Champ is not champ to fans



Jimmie Johnson is NASCAR's nice-guy champ, but not popular with fans.
HOMESTEAD, Fla. (AP) -- There's an Internet video of a family in its kitchen watching October's last-lap wreck at Talladega. When Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Jimmie Johnson crash on the final lap, the family flies into an expletive-laden rage against Johnson.
Widely viewed throughout NASCAR, it took Earnhardt and Denny Hamlin to make Johnson aware of the clip.
"That was one of the funniest videos I've ever seen," Hamlin told him, choking back laughter. "Even the toddler was ripping you."
Johnson is NASCAR's nicest guy and its newest champion, but he's far from a fan favorite.
With 23 career victories and his first Nextel Cup championship, Johnson's still working on winning over fans: He ranked a distant 10th last season in final voting for NASCAR's most popular driver.
Routinely booed during pre-race introductions, he's had more than one Victory Lane celebration spoiled by debris raining down from the grandstands. Although that didn't happen Sunday at Homestead-Miami Speedway, he hardly was embraced. His haters didn't even bother sticking around, making the final trophy presentation somewhat muted.
"He is a genuine person, the kind that fans should embrace," said Atlanta Braves pitcher Mike Hampton, who attended eight races this season, including Sunday's finale, as Johnson's guest.
"Instead, he's kind of the poster guy -- when things look too good, you say 'Man, I've got to break this down and figure out what's wrong with him.' But the honest answer is there's nothing. He treats the valet the exact same way he would treat the President of the United States. You don't get that a lot in professional athletes, but with Jimmie, what you see is what you get."
Model of consistency
It's hard to figure out exactly where Johnson went wrong. Since breaking onto the Cup scene in late 2001, he has been a model of consistency on and off the track. He works hard, wins races and competes for championships.
He's never punched a photographer or cursed on national TV. He's never been in trouble with the law and hasn't disrespected a NASCAR official.
He shows up where he's supposed to, honors his commitments and is almost always on time.
Maybe that's the problem.
It also might be guilt by association. Teammate Jeff Gordon draws his share of boos, and he and Johnson have been closely aligned since Gordon helped him get his big break with Hendrick Motorsports in 2001.
The story is well-known: Johnson was a no-name Busch Series driver when he approached Gordon at the track one day and asked for advice. Gordon gave him his phone number and told him to call him the following week, striking up a friendship that led Gordon to personally pitch Johnson to the CEO of Lowe's Home Improvement for the car the company planned to sponsor.
Success came early
Success came as soon as Johnson got behind the wheel of his new No. 48 Chevrolet. He drove to three victories as a rookie and a fifth-place finish in the standings.
But many fans instantly hated him, assuming Johnson's friendship with Gordon got him breaks he had not earned.
"I think a lot of people think Hendrick Motorsports ... and everything is just handed to you on a golden platter," Gordon said. "They think that his success is because he's got the best car, the best this, the best that. Not a lot of people appreciate Jimmie's talent."
Or the road he took to get to the top.
A laid-back California kid, there's a perception that Johnson doesn't fit the NASCAR mold. But behind his cool demeanor hides a guy who fought and worked for everything he has.
The misconception is Johnson is a spoiled rich kid with a Daddy who leveraged everything to help him make it big.
The reality is Gary Johnson was a heavy equipment operator, and his wife, Cathy, drove a school bus to help make ends meet. On weekends, the Johnsons loaded their three boys into an old van and took them camping in the desert, where Jimmie, Jarit and Jessie rode dirt bikes long into the night as their parents partied with friends around the fire.
"It's just such a long, long road, and it's been a lot of people that believed in me," said Johnson.
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