The way you talked about President Reagan pardoning Junior makes no sense whatsoever. It implied that he was pardoned and released at the same time when the events took place 30 years apart.
@the_Real_Grammy_of_69 ай бұрын
I thought the same thing
@waynelowe16829 ай бұрын
I was literally just about to comment this... Reagan wasn't even president for another 20+years.
@juhansuits65559 ай бұрын
Well - the mid-fifties was the time when certain Reagan era time travellers were known hanging around with their DeLorean. It seems we haven't been told the whole story.
@BlacktoothRacing9 ай бұрын
@@juhansuits6555😂😂😂
@gchampi29 ай бұрын
@@juhansuits6555 Nicely put...🤣🤣🤣
@GregBrownsWorldORacing9 ай бұрын
I went to Martinsville, it was pre-race and Junior Johnson happened to stroll by.The man got a standing ovation just for walking by, down in chicken bone alley. No announcement was made saying who he was or his accomplishments. The fans just knew. I struggle to think who else would get a reaction like that.
@gregorygolden12969 ай бұрын
First of all Junior wasn't a cheater. Was a innovator. Second, Junior did way more for NASCAR than it did for him. Think Winston. He went to them for sponsorship and long story short, got them to sponsor the whole series for starters. He was a Incredibly smart. He helped make the cars safer. And faster.
@borismcfinnigan34309 ай бұрын
You aren't the only person that loves Junior Johnson...But yeah it was cheating.
@Houndini9 ай бұрын
Totally correct. Jr. Johnson used their own rule book to his own advantage just like Smoky did. They were owners &/ or drivers That Big Bill France couldn’t control or threaten. And that is why both of them told France they just pull their equipment out & quit selling tickets for his own pockets. Today’s Nascrap is not even worth watching.
@rkr73729 ай бұрын
The last of that timeframe was Harry Hyde.
@rkr73729 ай бұрын
Thank you, you can’t consider it cheating if NASCAR turned a blind eye to it, I’m sixty years old and miss the old NASCAR.
@CarolinaKid939 ай бұрын
Another contribution from Junior, with thanks to Budweiser pouring more money in for two cars and retaining DW, that set up the success for Childress/Earnhardt and Melling/Coors/Elliott and most likely their careers being more successful than if another path was taken.
@normanreyome82379 ай бұрын
Love this man.... There is a story about Junior being quizzed by an owner if he was going to drive/race in the upcoming season over breakfast. JJ replied that he wanted to be involved, but not committed. The owner asked him what the hell does that mean? Junior looked at his plate of bacon and eggs and said " You see this food here?... The chicken was involved, ... but the pig was committed....." AWESOME
@israelmathes62688 ай бұрын
He was talking to Bill France Sr.
@whicker593 ай бұрын
U just can't do nuttin to those mountain boys. 😅
@SuperNASCARrocks9 ай бұрын
Junior was one of those drivers who always found a gray area to work around. He was always known as that type of driver.
@michaelhill78789 ай бұрын
You call it cheating Junior called it innovating.
@douglinn15839 ай бұрын
Can you imagine a car built by Junior Johnson and Smokey Yunick?
@DTittle9 ай бұрын
And put Cale Yarborough,Dale Earnhardt or David Pearson in it.
@SandraHansen-v6v8 ай бұрын
Junior and Smokey must be rolling in their graves over the spec car that the weenies are driving now.
@danielfoster36428 ай бұрын
That could have been amazing to see.
@douglasmodelgaragesvideo2 ай бұрын
Would that car track legal ?
@Todd-w7i8 ай бұрын
He was a Goodwood with his stock car. He was on slicks and it started raining during his run. After, in the press tent, a reporter asked him how his car handled in the rain. His reply was priceless "It don't"
@sammylacks49378 ай бұрын
IMO there's not another single person that did more to help NASCAR , the drivers and was an innovator in the progress of the cars than Junior. All the while under the guise of a down home country person. He was one of the smartest people and at least for awhile couldn't even write his name. Nothing but respect here. Thanks Jr. RIP our friend.
