In more ways than one, Jeff Gordon changed NASCAR racing
Feb. , 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.—Jeff Gordon’s impact on NASCAR Sprint Cup Series racing was immediate and substantial.
In 1994, his second full season at NASCAR’s highest level, Gordon won the Coca-Cola 600 and the inaugural Brickyard 400.
In
1995, he won the first of his four series titles. After last year’s
four-win season, Gordon has 92 career victories, third on the all-time
list behind Richard Petty (200)
and David Pearson (105).
Gordon
was the foil to seven-time Cup champion Dale Earnhardt Sr. While Gordon
brought new fans to the sport, he also raised the ire of Earnhardt fans
who were loath to
see race wins and series titles going to the kid from California,
rather than the Intimidator.
You
could argue, though, that Jeff Gordon did more to change the direction
of NASCAR racing when he played a critical role in adding Jimmie Johnson
to the Hendrick Motorsports
driver roster.
Gordon
won his last series title in 2001, a year before Johnson joined the
organization. Subsequently, Johnson won six championships, including
five straight from 2006 through
2010.
But
the first meeting between the drivers was tenuous at best. Johnson was
losing his ride in what is now the NASCAR XFINITY Series, and he finally
worked up the nerve to
ask Gordon for advice.
“I
doubt he'll remember, and we never had a chance to formally meet,”
Johnson recalled during Thursday’s NASCAR Media Day at Daytona
International Speedway. “But at test
sessions, I guess in '99 and even in 2000 when he was running some
[XFINITY] stuff, we'd have a test session and every now and then the 24
car would be there, and I would always try to linger by his pit and try
to introduce myself to him, and it never worked
out.
“Truthfully,
the first time I met him formally was at the August race in Michigan in
2000, and I went to him with some questions that I needed answered. I
needed some advice
because the Herzogs (Johnson’s team owners) were going to pull out.
They lost their sponsorship, and the only opportunities I had involved
switching manufacturers, as well, and I knew Jeff left Bill Davis and
Ford and went to Rick Hendrick and Chevy and I
thought he had like the magic answer.”
Johnson
introduced himself to Gordon at the drivers’ meeting, completely
unaware that his name already had come up during expansion talks within
Hendrick Motorsports.
“He
brought me back to the transporter, we talked briefly before the start
of the race,” Johnson said, “and after I told him my situation, he gave
me some advice, and then
said, ‘You're not going to believe this, but we're talking about
starting a fourth team, and your name is the only name that's been
brought up.’
“So
just in a 30 minute window of time, what all went on, starting out
trying to work up the nerve to introduce myself to him, looking for some
advice, and then practically
leaving with the job was just insane. It was the wildest 30 minutes of
my life.”
Though
their careers are inextricably interwoven, Gordon and Johnson will be
pursuing different agendas this season. In his final year in full-time
Cup racing, Gordon would
like nothing better than to win a championship under the Chase for the
NASCAR Sprint Cup format.
Johnson,
on the other hand, will try to win a record-tying seventh title, so if
either Gordon or Johnson should succeed, it will frustrate the other.
Johnson
won all six of his championships after the introduction of the Chase in
2004, but under last year’s distinctly different Chase format, he was
eliminated in the second
round and finished a career-worst 11th in the final standings.
In assessing his view of the new Chase format, however, Johnson had a more global perspective.
“I
said it last year, I wanted the stats to tell me that it was better, and
the stats that NASCAR shared with the drivers a couple weeks ago
definitely showed things going
in the right direction,” Johnson said. “I feel with my talents as a
driver, the team that I drive for, the commitment we all have for the
sport, regardless of format we're going to be a threat and have a shot
to win championships.
“I'm
for it. I want what's best for our sport. I want those grandstands
full. I want the ad buys to be up. I want people craving our sport like
they did in the '90s, so
I have an open mind as to how we get there.”
Spoken like a six-time champion, going on seven—unless Gordon has something to say about it.
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