Another example of Junior Johnson running his team with an iron fist would be the immediate firing of long time crew chief and 53 time winner for the team, Tim Brewer. The firing of Brewer right after the 1992 Hooters 500 is what broke the camels back in my opinion for the team.
Also Alan’s tragic end near Bristol the next April somewhat left Junior cursed during his last few seasons given the way he reacted when Alan said he wanted 2 do things his way,thus stealing Maxwell House from right under AKR’s rug!!!!
Tim's firing had everything to do with his testifying against Junior during his divorce case, from his wife of many decade's, Flossy Johnson & not anything to do with on-track racing. A Man like Junior Johnson lives by the code of the feud, as far as Junior was concerned, Bling-Bling Brewer betrayed him 🤷🏻♂️
@@scjacket611 Actually no, Junior walked away & belly'd up his race team, because of NASCAR's tightening up the rule book. Like I said in my previous comment, Junior lived by the code of the feud & as far as he was concerned, after all he had done for NASCAR in the past, they're fine'n him $100K for what they deemed an illegal carburetor, was an outright betrayal, so having many different interest's in his already got it made life, he simply quit the sport & walked away 🤷🏻♂️
I worked on Junior’s house near North Wilkesboro several times and he was truly a man of few words. I had to climb into the crawl space of his house and was amazed to see a stash of NASCAR trophies there!
Another factor in the downfall of his race teams was the divorce from his long-time wife Flossie in 1992. While he was able to keep the race teams in the divorce settlement I believe the repercussions from the divorce contributed to the downfall. He married his trophy wife about the time the race teams were sold and he had other things on his mind including having children.
Can't wrap my head around it sure I can find the lure of wanting to hit a young girl but hit it and quit it at the end of the day what are you going to talk about the latest pop star and the constant self evaluation of knowing how does this girl find me attractive sure money can be attractive but that's a hollow kinda relationship there's an old saying there's no fool like a old fool especially chasing children around at what's supposed to be your golden years and time for relaxation and leisure but this is all conjecture don't know the man personally so maybe he's getting what he deserves
Very good point about the divorce. Both the 11 and 12 teams originally had different owners and had different but feet apart locations. Junior had to purchace out of bankruptcy the 12 team then the divorce came later. Very interesting reading form my subscription of "Grand National Scene"
I was just about to say that. Also, not noted was that both Junior and Brewer were suspended at one point in 1990. And I mean an actual suspension; the 11 car itself couldn't run. So, Junior had to transfer his team to Flossie, which showed up with a different number (I think 97) for a few races.
@@bluorangefyre It was actually in 1991. They got caught running a illegal engine in The Winston, at the same time Geoff Bodine was out with a injury as well.
I'm glad someone finally said something other than junior was a sort of saint. He was a nasty ignorant piece of work and it shouldn't be overshadowed or forgotten no matter how much he accomplished. Great video though
He might not have had any formidable education but he was extremely smart. He’s the won that got Chevrolet back in racing and the won that got Winston to sponsor NASCAR. He had that mystery engine nobody could figure out. Terry Labonte said when he drove for him it was amazing what that man knows about a race car. Plus I didn’t know this until recently he got Dale Earnhardt his ride with Bud Moore and then Richard Childress and also helped Bill Elliott with his ride in the No.9 car. Nasty I’ll give you him and Bill Elliott got to fooling around with those Budweiser girls and cost them both their marriages. Tim Brewer said Junior called him from Atlanta with Tim up in Charlotte and said Tim I want you fly down here and get us and Brewer said no Junior I’m not gonna fly down there a pick you and that slut up. Brewer was very loyal to Miss Flossie I believe.
DW fired by Junior? Well, according to DW (while being interviewed by Dale Jr.) he was offered a contract from Rick Hendrick. DW approached Junior with this information at which time Junior stated to DW, "You need to go and take that deal." The "conversation" ended without Junior even attempting to make DW a counter offer. The barn door opened, and Darrell walked.....
Actually, I had heard several times before that Junior was unhappy with the direction the sport was going in. The late 80s and early 90s was a big transitional period for the sport. More and more the sport was popularized advertised and commercialized. More and more fans were being attracted to the sport and more and more businesses were pouring more money into the sport. Junior was an old school owner and really did not keep up with the times the way most teams of that era did. Junior in his hay day had creative innovations incorporated into his cars and the new commercialized nascar with more inspectors were catching juniors innovations and kept his cars from being as competitive as they once were. Some people that don’t know him well saw his as a cantankerous old b@stard but to me he was the true embodiment of a nascar legend that I am proud to say that I was able to meet in person and by the way about 1/4 of the current nascar rule book is directly or indirectly attributed to Mr. Johnson and his creative innovations.
I especially liked the story of the intake manifold that could pass inspection, and when the engine was up to speed, the floor dropped out and the engine flowed way more than allowed lol lol Also his moonshine story of giving the Wilkes county Sheriff a ride to the courthouse in a car fully loaded with liquor lol
I think the main reason Junior got out was the technology passed him by I imagine he didn’t have the engineering aspect like the bigger teams at the time. Junior was a great mind in finding power and having a bunch of creativity in his cars
@@fatpatlives1998 I hope RCR stays around for a long time I’ve always been a fan since I was an Earnhardt fan many years ago. I think there’s going to be a big owner change with big teams in the next few years.