@Widnu7 ай бұрын
Funny thing, I saw an interview with David Pearson, they were asking him if he was upset that he wasn't in the inaugural class of the Nascar "HOF" - He was upset alright but not about being excluded. He was upset that Junior Johnson wasn't, in the inaugural class, from David's perspective he explained that Junior got Winston cup sponsorship etc; Called him the most important figure in Nascar. Just wanted to share.🏆
@the_Real_Grammy_of_69 ай бұрын
It seems to me that the biggest cheater in this story is NASCAR. Actually NASCAR has always been the biggest cheater…looking the other way when it suits them
@mikecross43509 ай бұрын
GM bought nascar over and over when they needed to catch up
@paulmryglod48022 ай бұрын
"Don't mess up my show."- B. FRANCE
@rkr73729 ай бұрын
You left out the fact Junior was the first competitor to bring a air compressor to the track, he also modified a Jack so you only had pump it three times to get the car high enough to change a tire. I appreciate the video.
@ryanstuckey86779 ай бұрын
it was Leonard wood who modified the jack not jr
@blucheer87438 ай бұрын
Jr was one of the rare characters that combine great talent for what he was doing with complete fearlessness! One of the most confident men to ever walk the earth!
@danielfoster36429 ай бұрын
Junior Johnson was a character who did things his way, both as a driver and as an owner.
@Johnnycdrums8 ай бұрын
J.J. was straight up badass, like from an ancient race.
@MorganOtt-ne1qj9 ай бұрын
Jr. Johnson was a driver, engineer, crew chief, and owner at the same time. Not a pretty boy that turns a steering wheel, but a DRIVER, that knew what he could do behind the wheel. So maybe he ran a little 'shine in his early days...😮👍👍
@HMods19919 ай бұрын
Yeah, the Reagan part was worded poorly. You should’ve said which then he was later pardoned by Reagan in 1986.
@JeffIbach9 ай бұрын
Washington 500 1991 Junior Johnson brought the Budweiser car and failed tech twice. The next day during pre race interview the driver of this car said “yea we had the Bud Light car here yesterday” 😂
@phoenixkazmerik4819 ай бұрын
Great video man. Although at 6:52 you say Waltrip won twelve races and the championship in back to back seasons of 1980 and 81. Dale won in 1980, Darrell was 81 and 82.
@wsbill142249 ай бұрын
The colorful characters and the never-ending arms race of "cheating" is what made NASCAR fun to watch. It's a joke now. No credibility left. I miss the old guys and the old cars. They were fun. I don't think fun is legal anymore.
@KarenSimon-se3ez9 ай бұрын
Johnson was an incredible driver and very very smart! He was good at every thing he tried!
@bradbarley66399 ай бұрын
The most notorious and creative one was Smokey Yunick by far.
@RobertDetert9 ай бұрын
Yep. No doubt.
@mikedurhan99419 ай бұрын
Yeah, but Smokey pushed it too far and became a pain in the arse to NASCAR. Junior did not; he was smarter than that...........
@danielfoster36428 ай бұрын
Absolutely.
@burnout90698 ай бұрын
@@mikedurhan9941 The way I always read into it, was. NASCAR expected him to be cheating the moment he showed up, and would ride his ass to no end. But like jj. He was just being creative with the rulebook. Im sure there was more politics in the back ground that has been missed in that part of history.
@mikedurhan99418 ай бұрын
@@burnout9069 Whatever you wish to think.......... In Smokey's day, it was still the era where you began with a stock car. You could "race prep" it, and what you could change is what the rules specified. Smokey took the opposite approach, to wit: "If the rules don't say you can't, then you can". That was not the spirit of the sport in that day. His focus was on racing in 1958; by 1968 it was souly on cheating. Smokey became impressed with himself as being good at it (cheating). What he really became was a pain in the neck to NASCAR. He went way too far. He wasted their time - they wanted him gone...........
