Jimmie Johnson Isn’t Retiring—He’s Choosing His Finish Line
Jimmie Johnson will take one last green flag in the Daytona 500 in 2027, closing a Cup career that began with a pole at the same track 25 years earlier.
Jimmie Johnson will take one last green flag in the Daytona 500 in 2027, closing a Cup career that began with a pole at the same track 25 years earlier.
In Sunday’s Coca-Cola 600, NASCAR Hall of Famer Jimmie Johnson will make his 700th NASCAR Cup Series start on the same track where he made his debut in the series in 2001.
Rick Hendrick doesn’t view Jimmie Johnson as a turncoat—far from it.
Seven-time NASCAR champion and Legacy Motor Club co-owner Jimmie Johnson announced Monday a new strategic partnership with Knighthead Capital Management, marking a significant shift in the team’s trajectory
Seven-time NASCAR Cup Series champion and Hall of Famer Jimmie Johnson isn’t quite ready to let retirement define him.
Though Legacy Motor Club announced that Erik Jones has been cleared to return to racing by doctors and by NASCAR, the team convinced Jones it would be in his best interest to
sit out Sunday’s AdventHealth 400 at Kansas Speedway.
Jimmie Johnson confirmed this week he will compete in back-to-back events for the first time since he retired from fulltime NASCAR competition in 2020.
The Toyota camp showed the rest of Daytona 500 field that they will be fast when it matters Thursday night.
Sponsorship drives NASCAR.
Despite a few rough patches in their 17-year working relationship, driver Jimmie Johnson and crew chief Chad Knaus achieved a level of success at NASCAR’s highest level unparalleled in the current century.