Johnson and Earnhardt disagree on Talladega


CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Two of NASCAR’s biggest stars offered differing opinions Tuesday on how the sport can control the racing at Talladega Superspeedway.

Three-time defending NASCAR champion Jimmie Johnson called for a radical transformation of the race track, while Dale Earnhardt Jr. said alterations are not feasible. The two are teammates at Hendrick Motorsports.

The racing at the 2.66-mile Alabama superspeedway is again under scrutiny after Carl Edwards’ airborne crash into the safety fence on the last lap of Sunday’s race. It was the most frightening of three accidents, including a 10-car pileup that knocked Johnson out of the race with nine laps to go.

Because the track is so big and wide that drivers never have to lift off the gas, Johnson said Tuesday that NASCAR cannot remove the horsepower-sapping restrictor plates that are used to combat the high speeds at Daytona and Talladega. That leaves a track alteration as his only suggestion.

“I don’t know how we fix it unless we take a bunch of tractors out there and knock down the walls, knock down the banking, and make the track where you have to let off [the gas],” Johnson said. “Outside of that, I don’t think there is a rule that NASCAR can come up with. As long as we’re running [restrictor] plates, we’re going to have this issue.”

Earnhardt, NASCAR’s most popular driver, said track alterations aren’t possible.

“There’s no way you can justify it under the current economic state of the sport, of the track itself, of the company that owns the track,” he said. “Nothing from that wreck really stands out to me as, ‘Wow, we got to make a change here or something needs to be done,’ other than the car getting off the ground and people getting hurt. As far as the wreck itself, trying to avoid it from happening, I don’t see how you can.”

NASCAR officials have already dismissed altering the race track.

The four plate races each year are among the most exciting of the season. Because the cars all run at about the same speed, drivers are unable to pull away from each other. It creates huge packs of traffic and one wrong move by one driver can wipe out dozens of cars in spectacular accidents.

Sunday’s race lived up to the hype, with 57 lead changes among 25 drivers. Edwards and Brad Keselowski ran down leaders Ryan Newman and Earnhardt Jr. on the last lap.