@RealisticFisHed9 ай бұрын
I always thought it was really cool that he also got a voice cameo in Cars 3
@vr6swp9 ай бұрын
Johnson was often quoted as saying the fastest car he ever drove was a moonshine hauler, not a NASCAR stocker
@Motorsport-club9 ай бұрын
Stock car
@jok3r9069 ай бұрын
Their are three areas in life... Green, red, and gray. Junior loved the gray area, and found ways around the rules
@BloodRaven19699 ай бұрын
With the exception of 2 cars that NASCAR made it clear they'd let slide through it wasn't so much ways arounf the rules as rules NASCAR had no idea they wanted to have until Jr showed them they did. Same goes for Smokey Yunic
@kevinbarrett96158 ай бұрын
Immortalized by Springsteen in the song Cadillac Ranch , and in the movie Last American Hero.
@michaelhutto25218 ай бұрын
smoky yunick was the worst documented cheater,he was doing stuff that they had to create new rules on-lol,to get extra fuel in his car,they had regulations on gas tanks,but no rules on fuel lines,he used to snake fuel lines all over the car to get extra fuel in-lol
@JC-gw3yo8 ай бұрын
JJ was certainly a major presence in NASCAR.. We need more characters like him
@plantfeeder66778 ай бұрын
He's up there with the best. I always looked at cheating as creative interpretations of the rulebook of which the creativity part I wasn't blessed with. So let your driving do the talking. The desire to win is in all of us some will go to great lengths to make sure that happens.
@williambowen17719 ай бұрын
Junior never cheated. He innovated. I'm sure he helped rewrite the nascar rulebook though. Can't cheat if it's not in the book
@FormerFBISpecialAgent8 ай бұрын
Very interesting history! On the Ronald Regan pardon, Regan DID indeed pardon Junior Johnson, but in 1985. That effectively cleared his record, allowed him to vote, and allowed him to participate in the community without being restricted by a felony. The VAST majority of presidential pardons are AFTER a person has served their time and have proven they are a valuable member of the community. I used to work on these behind the scenes and do background checks and interviews to give the President the full picture of who is requesting a pardon.
@marks86039 ай бұрын
It's not a crime the first time.... Junior was a GENIUS at bending the rules..
@lookingthroughice78439 ай бұрын
Jr Johnson is a legend. One of the best drivers ever on track or on the road.
@danielfoster36428 ай бұрын
He certainly was.
@paulday57229 ай бұрын
I still enjoy NASCAR but I miss the days when true innovation and finding slick ways around the rule book were an integral part of the sport. Crew Chiefs were admired for their ingenuity and having the guts to try getting away with it. Nowadays, officials and fans act like you are an axe murderer if you put a piece of tape in the wrong spot.
@albertcoburn56749 ай бұрын
"It ain't cheatin if its a technical advantage."
@abcullens23288 ай бұрын
The rear exhaust helped Junior Johnson's car in this way, if another driver tried to draft behind the Junior Johnson car it would cause the car behind to overheat from the hot exhaust. Also the driver in the car behind him would be inhaling the exhaust fumes. This prevented drafting. And Reagan was making cowboy movies in the 50s. Thanks for the video I enjoyed it.
@Johnnycdrums8 ай бұрын
MC at the Apollo Theatre, NYC.
@pughoneycutt19869 ай бұрын
And never discount the love part of that last quote, because that car is not just your income it is your freedom
@watajob8 ай бұрын
Junior was VERY good at... interpreting the NASCAR rule book. However, I think Smokey Yunick was just a bit better.
@mikechurch23599 ай бұрын
Junior was something special he help make it what it was / is there would be no Winston cup if no for junior
@royhoco57488 ай бұрын
not a mention of how Jr. brought Winston into racing as a major sponsor
@smokeymchaggis739 ай бұрын
I think Richard Petty and Jeff Gordon would have something to say about the only driver & owner worthy HoF careers.
@israelmathes62689 ай бұрын
During Richards time Lee owned Petty Enterprises. In the 80s when Richard took ownership he didn't fair so well.
@smokeymchaggis739 ай бұрын
@@israelmathes6268 so what? He's Richard Petty. His contribution to the sport as an owner is worthy of the HoF even if Petty Enterprise never won a race
@israelmathes62689 ай бұрын
@@smokeymchaggis73I agree. He is a HOF owner as well. I was just stating that as an Owner Junior Johnson had more success. If Adam would have lived I think Petty would have had more Championships then Hendrick Motorsports. I meant no disrespect to the King. I love Petty's especially Maurice.
