson
suggested that NASCAR has the technology to analyze problems on
restarts and make quick decisions as to what happened. He also
credited Montoya with finding a way to trap him within the letter of
the law.
"Essentially,
Juan found a loophole," Johnson said. "He found a loophole in the
officiating and worked it to his advantage. So, sure,
I’m mad I didn’t win the race, and I’m not mad at him, but I think we
need to look at how we officiate and how we can regulate that and keep
that from happening."
The
loophole exists between the restart zone and the start/finish line. The
rule book says a driver must maintain pace car speed until
he reaches the restart zone, but there’s no rule that requires him to
go a certain speed between the restart zone and the stripe.
The rule book simply says that the second-place car (or any other car) cannot beat the race leader to the line.
"You could pin four or five people into that position, if they take the bait, which I took the bait--clearly," Johnson said.
Montoya
laughed off the notion that he is a master manipulator. As the leader,
he controlled the restart and is supposed to dictate
the pace.
"You
are not supposed to beat the leader to the line," Montoya said. "What
is so hard about that? You know what I mean? I
read a quote about him (Johnson) this week. I was at my house, and I
read a quote. He said ‘If he wouldn’t have done that, the No. 42
(Montoya) would have beat him.’ I’m like, ‘Well, I’m the leader, not
you.’
"I
was thinking, ‘I know you dominated the race, but we came to a pit
stop, and we did a better job than you guys. And
as we did a better job than you guys, we are the leader, not you.’
Crazy enough--if he would have backed off and let me go, he would have
probably passed me again. It would have been all good. He wanted to time
it really well where he didn’t have to deal with
me through Turns 1 and 2, but he mistimed it. That’s it--no drama."
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