@@fatpatlives1998it's easy to forget, because of the lean years they've had post Earnhardt and Harvick, but RCR is still one of the top teams in NASCAR. Performance-wise, that hasn't been the case before the last couple of years, but in terms of money and relationships with sponsors, they're on very solid ground. They're also well connected with GM, which helps.
Several reasons naturally. I had heard that Johnson made some bad business deals around the early 90’s and it simply caught up to him in the funds department. Sponsors were willing to stay with him but it simply wasn’t enough. Not only that, but what you said about “burning bridges”. Some of which wasn’t really his total fault like Lee Roy or Bobby Allison, but others were. Think of how many good drivers of that time drove for Junior: Lorenzen, Dieringer, Isaac, Allison, Bonnett, Waltrip, Cale Yarborough, Lee Roy Yarbrough, Labonte, Bodine, Elliott, Marlin: guys who all accomplished so much in the sport, most of whom are hall of fame drivers in their own right, and all did things to prove their case outside of driving for Junior. By 1995 Junior simply had burned too many bridges to recover, and really there was no one else to drive for him or be crew chief that was really anything realistically established, leaving him with Brett Bodine and goddamn Loy Allen. Junior Johnson was a genius. That’s undeniable. He just sometimes was too smart for his own good, and that isolated a lot of people.
Another example of Junior Johnson running his team with an iron fist would be the firing of long time crew chief and 53 time winner for the team, Tim Brewer. The firing of Brewer what broke the camels back in my opinion for the team.
Very good video Danny; keep these coming. As far as your question, I think there were several reasons. First, I think that Junior had lost his drive to dominate the sport. He said several times that he couldn’t be innovative anymore without NASCAR fining him $100k for nothing. The engineers and computers were replacing the old school crew chiefs. Two, after DW, he never had the hard charger driver like Cale, Leroy, or Bobby Allison. Terry, Geoff, and Bill were damn good drivers but they weren’t “hard nose drivers” that would take a 10th place car and win with it. They (including DW after 1984) were more calculated drivers who didn’t take a lot of chances (they still got results though) so I don’t think that they were good fits for Juniors mentality. Third, he didn’t expand his operation like Childress, Hendrick, Penske, etc; he was still operating out of his shop in his back yard. Those owners were building state of the art race shops and eventually brought engineering to the sport. The days of the shade tree mechanic having a race team were over in the early 90’s. Finally, I do think some of the stubbornness came back to bite him. When he and Tim Brewer disagreed over a pit call at Dover in 92, many thought that Elliott lost the title there because the team wasn’t the same after that. They had one final blow up at the Hooters 500 leading to Brewer getting fired. His race team was never the same after that from a performance standpoint. Throw those four reasons into the pot and stir it up, you’ll see why his organization eventually faltered leading him to sell out. I really hate that he had to exit the sport because he’s probably my all-time favorite innovator, owner, and NASCAR hero. But just like every other thing in life, All good things must eventually come to an end.
If junior played dirty as you mention, it just catches up with you. You can’t treat people poorly and get by with it forever. But what a record of runs he had with Cale and DW. Impressive!
DW said that in the mid 80's the powers that be wanted a well known popular driver to replace DW. Their choice was Bruce Jenner . They didn't care if he could win, they wanted star power . Jenner was a mouth back then too. I hated to hear him do televised track meets because he was obnoxious to listen to.
@@CraigGrant-sh3in That was when Darrell drove for DiGard. That was part of the saga of DW trying to get out of his DiGard contract to go drive for Junior.
Great video here. All this time that I have been a nascar fan, I never knew the story about how Junior "did dirty" to Alan for taking Maxwell House sponsorship away. It's quite unreal that happened. But in the end Alan did it his way and took that championship trophy from his rival ford team in that 'Underbird! I'm not sure if it's true but I also heard that Tim Brewer was fired during the race because of miscalculating the fuel milage at the final race at Atlanta in '92. You mentioned about the 'curse' of Alan that plagued Johnson's team afterwards... Well I'm not much of a skeptic but I can't get over what my dad did to Darrell Waltrip in '92. Small story: Davey Allison was my dad's favorite driver. D.A. was on the verge of winning the Winston Million at the Mountain Dew Southern 500 at Darlignton. However, mother nature and Darrell Waltrip had other plans and threw a wrench to the Havoline Team objective. During the rain delay D.W. was leading the race while Davey was in 5th. The event became a rain shortened race and then Nascar officially declared D.W. the winner. On that day my dad was so mad, he cursed out D.W. and said "May he never win another race again!" ...eventually that became true as 'ol D.W. never saw another cup win since that day!
Ned Jarrett : " Martha & I and Junior & Flossie used to vacation together - we had some good times - There's Junior - errrrrrrr that's not Fossie ! " That's what happened to the Junior Johnson Racing Team - Flossie took ole Junior to the cleaners - Those darn cameras !
I leave it alone, Jr did his thing & won a lot of races and championships as a driver and car owner. I would say overall his career was an overwhelming success, I wouldn't even call it a downfall I say he got out when the getting was good...
Except he did not get out when it was good. He got out after winning just one race in three years and being left with friggin Brett Bodine being the best driver he could attract. He got out because he'd fallen from an elite team to a backmarker.
