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Warren Johnson. Just say the name and you might think of a
few things instantly: His nickname is 'The Professor,' he has earned
six NHRA POWERade Pro Stock championships, he seems to be a little
on the intense side of things when it comes to racing. All of the
above are true. Warren will tell you himself. Warren Johnson raced
in his first NHRA event in 1971. He has been a fierce competitor
ever since. Along with those six championships, Warren has earned
92 victories - tops in Pro Stock and second overall only to John
Force's 109 Funny Car wins. Warren is known as much for his innovation
in the sport of Pro Stock racing as his success. But when it comes
right down to it, Warren is simply a man of few words. He will tell
you like it is. Period. Because the sooner he can get done chatting,
the sooner he can get back to work. Warren and the rest of the NHRA
POWERade Drag Racing Series is in Bristol, Ten. this weekend for
the fourth annual O'Reilly NHRA Thunder Valley Nationals at Bristol
Dragway. In this Q&A session, Warren talks about the records
and championships, what he thinks about racing with his son, Kurt,
and whether he even knows what the word 'retirement' means.
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CompetitionPlus - What has made you stay so motivated throughout
your career?
JOHNSON: I've been motivated probably because
drag racing is something I enjoy doing and I make a living at it.
This is better than a job. A job is something you have to do. Here,
I want to do something.
CompetitionPlus - What do you enjoy most about drag racing?
JOHNSON: The mechanical end of it. The development.
The people you meet. All of those things.
CompetitionPlus - What brought you to drag racing more?
The engine development or the competition?
JOHNSON: Probably the development side first.
The racing side of it, being from northern Minnesota at the time,
when I looked at racing and trying to make a living at it, up there
you couldn't do it circle track racing. You could eke out a living
with drag racing if you did it right. Had I been down south, I would
have gone circle track racing since there was opportunity there
with NASCAR.
CompetitionPlus - What are you most proud of in your career?
JOHNSON: I never really thought about being
proud of a particular aspect. I've been able to stay in it a lot
longer than most people have. I've seen all of the studs come and
go and been able to survive that. I'm an extremely good survivor.
That comes from being born and raised in northern Minnesota where
you have to make due with what you've got. It's rather frugal living
up there and it makes you appreciate what you have. It also makes
you want to survive on your own rather than having everyone else
do the work for you.

CompetitionPlus - What do you think about the beadlocks
that were put into the rules and regulations of Pro Stock racing
this season?
JOHNSON: That was a good change but that was
strictly a safety issue. It was something that was way overdue.
I can understand that a lot of competitors didn't want to make the
change but at the same time, if you look at it from a safety aspect
and the liability exposure that GoodYear and NHRA would be exposed
to, it was a no-brainer. We had to make the change.
CompetitionPlus - Why should fans prefer Pro Stock racing
over any of the other categories?
JOHNSON: Because they can relate to Pro Stock.
Even though it's a stretch that they are street cars, at least it
represents something that they can drive on the street, at least
silhouette wise. I can't speak from the spectator's standpoint,
but I am sure that there are a lot of gearheads that understand
that the performance is pretty phenomenal for a gas-burning vehicle
that is manually shifted.
CompetitionPlus - How do you approach each season as far
as setting goals?
JOHNSON: You have to look at the task at hand.
The championship is first and foremost but at the same time you
have to balance that with looking down the road. You can spend yourself
into an oblivion and not be able to return the next season. I look
at it as a business to start with. I certainly enjoy what I am doing,
but I have to look at what I am doing. I have to financially survive
because I don't have someone throwing me millions of dollars to
inflate their ego, so I have to look at this as a business. I still
have to enjoy it, which I do immensely.
CompetitionPlus - If you were the "King of NHRA"
for the day and could make any change to the performance of the
Pro Stock class, what would you change?
JOHNSON: The category is just fine as it is.
There is a lot of interest in making it a little more high-tech
with fuel injection and that sort of thing and maybe that has a
place here. But at this point and time, I think the competition
is pretty keen. The racing is side-by-side and that's what the spectators
are paying for. Pro Stock racing as opposed to the other pro categories
is really the best racing, the best entertainment. The Pro Stock
Bikes are pretty close, they have close racing too. When they say
that two fuel cars are within a car-length of each other, that's
300 inches. Wow.
CompetitionPlus - Looking back on your six championships,
do you have a favorite title?
JOHNSON: Not really. They all have equal value
from the standpoint that you accomplished the task at hand. I can't
say that any one was better than the other. You always look at the
first one, because you finally succeeded at achieving your goals.
