Sziasztok! Hi Fans!
Talltam egy j cikket Montoyval! :) Egy mly interj!
I found a new article with Monty, it's a depth interview with Juan Pablo!
 
CO
NCORD, N.C. — Juan Pablo Montoya giggled as he loaded voices onto a GPS navigation system he planned to use in his new Chevrolet Volt.
First up was Darth Vader.  Followed by Foghorn Leghorn. Then his own accented English leading a  driver through a rotary ("now it's time to go round and round, round and  round").
"Pretty cool!" he gleefully exclaimed. "Boys and toys, you know?"
At his penthouse apartment in Miami, Montoya is a  stay-at-home dad four days a week who ferries his children between  soccer practice and dance recitals, plays golf and flies remote-control  planes. His latest passion is the electric car that arrived last week  ("It's really cool. You think electric and think, 'Boring.' This has so  many integrated features.").
It seemingly runs counter to Montoya's on-track  persona as the cutthroat racer whose take-no-prisoners style results in  run-ins such as a skirmish last month with Ryan Newman at Richmond International Raceway that landed both on probation.
"I always had the reputation of being the bad  guy," said Montoya, whose aggression was well documented when he was a  CART champion and Formula One winner before he reunited with Chip Ganassi  to run the No. 42 in Sprint Cup five years ago. "I don't feel I like  being the bad guy, but I hate taking (crap) from people. If that's being  the bad guy, then I'm the bad guy."
Munching on a Caesar salad in his motor home last week in the Charlotte Motor Speedway infield, the Colombian discussed how his racing philosophy affected him personally and professionally: 
Q: So you still feel justified about what happened at Richmond?
A: Yeah, but you look over the past year, I  hadn't had any issues with anybody. It gets to a point, though, where  they can't run over you. I guarantee you I will never have another  problem with Newman. I guarantee next time I get by him, he'll give me  room and I'll give him room. He wants to run the (crap) out of me, I'll  keep running the (crap) out of him. We don't get anywhere. It's all  about making our lives easier in the long term.
You've got to be smart. There's so many races  here, especially in these cars and running side by side with people  around you all the time. Over the years, you learn to play the game. …  Some people think I'm an idiot who races the (crap) out of people. But  it's simple. Like (Matt) Kenseth. I'll get out of the racing line to let  him go. And he'll do the same for me. Tony (Stewart) will do the same  for me, and I'll do the same for him. But there are guys that you spend  half the race trying to pass a guy because he runs the (crap) out of  you. And the guy expects when he comes back that you let him go. Why? If  you treat me bad, I'll treat you bad. I understand, if it's 30 laps to  go, I'm not going to give you an inch, and you don't give me an inch.  But early in the day, why? It's avoidable contact. 
Q: Have you learned to live with the repercussions of your style?
A: The priorities are: No. 1, your boss; No. 2,  the sponsor. And family after that. As long as you don't do something  that your sponsor or boss is going to regret, you're OK. If your boss  thinks that you were too aggressive in trying to defend yourself or  racing hard, then you shouldn't be there. You're here to get your job  done. It gets frustrating for everyone here. You get to this level of NASCAR,  it's so hard. If you're not in an ideal spot and everything's going  your way, you don't win. There's four guys at Hendrick (Motorsports),  and the only guy who wins really is (Jimmie Johnson). It's a tough  environment. 
Am I the most social guy? No, I'm not social at  all. When you run open wheel, it's about yourself. In open wheel, you  don't share the road with anybody. But here you have to learn to share  the road.
Q: But you can do it without making friends with your rivals?           
          A: Jamie McMurray and his wife, for  example, they're very good friends with the Kenseths. What happens if it  comes down to those two for a championship, and you have to make an  aggressive move? Are you flying together in the same plane home after  that? I admire them for that. I couldn't do that. And I've learned to be  a lot smarter, and being here made me a lot better person and  understand racing in a lot different way. You have to be selfish, but in  this sport, you've got to be smart, too. You have to know which battles  to fight and when. 
Q: Have you gotten better at knowing when to fight those battles?
A: Absolutely. Is it perfect or pretty? No. But  you've got to do it. I've been wrecked by Newman probably three times  and never did anything. 
Q: Does it bother you that some fans think of you as the bad guy?
A: The problem is that I'm a foreigner here.  Literally. Right now I have to thank Kimi (Raikkonen), because now we're  the only two guys who aren't Americans. It's a huge nationwide and  worldwide sport, but locally, the people who come and watch the races,  they've been here forever. And I'm different. I think a lot of people  think I don't respect the sport. I think the older the fan is, the worse  it is. I'm here like any other guy in the garage and have a lot of  respect, and it's great. I enjoy what I do.
           Q: Has your fan interaction through Twitter helped show another side of you?
A: The Twitter thing I started July 4, 2009. They  said, 'Oh, it'd be good if people can see a little bit.' I just write  what I think and I?m very polite about how I write things. I think it's  great. I didn't do it for the sponsors or anybody. I know Target likes  it, but you've got to be smart about what you put. I can't say, "This  idiot is a freaking ..." When things go bad, I don't tweet. I just put I  had a bad weekend.              
Q: That's why people seem to like it, right? Because they see another side of you?             
A: People want to follow me and see what I am.  I'm a boring guy who loves the freaking electric car and plays golf and  flies RC planes. That's it. That's me. I'm lucky that I can make really  good money doing what I do. I think I'm really good at what I do. I  don't do it for anyone else.  
Q: Will the Volt replace the Escalade as your new vehicle for carting your kids around town?
            A: It's a four-seater car! It actually has a lot of space.  It's not a Ferrari. It's a very different concept. It's an  amazing-looking car for what it is. I'm not a small car guy. It's  actually entertaining to drive. I like it. Am I going to be a Greenpeace  guy? No, I'm a fuel junkie. But if you can help a little bit, why not?  And have fun in the meanwhile.
A statistical look at Juan Pablo Montoya's NASCAR Sprint Cup career:
    
        
            | Year | 
            Races | 
            Wins | 
            Top-5s | 
            Top-10s | 
            Poles | 
            Earnings | 
            Rank | 
        
        
              | 
        
        
            | 2006 | 
            1 | 
            0 | 
            0 | 
            0 | 
            0 | 
            $61,425 | 
            69 | 
        
        
              | 
        
        
            | 2007 | 
            36  | 
            1 | 
            3 | 
            6 | 
            0 | 
            $5,342,520 | 
            20 | 
        
        
              | 
        
        
            | 2008 | 
            36  | 
            0 | 
            2 | 
            3 | 
            0 | 
            $4,651,163 | 
            25 | 
        
        
              | 
        
        
            | 2009 | 
            36  | 
            0 | 
            7 | 
            18 | 
            2 | 
            $6,778,916 | 
            8 | 
        
        
              | 
        
        
            | 2010 | 
            36  | 
            1 | 
            6 | 
            14 | 
            3 | 
            $5,639,446 | 
            17 | 
        
        
              | 
        
        
            | 2011 | 
            11  | 
            0 | 
            2 | 
            4 | 
            2 | 
            $1,833,501 | 
            15 | 
        
        
              | 
        
        
            | 6 | 
            156 | 
            2 | 
            20 | 
            45 | 
            7 | 
            $24,306,971 | 
             
             | 
        
        
              | 
        
        
            | Source: racing-reference.info | 
        
        
              | 
        
    
 
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