I thought I remembered reading somewhere that DW wanted out of his contract and knew the best way to do that was to talk to Junior about a raise. So DW kinda snookered him into it
Great show Danny! I think that Junior didn't want to spend the money to stay competitive in Cup racing, leading to not keeping up with technology, leading to worse finishes, leading to less sponsorship (money buys speed). Vicious circle!
Maybe I missed something but you said Cale went to drive for Junior in 1974 and won four races which is incorrect. Cale went to drive for Junior in 1973 and won four races and in 1974 won 10 races. There are other contributing factors about Juniors team not doing well in the nineties except with Bill Elliott but Junior himself said NASCAR got so knit picky with his cars looking for things that wasn’t even there it was down right ridiculous so he got fed up with it and closed his operation down after 1995. If you talk to Cale Yarborough or Darrell Waltrip today they have nothing but high praises for Junior.
Wooohooo. Another Rise and Fall Story, Interesting to Learn about Junior Johnson and Associates. They were like racing for HMS, RCR, Penske, Roush, and SHR
And more to the irony to that Earmhardt and Darell story is that decades later Dale Earnhardt's son Dale Jr. Would have Budweiser as his main sponsor for the first 8 years in his cup career then when he moved to Hendrick Motorsports eventually Mountain Dew would be one of his primary sponsors
The reason Junior Johnson was successful was he was a master at the rule book. As the sport got bigger and the inspectors got tougher he couldn't get away with much anymore. Not to mention his switch to Ford I think hurt too
I really like the short stories you do the different drivers and different owners Junior had his good side and this bad side that would show up at times always appreciated him giving Elton Sawyer a chance to drive for him I grew up around Elton and his family now look at where he is at with NASCAR thanks again for a good story
Loved the fact that Junior was honest, blunt, and just a complete badass... but I have to admit, and I know that this may be a bit of a bold statement, but, I think Dale Sr. and the Darrell Waltrip rivalry, back in the eighties, was one of the most forgotten about rivalries that kind of gets swept underneath the rug...
I always imagine what it would have been like to work for Junior back in the day. That shop, his legacy and everything always seemed like it was kind of the last of what NASCAR used to be. It always seemed sort of "romantic" in that way I guess.
Junior Johnson getting rid of Tim Brewer was his downfall as well...man knew how to set up.cars for winning...Out of Brewers interview with Steve Waid...Brewer told him that Johnson said Brewer already had a race team even tho he didn't technically own one....Facts!!!
Wow I mean the only time I've heard of Leroy was from the 1969 Talladega scandal so it was a shock for me to hear that he wasn't related to Cale in anyway
LeeRoy Yarborough punched out Bill France before the inguaral Talladega race in 1969 after he called Bobby Allison a pussy because he and the other drivers refused to run the race due to safety concerns with the tires
I was expecting a brief mention on that weird 1991 period where the car number was changed to 97 or something. Had to do with getting caught running a larger engine. All a bit fuzzy in my memory.
The real problem was....Junior was doing business the way they did in the 70's and the 80's... If you've ever been by his shops..... Yes he worked hard and everybody there worked hard but they did not grow like everyone else....DEI made garage mahal and at the time it was unbelievably huge which now is average..... Juniors operation looked like what now would be from a local short track driver.. From the small shop to every time they would have a press conference his wife Flossie would fix breakfast for everybody.. Even if he had survived there is no way he could have dealt with all the crap that is in NASCAR today
Can we get a vid on DiGard racing? They were on top in the mid 80s and completely fell apart at the end of them. And then turned into whittington bros, another interesting story of its own
The Kulwicki Curse AKA firing Tim Brewer after he had Elliot pit in the final race in 1992 (allowing Kulwicki to get the bonus points for leading the most laps). In line with your closing statements, another relationship Johnson nixed that happened to be the final straw for his competitiveness.
I personally think the change in times and cars and also just technology in general. Mr Johnson was and old style racer that probably didn't conform to the times.
Hey guys. If there’s a weird glitch in this video in the middle, it’s because we were asked to remove a sponsored message from the original partner of this video.
I’m sure you know this, while other owners had their teams work together and share information, he actively pitted his against each other. I think had a lot to do with how things went.
True. So very true. DW said many times that Junior would go talk to Neil’s team and say “Durrel said he was going to whip y’all today” then he would do the same with DWs team. He also would call Darrel “Cale” over the radio during races to rile DW up.
Being a big fan Bill Elliott And watching multiple documentaries about him when he was racing for junior Johnson His crew chief in 93 and 94 They were trying to rebuild the team because junior Johnson was going through a very bitter divorce And I think that Ultimately led to the downfall of the organization
I think as time went on, Junior saw that is was becoming more of a business rather than a hobby. I think the rules got too tight, and he lost the will to innovate. And, maybe when considering expanding, that meant relocating, and it was probably way more expensive than he had the money for to invest.
I'd say his trailblazer attitude came back to bite him. Man invents drafting, bends every rule in half, and so on which works for a car...but a race team not so much
Hey, I’m just curious I love your takes on the sport of NASCAR I’m a big fan of your, but why did you not talk about hispardon that he got from the president in this video?
