The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Jimmie Johnson 1st NASCAR driver to test positive for virus

- By Jenna Fryer

Seven-time NASCAR champion Jimmie Johnson has tested positive for the coronaviru­s and will miss this weekend’s race at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway,

The 44-year-old Johnson is the first driver in any NASCAR series to test positive and the news cast a shadow over the historic NASCAR-IndyCar doublehead­er races coming up Saturday and Sunday. There was no indication any races would be affected.

Hendrick Motorsport­s said Johnson will not return until he is cleared by a physician. Has no symptoms, but was tested today after his wife tested positive.

Johnson earlier Friday held a Zoom session with reporters to discuss Sunday’s race and an upcoming test of an Indy car on the road course at the fabled venue. He will now miss that test, as well as what was supposed to be his final Brickyard 400. Justin Allgaier will replace him Sunday in the No. 48 Chevrolet.

Johnson is scheduled to retire from full-time NASCAR competitio­n at the end of the season and was trying to tie Jeff Gordon and Michael Schumacher as the only five-time winners at Indianapol­is.

Johnson has made 663 conscutive Cup Series starts — the longest streak among active drivers — and is currently 12th in the standings, 63 points inside the playoff picture. NASCAR’s rules state a driver must be symptom free and have two negative coronaviru­s tests in a 24-hour span to return.

Johnson could potentiall­y also miss the Cup race at Kentucky and the All-Star race at Bristol. Next week’s test of the road course at Indy in Scott Dixon’s car has also been scrapped.

NASCAR was one of the first sports to resume competitio­n from the pandemic shutdown and has completed 11 Cup races since its May 17 return. The sanctionin­g body does not test for coronaviru­s but participan­ts are required to do a temperatur­e check as they enter the facility.

Drivers have been told to isolate at the track and there is very little interactio­n beyond radio conversati­on between the competitor and his crew.

Although Stewart-Haas Racing and Team Penske both said they’ve had positive tests from shop-based team members, Johnson is the first driver. Earlier Friday, Brazilian sports car driver Felipe Nasr said he had tested positive and will miss Saturday’s IMSA event at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway.

Johnson earlier Friday discussed the Indy car test scheduled with Chip Ganassi Racing, which he said was the first step in determine if actual races are in his future. If he’s any good, he said, he would be open to racing all 12 street and road course events on the IndyCar schedule.

Johnson has long said safety concerns would keep him from racing on IndyCar oval tracks, but Friday he offered a surprising­ly softer stance about the Indy 500. IndyCar this year unveiled its aeroscreen windshield designed to protect the drivers from debris as they sit in the open-air cockpits. Saturday will mark just the second race with the device, but it appeared problemfre­e last month on the oval at high-speed Texas Motor Speedway.

“Their safety on ovals has dramatical­ly increased this year with the windscreen. So, I’ll keep a close eye on things there and see how the safety level looks,” Johnson said. “I’ve always wanted to race the Indy 500. I’d have to do a lot of selling to my wife to get that pass, but my true desire right now is to just run the road courses.”

Johnson has his eye on the street course race in Long Beach, California, a race that was canceled this year because of the coronaviru­s pandemic but is one of the most storied events on the IndyCar calendar at a track just a couple hours from his native El Cajon.

“When I was a kid growing up, the closest IndyCar racing for me was at Long Beach so one of my hopes is that I am able to race at Long Beach,” Johnson said. “I hung on the fence a lot as a kid watching and dreaming . .... There’s a lot of sentimenta­l value with that race and I hope to race there.”

He is stuck in a threeyear losing streak but Hendrick Motorsport­s has been dramatical­ly improved this season and Johnson has been competitiv­e. He has also been actively prepping for a whirl in an Indy car and had been scheduled to test with the McLaren team before the pandemic.

“It’s a test, it’s a tryout and it’s a two-way street. Two-way tryout for the team to look at me and for myself to look at a team,” he said. “If I’m about four seconds off the pace, then that’s probably a quick sign that I don’t need to be in one of these cars. If I’m within a certain amount of time and I have a good feel of the car, then for me, I feel like that’s an important first step that I need to know that I can be competitiv­e.

“I do not want to go race in any series and not be competitiv­e,” he said.

 ?? DARRON CUMMINGS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this May 16, 2019, file photo, NASCAR driver Jimmie Johnson, center, talks with Will Power, left, of Australia, and Josef Newgarden during practice for the Indianapol­is 500IndyCar auto race at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway in Indianapol­is.
DARRON CUMMINGS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this May 16, 2019, file photo, NASCAR driver Jimmie Johnson, center, talks with Will Power, left, of Australia, and Josef Newgarden during practice for the Indianapol­is 500IndyCar auto race at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway in Indianapol­is.

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