@michaelhill78789 ай бұрын
Meh ever hear of Curtis Turner and Smokey Yunick?
@velvetjones18569 ай бұрын
Johnson was arrested in 1956 and Reagan was president between 1981-1989. He may have pardoned him when in office, but that didn't get him released from prison in 1956. Ronnie was doing General Electric Theater on TV in 1956.
@Johnnycdrums8 ай бұрын
Also an MC at the Apollo Theatre, NYC.
@danielfoster36428 ай бұрын
General Electric Theater. Never heard of that before. You intrigue me.
@spyder77249 ай бұрын
Re-writing history. Reagan President in 1955?
@TheSilvert80089 ай бұрын
I blame the Doc Brown paradox. ☺
@m420379 ай бұрын
The 65 galaxies were underrated, let's see today's drivers race these @165mph at Daytona
@chiefkikyerass71885 ай бұрын
And that's was when tires and tracks sucked
@jebediahgentry70299 ай бұрын
I would say Smokey Yunick is the most notorious cheater
@wingunder9 ай бұрын
Wait a minute. Eisenhower was President in 1956, definitely not Ronald Reagan. @3:05
@alexsweet85858 ай бұрын
Nobody's more notorious for cheating than Smokey Yunick.
@donsimonsen16589 ай бұрын
The rear exhaust pipes,, Also prevented others cars from from Drafting..
@BloodRaven19699 ай бұрын
That was the biggest part. Anyone trying to draft was breathing nothing but tha5t Torino's exhaust while the exhaust screw up the slip stream off the back end of that fastback body. Big 68/69 Torino fanatic so I ask the older guys into them about that exhast effect. Was interest to learn.
@Johnnycdrums8 ай бұрын
@@BloodRaven1969; Lol, nothing stock about those tail pipes, other than going out the back.
@mikeskidmore67549 ай бұрын
The rear exhaust prevented other cars from drafting behind the car with rear exhaust. It would blow hot air into the radiator and the hot exhaust fumes were terrible for the driver in the back .. So NASCAR banned rear exhaust exits..
@Lesposito259 ай бұрын
You’re not going to say why the PRESEDENT pardoned junior? Seems pretty important
@elijahrebello18 ай бұрын
I would be more interested in getting the president right, Reagan was president in the 80s not 60s
@Johnnycdrums8 ай бұрын
@@elijahrebello1; Who are you blaming, Eisenhower?
@elijahrebello18 ай бұрын
No. Video states that Reagan pardoned him in the 60s. Someone else clarified that Reagan cleared his record in the 80s. I guess that’s considered a pardon, but he didn’t get away with anything.? Just seems like a major error given the content of the video.
@Johnnycdrums8 ай бұрын
@@elijahrebello1; It was implied, not stated, as such. I give him a pass, as it was an error, obviously not wanted .
@bearcountrypublishing53032 ай бұрын
I've been to the Dawsonville pool hall back in the day when Elliot was running strong in junior builds. But this is sure enough some ancient alien tale here, with Reagan pardoning someone from 30 years in the future.
@jsmith2829 ай бұрын
My opinion just like smokey if it's not in the rule book it's fair game
@Todd-w7i8 ай бұрын
I remember when his car went through tech and they found a number fails. When he was later asked what he thought, his response was "They only scratched the surface"
@roberthartmaier66439 ай бұрын
Junior was also the guy who was responsible for R.J. Reynolds sponsoring the Winston Cup that awarded 1 Million to the driver who won the championship. This increased the popularity of NASCAR and made it a nationwide sport instead of a southeastern minor league one.
@pok303069 ай бұрын
Great video. Minor stat correction, Sterling Marlin never won for Junior Johnson, while Elliott, Bodine, and Labonte did.
@kurtvanluven93517 ай бұрын
But Marlin's 1995 Daytona car used Jr's tricks to win.