Bobby Allison quit because jr wouldn’t talk to him.he would only translate through the crew chief and never speak to Bobby directly.Bobby talks about it in his hof video. Jr also said Bobby was the greatest driver he ever had.well if he was so great why be a dink and make him quit. I like jr cause he’s a good ol boy but he was his worst enemy at times.
YOU are ABSOLUTELY correct. BOBBY ALLISON is a people person, and having to TRY TO COMMUNICATE with Junior through a 3rd party was not in tune with his face to face communication nature. Junior WOULDN'T ---- BOBBY LEFT him.
I'm surprised you didn't even mention that Junior Johnson was the man that convinced Winston to sponsor the entire series. Without that sponsorship nascar may not exist today.
Lots of things. Relationships gone sour between Junior in 1986 and DW and Tim Brewer after 1992. A bad business deal between Junior and Warner Hodgdon. In 1991 the team was suspended for an oversized motor for a few races. His split from Flossie. And I guess a vengeful attitude towards those who said no. And not keeping up with the times.
I am not going to lie, but I know very little before 1993, but from what I have learned from you and a couple other NASCAR channels. So with that from what I have gathered from you is Johnson failed by not knowing how to compromise with others. He should have learned how to bend a little when he was going through drivers like the Cleveland Browns go through QB's not going to find a lot of success with that veteran QB around.
Other sports realize long ago not to allow a few with money to outspend other teams. NASCAR did not take the same road. Salary caps or spending caps could have saved the smaller operations like Juniors, Pettys, Wood Brothers etc. With Hendricks, Penske etc they have unlimited money to buy speed. Unlimited money for technology. It's simple a 4 million dollar team can not complete with a 18 million dollar team. NASCAR just look at open wheel IRL.
I don't think Jr could keep up with the technology advances that were being made. I can see him viewing tec as a sort of junk science; Computers, etc. The sport passed him by. No shame. He is still a legend. I hate to know about the sponsorship stealing with AK. Still love the guy though.
Junior failed to keep up with the technology. I remember stopping by his shops back in the early 90's and you could just tell they were going down hill.
I think he should have paid Darrell more money based on his past results. After he left not much more happened w/ JR's team but Waltrip went on to win Daytona shortly afterward .
Junior's team finished in the top three in points two more times, DW never did. They finished top four four times, DW did it once. So you might want to rethink this.
“Boy, if you can’t win in this car you need to be bagging groceries or something.” Junior had some of the best quotes.
Ha don't make them like that anymore
Ha! Said in reference to the car that Spencer won his two and only cup victories in.
Thanks 👍
Another example of Junior Johnson running his team with an iron fist would be the immediate firing of long time crew chief and 53 time winner for the team, Tim Brewer. The firing of Brewer right after the 1992 Hooters 500 is what broke the camels back in my opinion for the team.
Also Alan’s tragic end near Bristol the next April somewhat left Junior cursed during his last few seasons given the way he reacted when Alan said he wanted 2 do things his way,thus stealing Maxwell House from right under AKR’s rug!!!!
This was the decision that spelled the end of Junior Johnson. Unforgivable. Elliott knew then he was gone after 1994
Tim's firing had everything to do with his testifying against Junior during his divorce case, from his wife of many decade's, Flossy Johnson & not anything to do with on-track racing. A Man like Junior Johnson lives by the code of the feud, as far as Junior was concerned, Bling-Bling Brewer betrayed him 🤷🏻♂️
@@Slinger43 right. And he ruined his team
@@scjacket611 Actually no, Junior walked away & belly'd up his race team, because of NASCAR's tightening up the rule book. Like I said in my previous comment, Junior lived by the code of the feud & as far as he was concerned, after all he had done for NASCAR in the past, they're fine'n him $100K for what they deemed an illegal carburetor, was an outright betrayal, so having many different interest's in his already got it made life, he simply quit the sport & walked away 🤷🏻♂️
I worked on Junior’s house near North Wilkesboro several times and he was truly a man of few words. I had to climb into the crawl space of his house and was amazed to see a stash of NASCAR trophies there!
I spent a lot of time in that house as a kid. Flossie would babysit my two older brothers and I.
Firing of Brewer was the end. Tim Brewer just got it done with a lot of drivers. He was a winner.
Another fact about LeeRoy Yarbrough's win in the Daytona 500 it was the very first Daytona 500 to be won with a last lap pass.
LeeRoy was a badass , fearless
Another factor in the downfall of his race teams was the divorce from his long-time wife Flossie in 1992. While he was able to keep the race teams in the divorce settlement I believe the repercussions from the divorce contributed to the downfall. He married his trophy wife about the time the race teams were sold and he had other things on his mind including having children.
Can't wrap my head around it sure I can find the lure of wanting to hit a young girl but hit it and quit it at the end of the day what are you going to talk about the latest pop star and the constant self evaluation of knowing how does this girl find me attractive sure money can be attractive but that's a hollow kinda relationship there's an old saying there's no fool like a old fool especially chasing children around at what's supposed to be your golden years and time for relaxation and leisure but this is all conjecture don't know the man personally so maybe he's getting what he deserves
Very good point about the divorce. Both the 11 and 12 teams originally had different owners and had different but feet apart locations. Junior had to purchace out of bankruptcy the 12 team then the divorce came later.
