Friday Notebook
Jimmie Johnson: We did not rat out the Penske cars
Apr. 19, 2013 (EDITORS: For photos of the Michael Waltrip Racing tribute to Boston, please visit NASCARMedia.com)
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
KANSAS CITY, Kan. -- Forget that the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series garage is a self-policing society.
Forget
that the transporter of reigning Cup champion Brad Keselowski was
parked next to that of five-time champ Jimmie Johnson last
week at Texas or that their garage stalls were in close proximity.
Johnson
said emphatically that no one on his No. 48 team blew the whistle on
Keselowski's team last week, when infractions involving
rear end housings subsequently led to huge penalties for both of Penske
Racing's Cup cars -- the No. 2 of Keselowski and the No. 22 of Joey
Logano.
Crew
chiefs Paul Wolfe (No. 2) and Todd Gordon (No. 22) were fined $100,000
each and suspended for six Cup points races as well at the
NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race in May. NASCAR also suspended the car
chiefs and race engineers of both teams, along with Penske team manager
Travis Geisler, for six weeks.
The
punishments are stayed pending the hearing of Penske's appeal, but if
they are upheld, the loss of personnel will test severely
the depth of the Penske organization.
Where
the actual detection of the violations is concerned, Johnson said in no
uncertain terms that the No. 48 team had nothing to do
with it, despite speculation to the contrary earlier in the week.
"No,
the Hendrick group and the No. 48 team did not rat out the Penske
cars," Johnson said Friday morning before Cup practice at Kansas
Speedway. "There are two decisions teams are faced with in the garage
area. Everybody has people watching. We've been very impressed with the
No. 2 car's staff and their ability to have somebody just stand and
watch other teams."
Johnson
says that, while someone from the 48 team may try to discern what other
teams are doing, it's not their style to play garage
tattletale.
"This
environment does take place in the garage area. Yeah, there are eyes
open, but when a team sees something, they have two options. One,
they go home and try to adapt it to their car and understand it and see
if they can make it work, or they go in the (NASCAR) truck and say
something. We don't say something. We're a company built on
performance. We're a company that tries to understand the
rule book as close as we can to the law.
"Sure,
we have had our issues with it, but that's racing -- it's been that way
since day one of racing. We go in there and we try to
be as smart as we can and conform to the rules and put the best race
car on the track. With all that being said, no, sure there was a lot of
activity around the Penske cars during the test day, just like all the
other cars. Everybody is watching, everybody
is looking, but in no way shape or form did anybody from the No. 48 car
walk into that truck and say anything."
HONORING BOSTON VICTIMS
The
numbers on Michael Waltrip Racing's three NASCAR Sprint Cup cars will
have a specific, distinctive look this weekend. They will
present themselves as bib numbers from a marathon.
Team
owner Michael Waltrip has competed in the Boston Marathon, and he and
his drivers are honoring the victims of Monday's bombing
at the historic race with the special number schemes.
"I'm
very proud to be running the bib numbers on our race cars this
weekend," MWR driver Martin Truex Jr. said Friday morning after
a tree-planting ceremony at Legends Toyota near Kansas Speedway.
"Obviously, the whole deal, when we heard about it, it hit Michael
really close to home, because he's run in the marathon before. He
understands what it's like to put all the work in, the effort
in to be a part of that event.
"It
was obviously a huge honor for all those people to be a part of, and
then, getting ready to cross the finish line and realize their
goal and be proud of something, somebody had to take that away from
them and hurt a bunch of people. It's sick. We're very proud to have
those numbers on the race cars this weekend. We're all thinking about
all the folks from Boston that were affected -- everybody
that ran in it, everybody that watched and was around the area,
everybody that was affected by it. Hopefully, we can do a little bit to
help them out and let them know we're thinking of them."
HENDRICK CONNECTION
The
death of Massachusetts Institute of Technology security officer Sean
Collier, 26, slain during a confrontation with Boston Marathon
bombing suspects, hit close to home at Hendrick Motorsports.
Andrew Collier, younger brother of the MIT shooting victim, is a machinist in the Hendrick engine department.
"(We're)
trying to gather all that's going on, but a very sad time," said
Hendrick driver Jimmie Johnson. "My thoughts and prayers are
with the Collier family. I certainly know that it's the same thing for
all of Hendrick Motorsports.
"We're one big family, and it's sad and unfortunate to see a fellow teammate and his family going through such a tough time."
GROWING GREEN
With
Earth Day coming Monday, NASCAR Sprint Cup drivers Martin Truex Jr. and
Clint Bowyer got an early start on some earth moving during
a tree-planting celebration Friday morning at Legends Toyota near
Kansas Speedway.
The
tree planting was part of a month-long initiative in NASCAR's "Race to
Green" and the NASCAR Green Clean Air Tree Planting Program
Delivered by UPS. In an effort to reduce the sport's carbon footprint,
NASCAR is encouraging its fans, teams, tracks and partners to pledge
trees to the cause.
Toyota,
for instance, will donate a tree for each lap led by a Toyota driver
and 1,000 for each Toyota win. With Kyle Busch winning
at Texas last Saturday in a Joe Gibbs Racing Camry, Toyota already is
on the hook for more than 1,100 trees this month.
On
Friday, Truex and Bowyer spread soil around the base of the saplings
before other participants covered the soil with mulch made from
recycled tires.
Asked to recall the last time he had planted a tree, Truex quipped, "I used to plant trees -- now I have a landscaper."
"That's
real nice," retorted Bowyer. "When I was a kid, we used to plant trees a
lot. The neatest thing about this… we take care of
each other, and we do so much with this sport in charitable work, but a
lot of times, the ground itself is overlooked.
"This is a neat opportunity to take care of both."
No comments:
Post a Comment