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Nextel All-Star Challenge - Tony Stewart Notes
TONY STEWART
All-Star Test Session
ATLANTA (May 17, 2005) - When Major League Baseball plays its All-Star game July 12 at Detroit's Comerica Park, players won't be there to test out the field or develop a new bat that always hits home runs. They'll be there to put on a show, plain and simple.
But the NASCAR NEXTEL All-Star Challenge, NASCAR's version of an All-Star game, does all that and more. Fans will certainly be treated to a show at the 1.5-mile Charlotte oval, as top NASCAR drivers compete for a $1 million payout in a race with no point ramifications.
But overshadowed by the glitz of the event is a high-profile test session. Drivers and teams can use the track time garnered from participating in Saturday night's All-Star Challenge and put it toward next weekend's Coca-Cola 600 - a point-paying race that is also at Charlotte.
For Tony Stewart, driver of the #20 Home Depot Chevrolet for Joe Gibbs Racing, the All-Star Challenge represents the perfect test session. Unlike most test sessions that are lonely and monotonous, there's actual competition in the All-Star Challenge. And the incentive of a nice trophy augmented by an equally nice paycheck should not be overlooked.
And in taking full advantage of all the track time the All-Star race weekend offers, Stewart will also compete in the undercard NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race for Morgan-Dollar Motorsports. It's all in an effort to glean the most information from what is essentially a weekend's worth of free testing.
How much will running the Truck Series race on Friday night help you for the All-Star race on Saturday night?
"I'm really anxious to see the improvements to the track surface. They've grinded the track and taken out a lot of the bumps. And from what other drivers tell me, the track's pretty smooth. But I haven't tested the new surface, so my time in the truck will be pretty valuable. I'll get a whole day of practice and qualifying with the truck before I get over to the Cup side with The Home Depot Chevrolet. Running the truck certainly won't hurt, that's for sure.
"Morgan-Dollar is a really good team. I finished third in my only race with them last year at Richmond (Va.), and Bobby (Labonte) won with them earlier this year at Martinsville (Va.). They've got really good equipment, which means I'll have more time to learn the race track."
Can the All-Star Challenge be used as a test session for the Coca-Cola 600?
"Absolutely. It always is. If your car is driving well, you're running for a million dollars. But if your car isn't driving well, you're learning from that and applying it to the 600 instead. I've always looked at it as however your car is driving in the All-Star race is relatively true to how your car is going to drive in the 600. It's a really good test because it's really the only time we have to run at night in race conditions."
Much was made about the new spoiler and tire combination coming into this season, particularly how they would affect a car's handling at intermediate tracks such as Charlotte. Now that you're fairly deep into the season and have competed on a variety of different race tracks, have you noticed much difference in how your car handles this year as opposed to last year?
"I really haven't noticed any difference, to be honest. With the exception of the short tracks, we've been a little bit off with our cars this year, so I'm not sure I'm the right guy to answer that question. I haven't noticed any drastic differences. It seems like it's just business as usual. It just seems like with every change in the rules, the teams takes the information they get from the wind tunnel to calculate how much downforce they've lost. Then they figure out how to adjust the body to get the balance back in the car to gain some of that downforce back. But like I said, I really haven't noticed a lot of difference."
Some drivers have said that the cars are harder to drive this year. Is that the case?
"These cars are always hard to drive. If they were easy to drive, you and everybody could do it. When you're in the car, it stills feels loose or tight. Sometimes you're in a four-wheel drift and you have to make adjustments based on that. That aspect of driving these cars really hasn't changed. It doesn't seem to me to have been a huge transition."
Chassis No. 97:
This is a brand new chassis, with the NASCAR NEXTEL All-Star Challenge marking the first time Chassis No. 97 will turn a wheel. While extensively tested in the wind tunnel, it has not made a single lap on the race track.
Notes of Interest:
This is Stewart’s seventh year in the NASCAR NEXTEL Cup Series and his seventh year in the All-Star race at Charlotte.
Stewart won The Winston Open during his rookie year in 1999 to advance into The Winston, where he finished second for his career best finish in The Winston.