Very interesting reading form my subscription of "Grand National Scene"
I was just about to say that. Also, not noted was that both Junior and Brewer were suspended at one point in 1990. And I mean an actual suspension; the 11 car itself couldn't run. So, Junior had to transfer his team to Flossie, which showed up with a different number (I think 97) for a few races.
@@bluorangefyre It was actually in 1991. They got caught running a illegal engine in The Winston, at the same time Geoff Bodine was out with a injury as well.
Totally forgot about the incident in 1990 and yes I do think it was the 97 number that they ran.
It's also interesting that Dale Earnhardt's first championship came over Cale Yarborough who drove for Junior Johnson.
I'm glad someone finally said something other than junior was a sort of saint. He was a nasty ignorant piece of work and it shouldn't be overshadowed or forgotten no matter how much he accomplished. Great video though
Nasty I will give you, but he was not ignorant. He was an extremely smart man.
He might not have had any formidable education but he was extremely smart. He’s the won that got Chevrolet back in racing and the won that got Winston to sponsor NASCAR. He had that mystery engine nobody could figure out. Terry Labonte said when he drove for him it was amazing what that man knows about a race car. Plus I didn’t know this until recently he got Dale Earnhardt his ride with Bud Moore and then Richard Childress and also helped Bill Elliott with his ride in the No.9 car.
Nasty I’ll give you him and Bill Elliott got to fooling around with those Budweiser girls and cost them both their marriages.
Tim Brewer said Junior called him from Atlanta with Tim up in Charlotte and said Tim I want you fly down here and get us and Brewer said no Junior I’m not gonna fly down there a pick you and that slut up.
Brewer was very loyal to Miss Flossie I believe.
I met Junior a few years back and he signed a bottle of shine for me. #Legend
I remember that 🏎️
DW fired by Junior? Well, according to DW (while being interviewed by Dale Jr.) he was offered a contract from Rick Hendrick. DW approached Junior with this information at which time Junior stated to DW, "You need to go and take that deal." The "conversation" ended without Junior even attempting to make DW a counter offer. The barn door opened, and Darrell walked.....
I've been anticipating this one ever since you've started this series! Woo
Actually, I had heard several times before that Junior was unhappy with the direction the sport was going in. The late 80s and early 90s was a big transitional period for the sport. More and more the sport was popularized advertised and commercialized. More and more fans were being attracted to the sport and more and more businesses were pouring more money into the sport. Junior was an old school owner and really did not keep up with the times the way most teams of that era did. Junior in his hay day had creative innovations incorporated into his cars and the new commercialized nascar with more inspectors were catching juniors innovations and kept his cars from being as competitive as they once were. Some people that don’t know him well saw his as a cantankerous old b@stard but to me he was the true embodiment of a nascar legend that I am proud to say that I was able to meet in person and by the way about 1/4 of the current nascar rule book is directly or indirectly attributed to Mr. Johnson and his creative innovations.
And let's not forget he was a chicken farmer first and foremost
I especially liked the story of the intake manifold that could pass inspection, and when the engine was up to speed, the floor dropped out and the engine flowed way more than allowed lol lol Also his moonshine story of giving the Wilkes county Sheriff a ride to the courthouse in a car fully loaded with liquor lol
I think the main reason Junior got out was the technology passed him by I imagine he didn’t have the engineering aspect like the bigger teams at the time. Junior was a great mind in finding power and having a bunch of creativity in his cars
He saw the HMS, Roush, Gibbs organizations on the rise. That's too much money to compete with. I'm surprised RCR is still hanging in there currently!
@@fatpatlives1998 I hope RCR stays around for a long time I’ve always been a fan since I was an Earnhardt fan many years ago. I think there’s going to be a big owner change with big teams in the next few years.
Thanks 🙏
@@fatpatlives1998it's easy to forget, because of the lean years they've had post Earnhardt and Harvick, but RCR is still one of the top teams in NASCAR. Performance-wise, that hasn't been the case before the last couple of years, but in terms of money and relationships with sponsors, they're on very solid ground. They're also well connected with GM, which helps.
Several reasons naturally.
I had heard that Johnson made some bad business deals around the early 90’s and it simply caught up to him in the funds department. Sponsors were willing to stay with him but it simply wasn’t enough.
Not only that, but what you said about “burning bridges”. Some of which wasn’t really his total fault like Lee Roy or Bobby Allison, but others were. Think of how many good drivers of that time drove for Junior: Lorenzen, Dieringer, Isaac, Allison, Bonnett, Waltrip, Cale Yarborough, Lee Roy Yarbrough, Labonte, Bodine, Elliott, Marlin: guys who all accomplished so much in the sport, most of whom are hall of fame drivers in their own right, and all did things to prove their case outside of driving for Junior.
By 1995 Junior simply had burned too many bridges to recover, and really there was no one else to drive for him or be crew chief that was really anything realistically established, leaving him with Brett Bodine and goddamn Loy Allen.
Junior Johnson was a genius. That’s undeniable. He just sometimes was too smart for his own good, and that isolated a lot of people.
Another example of Junior Johnson running his team with an iron fist would be the firing of long time crew chief and 53 time winner for the team, Tim Brewer. The firing of Brewer what broke the camels back in my opinion for the team.