@caltiki30909 ай бұрын
It’s debatable between him and Smokey……………
@noobs4life3039 ай бұрын
Great video but ........ I'm not sure that Junior Johnson is the most "innovative." Certainly he's in the top 3 but I think Smokey Yunick may have him beat. IF you can get your hands on a copy I HIGHLY recommend "Best Damn Garage in Town." In all of the research I've done over the years the one thing in reference to Yunick that I saw time and time again was his assertion that "I never broke the rules. The rule didn't exist until after they found out that I was doing it." 😂 And typically I have found that others will back up his claim. It wasn't illegal until after Smokey had done it. 🤔 Now that I think about it, maybe this video is correct. Like I said it wasn't illegal when Smokey did it, BUT he sure was responsible for a ton of rule additions, amendments and changes.
@DennisBocock9 ай бұрын
I seem to remember bill elliotts narrow t bird
@mrbigw1009 ай бұрын
Darrell waltrip told a story about the time he drove jr Johnson cars he would get a rench and open a door in the jack point and drop lead shot out of the chassis to make it lighter and was caught in a race when he spun out and slid down pit road and there was only 2 cars on pit road and lead shot went everywhere the door was in the jack stop so when they jacked up the car to look for where it would of come out of there covered the door with the jack 😂 he also used lead radios and helmet s when they weighed the cars
@lynnd18118 ай бұрын
Jr Johnson wasn't arrested for running his own still. On a Biography Channel interview Jr stated that his Daddy was feeling a bit under the weather and told Jr to go check the still, when he did the revenuers arrested him. Jr started that he loved and respected his Daddy so much that if he had known beforehand that he would have been arrested he would have gone to check the still anyway. He then told stories about having so much moonshine in the house he and the other kids had to crawl over the boxes of shine to get in and out of bed.
@54Rocketeer8 ай бұрын
Shocking voice over!
@suntory1462 ай бұрын
The real advantage of running "tail pipes" was that it would prevent competitors from drafting, as the hot exhaust would cause their cars to overheat.
@Mbartel5009 ай бұрын
In the early days of stock car racing…if you weren't cheating, you weren't winning.
@royb.14418 ай бұрын
I swear - it feels like every driver's origin story has them as the first person to discover and use drafting
@Dr.J.Garlock9 ай бұрын
1956 Presidential pardon by Ronald Regan? Not sure that was possible!
@fordenginebuildersv8power1849 ай бұрын
It wasn’t juniors still it was his dads! Gonna tell a story tell it right
@alparker86618 ай бұрын
I thought Smokey Unick held this title.
@danielfoster36428 ай бұрын
No one knows for sure who the biggest cheater was in NASCAR history.
@RobertDetert9 ай бұрын
No that would be Smokey. The greatest innovator ever
@BuddyCorp9 ай бұрын
I want a full video on the Banana.
@Johnnycdrums8 ай бұрын
Probably a FE 427 side oiler.
@mikecross43509 ай бұрын
Everybody stretched the rules nobody cheated unless they got caught
@geofjones99 ай бұрын
The headline said Johnson was a notorius cheater. Smokey Yunick was famous for bending the rules, but this clip said very little a bout Johnson cheating. The "inovations" he created were not illegal, just new.
@pauljanssen75949 ай бұрын
The one rule of thumb for cheaters is this, it's only cheating if you get caught.😊
@elisamaria36289 ай бұрын
He actually sold his team to Brett Bodine
@shanew.williams9 ай бұрын
I liked for the video clips & pics.
@stealthbomber21279 ай бұрын
Smokey Yunick was great at cheating too. Chad Knaus is the new undisputed cheating king and nascrap let him do it.
@dddevildogg9 ай бұрын
Chad has the same last name as Melania Trump's maiden name...Anglicized from Knavs?
@ClarencegHammАй бұрын
Chad crack the back knaus😂
@TanDawg589 ай бұрын
He wasn't just a cheater on track. He also had an affair while he was still married to Flossie, which lead to their divorce and his marriage to the young blonde (can't think of her name)
@kurtvanluven93517 ай бұрын
How about Sterling Marlin's 1995 winning car for the Daytona 500? It had 3 oil pumps, almost no oil in the pan and circulated through the rear end? (plus the X-pipes)
@mattskustomkreations9 ай бұрын
3:05. Huh?? Junior was NOT in prison til Ronald Reagan pardoned him! 😅 He went to prison in 1956-57 when Reagan was still wrapping up his acting career. It wasn’t til 30 years later when Reagan was President that he basically vacated Junior’s old felony conviction.