The second one is usually a bit harder because you're a target after
that.
CompetitionPlus - Do you enjoy being the target?
JOHNSON: I never think about it.
CompetitionPlus - Do you thrive off the competition or
do you just concern yourself with racing the tree and the environment?
JOHNSON: That's all I can compete against.
I can't drive the other lane. I can't do anything about any other
team. All I can do is worry about my particular car. I can't control
anybody else's destiny and I don't want to control anybody else's
destiny.
CompetitionPlus - Your son Kurt has earned 28 national
event victories in his career. Did you ever imagine Kurt would become
such a competitor in the Pro Stock ranks?
JOHNSON: That's hard to answer whether he
would be a competitor. The driving part is really the easy task.
A competitor and a driver are two different things. That would be
like comparing a competitor and a racer. A racer will do anything
it takes to win. Kurt puts in whatever hours it takes to win. Absolutely
I am proud of him. He's done great so far and the future is wide
open for him. He's on his own as far as that he makes his own choices
and calls over there and he's doing a great job.
CompetitionPlus - What do you like about racing with your
son?
JOHNSON: I can look at it from a business
standpoint and we both have the same viewpoint as far as the fact
that we are doing this first and foremost to make a living. Whether
he enjoys it as much as I do, I can't answer. He would have to answer
that. But he obviously must enjoy it to a certain extent because
he puts in a lot of hours and he is always thinking about how we
can make these things go quicker and faster and creating new things
and coming up with innovative ideas. So he obviously has some enjoyment
in it.
CompetitionPlus - If you had not been involved with racing,
what would you have done?
JOHNSON: I think we can rule out me playing
NBA basketball. Maybe golf. Hitting a little ball doesn't seem to
be all that hard. All you need are some shoes and a set of clubs
and then you can go and make a living at it. But golf is like a
lot of other things. It looks simple and it isn't when you try it.
These guys spend hundreds of hours practicing one particular swing.
When you try to be better than anyone else at any particular thing,
that is where the degree of difficulty comes in. I suppose being
a pilot would have been enjoyable, but I really haven't thought
about anything other than racing.

CompetitionPlus - Have you given any thought to retirement?
JOHNSON: Isn't that a social disease or something?
I don't know what that is. As far as I am concerned, retirement
involves a pine box. I have to be doing something all the time.
I could be retired from the driving aspect of it and being out here
everyday. But I would still be involved with team ownership and
have someone else drive it. We'll cross that bridge when it comes.
CompetitionPlus - You've had great success at the U.S.
Nationals in the past. This year we're celebrating the 50th anniversary
of the Mac Tools U.S. Nationals. Knowing that, would it mean more
to win that race?
JOHNSON: I won the 40th anniversary, so winning
the 50th would be all right. That's what I am going there to do
anyway, so why not? If I accomplish that, so be it.
CompetitionPlus - Is earning your 100th win important to
you?
JOHNSON: No. It has no bearing on how I race
or how long I race. I have been very fortunate to win as many races
as I have and records, in reality, are only meant to be broken.
Someone else will surpass whatever I end up with someday. I don't
think about any of the records or numbers. I haven't got a huge
ego like some people. I enjoy what I am doing. I may get a little
more intense than most people do but that's because I enjoy what
I am doing. I don't think about records because that is not what
I am here for.
CompetitionPlus - What gives you satisfaction? What's the
payoff for all of the hard work?
JOHNSON: Probably just the competing. Early
on, NHRA was founded on guys going out and playing with their hot
rods but I looked at it as something that if I was going to do it,
I had to make a living at it. That's where it all started. It's
turned into a rather lengthy career.
CompetitionPlus - Do you get any satisfaction knowing that
people you've had working in your organization have gone on to success
in their own right? Do you like being a teacher?
JOHNSON: If someone can take something you
have done and expand on it and hopefully do better, than yes, that's
a good feeling. At least you pointed them in the right direction.
I've never been paid to be a teacher, but I've run other fabricating
companies, instructional steel companies, companies along those
lines and I was always having to show people how to do things in
order for the company to make a profit. I guess I have been a mentor
of sorts.
CompetitionPlus - How did you get the nickname 'The Professor'?
JOHNSON: One of the National DRAGSTER staff
writers coined the term. Way back when. I think it was John Brasseaux.
He hung that moniker on me because I was so intense at what I was
doing, I worked at it. He made the observation that for me it was
more of an analytical approach to racing. I wasn't just throwing
parts at a hot rod.
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