Very good video Danny; keep these coming. As far as your question, I think there were several reasons. First, I think that Junior had lost his drive to dominate the sport. He said several times that he couldn’t be innovative anymore without NASCAR fining him $100k for nothing. The engineers and computers were replacing the old school crew chiefs. Two, after DW, he never had the hard charger driver like Cale, Leroy, or Bobby Allison. Terry, Geoff, and Bill were damn good drivers but they weren’t “hard nose drivers” that would take a 10th place car and win with it. They (including DW after 1984) were more calculated drivers who didn’t take a lot of chances (they still got results though) so I don’t think that they were good fits for Juniors mentality. Third, he didn’t expand his operation like Childress, Hendrick, Penske, etc; he was still operating out of his shop in his back yard. Those owners were building state of the art race shops and eventually brought engineering to the sport. The days of the shade tree mechanic having a race team were over in the early 90’s. Finally, I do think some of the stubbornness came back to bite him. When he and Tim Brewer disagreed over a pit call at Dover in 92, many thought that Elliott lost the title there because the team wasn’t the same after that. They had one final blow up at the Hooters 500 leading to Brewer getting fired. His race team was never the same after that from a performance standpoint. Throw those four reasons into the pot and stir it up, you’ll see why his organization eventually faltered leading him to sell out. I really hate that he had to exit the sport because he’s probably my all-time favorite innovator, owner, and NASCAR hero. But just like every other thing in life, All good things must eventually come to an end.
If junior played dirty as you mention, it just catches up with you. You can’t treat people poorly and get by with it forever. But what a record of runs he had with Cale and DW. Impressive!
DW said that in the mid 80's the powers that be wanted a well known popular driver to replace DW. Their choice was Bruce Jenner . They didn't care if he could win, they wanted star power . Jenner was a mouth back then too. I hated to hear him do televised track meets because he was obnoxious to listen to.
@@CraigGrant-sh3in That was when Darrell drove for DiGard. That was part of the saga of DW trying to get out of his DiGard contract to go drive for Junior.
Great video here.
All this time that I have been a nascar fan, I never knew the story about how Junior "did dirty" to Alan for taking Maxwell House sponsorship away. It's quite unreal that happened. But in the end Alan did it his way and took that championship trophy from his rival ford team in that 'Underbird!
I'm not sure if it's true but I also heard that Tim Brewer was fired during the race because of miscalculating the fuel milage at the final race at Atlanta in '92.
You mentioned about the 'curse' of Alan that plagued Johnson's team afterwards...
Well I'm not much of a skeptic but I can't get over what my dad did to Darrell Waltrip in '92.
Small story: Davey Allison was my dad's favorite driver. D.A. was on the verge of winning the Winston Million at the Mountain Dew Southern 500 at Darlignton. However, mother nature and Darrell Waltrip had other plans and threw a wrench to the Havoline Team objective. During the rain delay D.W. was leading the race while Davey was in 5th. The event became a rain shortened race and then Nascar officially declared D.W. the winner. On that day my dad was so mad, he cursed out D.W. and said "May he never win another race again!"
...eventually that became true as 'ol D.W. never saw another cup win since that day!
Ned Jarrett : " Martha & I and Junior & Flossie used to vacation together - we had some good times - There's Junior - errrrrrrr that's not Fossie ! "
That's what happened to the Junior Johnson Racing Team - Flossie took ole Junior to the cleaners -
Those darn cameras !
Please do The Rise and Fall of Petty Enterprises
I wouldn't call the stuff you can legally buy now moonshine....Junior would say the same!
(Rise and Fall of Turner Scott Motorsports)
Aka the team that screwed Reed Sorenson out of a championship and a chance of reviving his career
Well never know
One is dead and the other won't talk
Bill Davis has said that when he bought the 22, it was still a Junior Johnson car. All the equipment and sponsorship was still signed with Junior
I thought I heard Maxwell Coffee House wrong but it happened twice. Love it! 😂
I leave it alone, Jr did his thing & won a lot of races and championships as a driver and car owner. I would say overall his career was an overwhelming success, I wouldn't even call it a downfall I say he got out when the getting was good...
Except he did not get out when it was good. He got out after winning just one race in three years and being left with friggin Brett Bodine being the best driver he could attract. He got out because he'd fallen from an elite team to a backmarker.
There he is, Danny B!!!! I was just talkin about you the udder day
Rise and Fall of Brad Keselowski Racing in honor of Brad now being a co-owner of Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing.
Easily the best rise and fall video you have made
I thought I remembered reading somewhere that DW wanted out of his contract and knew the best way to do that was to talk to Junior about a raise. So DW kinda snookered him into it
I didn’t read that. But if it’s true, DW was playing 5D chess.
I think he said something like that in the dale jr. Download
I find it hard to believe that DW was that smart
@@insulman100 well he can say that 40 years later whether it's true or not
@@chuckiefinster544 It's probably true just reminded of the fun my friends and I had trash talking at work on Monday mornings
Great show Danny! I think that Junior didn't want to spend the money to stay competitive in Cup racing, leading to not keeping up with technology, leading to worse finishes, leading to less sponsorship (money buys speed). Vicious circle!