@TheSports_Fanatic9 ай бұрын
I saw Johnson and I was going to start fuming if you were talking about Jimmie
@practicelogos53teamer9 ай бұрын
😂 HMS fan
@ryangold85179 ай бұрын
They weren't rule breakers, they were rule makers
@DrewWolf-xk7sk6 ай бұрын
Beside this video having factual inaccuracies and distortions, there is a wonderful indie film from 1973 called The Last American Hero. It’s available thru streaming services. The film features a song called “I’ve Got a Name” by Jim Croce who had died just days before the film’s release.
@oldmanfunky49097 ай бұрын
Nascar coined the slogan "If your not cheating, your not trying!"
@duanefalk2198 ай бұрын
Wait a minute…you said Waltrip won the championship in 1980 and 1981. Earnhardt was the 80 champion. Pretty big thing to get wrong!
@matthewmoilanen7879 ай бұрын
Sorry but Chad Knause was Nascars biggest cheater. He even went so far as to tell Jimmy on monitored radio to hit the wall post race so Nascar couldn't use the templates on the car.
@maxballa70728 ай бұрын
Innovator not cheater
@brianmaricle96468 ай бұрын
Having an edge on the law was part of moonshining so having an edge in racing shouldn't be considered cheating since moonshining gave us NASCAR
@cousinjohncarstuff45688 ай бұрын
Who was got fed up with after race inspection, jumped in the car and drove off with the fuel tank removed?
@burnout90698 ай бұрын
Wasn't that Yunics car?
@doylebrockman82258 ай бұрын
Your timeline is off.
@edmondcamp28786 ай бұрын
Darrell won 12 races each year in 1981 and 1982 not 1980 and 1981. Cale drove for Junior in 1980 winning six races five super speedway races and at Bristol and 14 pole positions.
@dougeldredge9 ай бұрын
he also made some good country ham
@danielfoster36428 ай бұрын
Ham and moonshine? Wow.
@cosmostrek20019 ай бұрын
If you are not cheating you are not trying.😂😂😂😂🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
@Freesavh17769 ай бұрын
If you ain't cheatin you aint trying. 😂
@jasonthunders65518 ай бұрын
28 june,i share my birthday with Junior👍
@ImNotHereToArgueFacts9 ай бұрын
5:00 No mention of cheating or I missed something.
@rbell31099 ай бұрын
The video at about 10:00 is not the 1965 Daytona 500. Looks to be a 1968 race with a reddish color 1968 Charger 500 running in second
@Richard4point68 ай бұрын
NASCAR lost me when the France family discovered the word "parity."
@lsuhutch95707 ай бұрын
I love this video, but you have got to change that presidential/prison part. Editing department needs to reevaluate its process.
@foxwolf3168 ай бұрын
I don't understand why you ignored the crash of him flipping on the back strech at his debut in dalington 1953, when he flip got back on 4 wheels and open the hood when drivers were racing by him while taking his shirt off to stop the engine from burning.
@Johnnycdrums8 ай бұрын
Such a bad ass.
@1956tojo9 ай бұрын
He cheated of course because he was racing with GM products for 85% of the time and you simply HAD to in order to stay up there... Ford was so dominant for so long that rules were purposely changed several times to change that fact and try to make it fair for the other manufacturers... That there is just plain history.. I was a kid in the late 50s through the 60s and remember my Dad and Grampa and Uncles talking and complaining about that very thing as it kept happening. But yeah... Jr. Johnson was a badass good ol' boy... Nobody held that stuff against him but prudes and jealous clowns...
@davecasey43417 ай бұрын
I always thought Smokey Yunick was the most notorious cheater in NASCAR history.
@samstewart48079 ай бұрын
lol he was more notorious then Smokey- because he got caught more.
@chrisbrown39259 ай бұрын
We may never know just who was the real biggest cheater...