Stewart won the first segment of the NASCAR NEXTEL All-Star Challenge in 2004 and the second segment of The Winston in 2001.
Stewart will sport a Madagascar paint scheme for the NASCAR NEXTEL All-Star Challenge. Madagascar, a computer-animated comedy by DreamWorks, debuts May 27 in theatres nationwide.
Four people who will get a sneak preview of Madagascar are Kathryn Williams, Donald Williams, Della Casper and Karen Koschalk. Kathryn Williams won a contest sponsored by The Home Depot to catch a sneak preview of Madagascar along with a VIP race weekend during the NASCAR NEXTEL All-Star Challenge. The Milwaukee resident and her three friends will visit Joe Gibbs Racing for a reception on Thursday before attending the sneak preview later that evening. The foursome will then spend Friday and Saturday at the track.
Home Depot store #6368, located in Pace, Fla., will be represented on the lower rear quarterpanel of the #20 Home Depot Chevrolet during the NASCAR NEXTEL All-Star Challenge. Store #6368 was judged to be the outstanding store of the week, thereby earning its place on the orange and white Joe Gibbs Racing machine.
On Monday, Stewart was on NBC’s “Today” show helping Miechel Bassett of Evansville, Ind., fulfill her “Live for Today” dream. Bassett, a housewife and mother of two, wanted to drive a NASCAR stock car. And in a two-seater Home Depot Chevrolet provided by the Richard Petty Driving Experience, Stewart took Bassett for a handful of white-knuckle laps around Richmond International Raceway’s .750-mile oval. After pulling onto pit road following the run with Stewart, Bassett got to compare Stewart’s driving style with that of Dale Earnhardt Jr., as the NASCAR icon was also on hand to make Bassett’s “Live for Today” experience a memorable one. Bassett’s wish was one of more than 60,000 received by “Today” as part of its month-long series, “Live for Today”. From playing baseball in a Major League ballpark to running with the bulls in Pamplona, “Today” whittled down the responses to a list of the top 50 things that many want to do in their lifetime. Bassett’s dream slotted in at 11th. America’s #1 morning show for almost 10 years in a row, “Today” is co-anchored by Katie Couric and Matt Lauer.
The Home Depot, in partnership with Joe Gibbs Racing (JGR) and the national non-profit organization KaBOOM!, announced last month a commitment to build 10 NASCAR-themed playgrounds through “Racing to Play”. The program’s mission is to bring the excitement of NASCAR to at-risk youth in NASCAR race communities. The “Racing to Play” program will identify and work with 10 organizations in select race markets to build NASCAR-themed KaBOOM! playgrounds in a single day at the organization’s site. The program will target organizations that serve children, including those that support at-risk youth and provide positive after-school and learning environments. The initial kick-off build will be June 16 at the Jackson Arts & Technology Academy in Jackson, Mich., prior to the Michigan 400. The next two builds are scheduled for the Daytona Beach Housing Authority (June 30, Daytona Beach, Fla.) and the Carol Murphy Center (July 7, Markham, Ill.). Sites are still being determined for the seven remaining build markets: Indianapolis; Fontana, Calif.; Richmond, Va.; Talladega, Ala.; Kansas City, Kan.; Atlanta; and Phoenix. Stewart, along with fellow JGR drivers and crews, will participate in the builds.
Stewart will make his fifth career NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series start Friday night in the Quaker Steak & Lube 200 at Charlotte driving the #47 Chevrolet Tork Silverado for Morgan-Dollar Motorsports. (The Morgan-Dollar team, led by crew chief Randy Goss, won in its last outing at Martinsville Speedway with Stewart’s Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Bobby Labonte behind the wheel.) In his four previous Craftsman Truck Series starts, Stewart has logged two wins, a third and a 10th. Both wins came at Richmond in Chevrolets prepared by Andy Petree Racing (September 2003 and September 2002). The third-place effort came last year at Richmond in Stewart’s only start for Morgan-Dollar, while the 10th place effort came in Stewart’s first career Truck Series start at Indianapolis Raceway Park in 1996 in a Ranier-Walsh Racing-prepared Chevrolet.
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