Jimmie Johnson vows to loosen up the way he views restart rules
July 4, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. --
Where restart rules are concerned, Jimmie Johnson promises he won't be such a strict constructionist in future races.
After
restart issues at both Dover and Kentucky cost Johnson likely wins at
both tracks, Johnson says he'll take some liberties with
the letter of the law when he's coming to the green flag after a
caution.
Why? Because Johnson feels other drivers are doing precisely that.
When
Matt Kenseth led the field to green late in last Sunday's NASCAR Sprint
Cup Series race at Kentucky, Johnson exclaimed on the radio
that Kenseth should have been penalized for "stopping the field" --
failing to maintain pace car speed as he approached and entered the
restart zone.
Kenseth
pulled ahead at the start/finish line, leaving Johnson's dominant car
in the middle of a three-wide sandwich entering Turn 1.
Johnson spun and lost his opportunity to win the race.
"I
know the rule," Johnson said Thursday before opening practice at
Daytona International Speedway. "I feel like I'm maybe a little
focused on the way the rule reads exactly and paying maybe too close of
attention to that.
"Maybe I should lighten up and loosen up."
For
the record, NASCAR rules -- as reiterated in every pre-race drivers'
meeting -- require the leader to maintain pace car speed before
restarting the race in the prescribed zone, defined by red marks on the
speedway wall.
Johnson says he always has abided by the rule but feels others have played fast and loose with procedures.
"There
are a lot of restarts, especially during the Kentucky race, that I
brought [to the green] that I feel like a good citizen, a
good student in doing exactly what I'm supposed to," Johnson
said. "There are other times [with other drivers controlling the
restarts] when I don't feel that exactly happens and that it's not
called on or viewed from [NASCAR race control] as the rule reads.
"At
the end of the day, I'm just going to lighten up on how I think about
it and use that zone and that area regardless of the way the
rule reads to get an advantage and worry about myself."
At
Dover, Johnson was black-flagged for passing Juan Pablo Montoya before
the cars reached the start/finish line, another violation
of restart procedure.
Does that mean Johnson now is psyched out about restarts he doesn't control?
"I'm
not smart enough to let it get in my head," the five-time Sprint Cup
champion quipped. "So we're fine there. There's not much between
these ears."
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