Maybe I missed something but you said Cale went to drive for Junior in 1974 and won four races which is incorrect. Cale went to drive for Junior in 1973 and won four races and in 1974 won 10 races. There are other contributing factors about Juniors team not doing well in the nineties except with Bill Elliott but Junior himself said NASCAR got so knit picky with his cars looking for things that wasn’t even there it was down right ridiculous so he got fed up with it and closed his operation down after 1995.
If you talk to Cale Yarborough or Darrell Waltrip today they have nothing but high praises for Junior.
You hit the nail on the head Danny!!
Wooohooo. Another Rise and Fall Story, Interesting to Learn about Junior Johnson and Associates. They were like racing for HMS, RCR, Penske, Roush, and SHR
And more to the irony to that Earmhardt and Darell story is that decades later Dale Earnhardt's son Dale Jr. Would have Budweiser as his main sponsor for the first 8 years in his cup career then when he moved to Hendrick Motorsports eventually Mountain Dew would be one of his primary sponsors
The reason Junior Johnson was successful was he was a master at the rule book. As the sport got bigger and the inspectors got tougher he couldn't get away with much anymore. Not to mention his switch to Ford I think hurt too
You must have missed 92
I really like the short stories you do the different drivers and different owners Junior had his good side and this bad side that would show up at times always appreciated him giving Elton Sawyer a chance to drive for him I grew up around Elton and his family now look at where he is at with NASCAR thanks again for a good story
Thank you Danny for uploading this video
Great video enjoyed it very much, Thank You.
Been waiting for this one. Can you try the rise and fall of Petty Enterprises/Evernham Motorsports?
PE been dead since the 80s....Ray simply didn't have enough money long term to hang around and his off the track endeavors with crocker
Loved the fact that Junior was honest, blunt, and just a complete badass... but I have to admit, and I know that this may be a bit of a bold statement, but, I think Dale Sr. and the Darrell Waltrip rivalry, back in the eighties, was one of the most forgotten about rivalries that kind of gets swept underneath the rug...
I always imagine what it would have been like to work for Junior back in the day. That shop, his legacy and everything always seemed like it was kind of the last of what NASCAR used to be. It always seemed sort of "romantic" in that way I guess.
Thanks For Uploading ☺😎
Quality work Danny. Loving this series. I always love to learn more about the race teams, especially those not around anymore.
I've been waiting for this one for a while.
Looking forward to your LeRoy Yarbrough docu. Great vid here!
Awesome video man
Fun face for y'all didn't know is that Cale Yarborough & Lee Roy Yarbrough may sound the same but spelling is different by one letter.
Junior Johnson getting rid of Tim Brewer was his downfall as well...man knew how to set up.cars for winning...Out of Brewers interview with Steve Waid...Brewer told him that Johnson said Brewer already had a race team even tho he didn't technically own one....Facts!!!
When Junior sold the team he told his employees, "If we could have kept Bobby Allison, we would have won 200 races & Richard Petty wouldn't have."
Thats about a true statement as i ever heard hell no telling how many championships they would have won with the man bobby allison
Great video!
Wow I mean the only time I've heard of Leroy was from the 1969 Talladega scandal so it was a shock for me to hear that he wasn't related to Cale in anyway
@@davidh1249 Ya I just read both there names but the pronunciations are almost identical
Since you did a rise and fall on Nashville Superspeedway, can you do one on Ontario Motor Speedway, North Wilkesboro, Rockingham, and Nazareth?
His old shop is an antique store now.
It is?
@@jabber1990 Before Covid. I haven’t driven past in a couple of years.
Love the video Danny!
LeeRoy Yarborough punched out Bill France before the inguaral Talladega race in 1969 after he called Bobby Allison a pussy because he and the other drivers refused to run the race due to safety concerns with the tires
I was expecting a brief mention on that weird 1991 period where the car number was changed to 97 or something. Had to do with getting caught running a larger engine. All a bit fuzzy in my memory.
Love these videos man. You do an excellent job!!
Thanks Mark.
The real problem was....Junior was doing business the way they did in the 70's and the 80's...
If you've ever been by his shops..... Yes he worked hard and everybody there worked hard but they did not grow like everyone else....DEI made garage mahal and at the time it was unbelievably huge which now is average..... Juniors operation looked like what now would be from a local short track driver..
From the small shop to every time they would have a press conference his wife Flossie would fix breakfast for everybody..
Even if he had survived there is no way he could have dealt with all the crap that is in NASCAR today
Richard Howard may have been listed as the owner, but it was Jr. Johnson’s team.
Hard to quit smoking in times like these but maybe one day. High School late 90's it was still 2 dollars pack. Stress the big reason
Looking forward to your video on Lee Roy Yarborough
Can we get a vid on DiGard racing? They were on top in the mid 80s and completely fell apart at the end of them. And then turned into whittington bros, another interesting story of its own
I like your video but dw said in a resent interview he was offered more money with Rick and he told Jr and he said boy you better take that deal
The Kulwicki Curse AKA firing Tim Brewer after he had Elliot pit in the final race in 1992 (allowing Kulwicki to get the bonus points for leading the most laps). In line with your closing statements, another relationship Johnson nixed that happened to be the final straw for his competitiveness.
I personally think the change in times and cars and also just technology in general. Mr Johnson was and old style racer that probably didn't conform to the times.
Danny this is a video no one saw coming but we needed
About time
Hey guys.
If there’s a weird glitch in this video in the middle, it’s because we were asked to remove a sponsored message from the original partner of this video.
Can you re-upload this video?
I’m sure you know this, while other owners had their teams work together and share information, he actively pitted his against each other. I think had a lot to do with how things went.
True. So very true. DW said many times that Junior would go talk to Neil’s team and say “Durrel said he was going to whip y’all today” then he would do the same with DWs team. He also would call Darrel “Cale” over the radio during races to rile DW up.
Being a big fan Bill Elliott And watching multiple documentaries about him when he was racing for junior Johnson His crew chief in 93 and 94 They were trying to rebuild the team because junior Johnson was going through a very bitter divorce And I think that Ultimately led to the downfall of the organization
I think as time went on, Junior saw that is was becoming more of a business rather than a hobby. I think the rules got too tight, and he lost the will to innovate. And, maybe when considering expanding, that meant relocating, and it was probably way more expensive than he had the money for to invest.
My wife’s grandpa use to haul moonshine with Junior. He remembers the day he got arrested and it changed all of his buddies lives forever.
I'd say his trailblazer attitude came back to bite him. Man invents drafting, bends every rule in half, and so on which works for a car...but a race team not so much
Cale YarBOROugh and Leroy YarBROUGH aren't even close to being related. Still a good video and well presented overall.
I said they’re not related. But if you just hear the names, some may not know that.
Hey, I’m just curious I love your takes on the sport of NASCAR I’m a big fan of your, but why did you not talk about hispardon that he got from the president in this video?
I love Junior Johnson 😀
OK but didnt darrell has gone on the record saying he asked for a raise knowing he had agreed not too to get out of his contract?
Bobby Allison quit because jr wouldn’t talk to him.he would only translate through the crew chief and never speak to Bobby directly.Bobby talks about it in his hof video. Jr also said Bobby was the greatest driver he ever had.well if he was so great why be a dink and make him quit. I like jr cause he’s a good ol boy but he was his worst enemy at times.
YOU are ABSOLUTELY correct. BOBBY ALLISON is a people person, and having to TRY TO COMMUNICATE with Junior through a 3rd party was not in tune with his face to face communication nature. Junior WOULDN'T ---- BOBBY LEFT him.
You should do the Rise and Fall of Petty Enterprises
wow the irony..........in 92 finale which car on track led 1 lap to stop bill picking up the extra bonus points..................terry labonte !!!!
That was not an accident
@@scjacket611 what do u mean ??
@@Strangegloves Labonte wanted to spite Junior
That shit ain’t real moonshine 😂
18:17 what car is this? It appears to be at the Oxford 250.
I'm surprised you didn't even mention that Junior Johnson was the man that convinced Winston to sponsor the entire series. Without that sponsorship nascar may not exist today.
I think Brett drives the pace car in cup series
He does.
Make a rise and fall of Petty Enterprises
Lots of things. Relationships gone sour between Junior in 1986 and DW and Tim Brewer after 1992. A bad business deal between Junior and Warner Hodgdon. In 1991 the team was suspended for an oversized motor for a few races. His split from Flossie. And I guess a vengeful attitude towards those who said no. And not keeping up with the times.
I am not going to lie, but I know very little before 1993, but from what I have learned from you and a couple other NASCAR channels. So with that from what I have gathered from you is Johnson failed by not knowing how to compromise with others. He should have learned how to bend a little when he was going through drivers like the Cleveland Browns go through QB's not going to find a lot of success with that veteran QB around.
Other sports realize long ago not to allow a few with money to outspend other teams. NASCAR did not take the same road. Salary caps or spending caps could have saved the smaller operations like Juniors, Pettys, Wood Brothers etc. With Hendricks, Penske etc they have unlimited money to buy speed. Unlimited money for technology. It's simple a 4 million dollar team can not complete with a 18 million dollar team. NASCAR just look at open wheel IRL.
Two words , Brett Bodine
You should do TRG Motorsports
Hope to see an April Fools video next!
I don’t think infamous is the right word to describe Junior, maybe Colorful, or Brilliant, or “Creative”.
This video was "Udderly" delightful no udder video id recommend..................I'm sorry I couldn't help it
The American hero.🌟
If it's legal it ain't moonshine 🤷♂️ ain't nothing but bonded corn liquor 😁
Everyone wants to piss on Tim Brewer. I suggest you go watch the scene vault with About Tim Brewer
Do JTG Daugherty Racing
They’re still in business though, so…
I don't think Jr could keep up with the technology advances that were being made. I can see him viewing tec as a sort of junk science; Computers, etc. The sport passed him by. No shame. He is still a legend. I hate to know about the sponsorship stealing with AK. Still love the guy though.
Junior failed to keep up with the technology. I remember stopping by his shops back in the early 90's and you could just tell they were going down hill.
I think he should have paid Darrell more money based on his past results. After he left not much more happened w/ JR's team but Waltrip went on to win Daytona shortly afterward .
Junior's team finished in the top three in points two more times, DW never did. They finished top four four times, DW did it once.
So you might want to rethink this.
@@scjacket611 OK, but if DW stayed there is a good chance some of them were championships.
@@donnarolando3961 No there wasn't. Waltrip was at the sunset of his career and past his prime.