TONY STEWART
Triple Duty at The Glen
ATLANTA (Aug. 8, 2005) - If it's fast and has four wheels, chances are Tony Stewart will drive it. The pilot of the #20 Home Depot Chevrolet in the NASCAR NEXTEL Cup Series has competed in everything - from go-karts and USAC Sprint, Midget and Silver Crown cars to Indy cars and stock cars. Stewart has not only raced these machines, but won with them. He even drove a monster truck at Talladega (Ala.) back in 2001.
So it should come as no surprise that during the upcoming race weekend at Watkins Glen (N.Y.) International, Stewart will compete in the Rolex Sports Car Series race on Friday, the NASCAR Busch Series race on Saturday and, of course, the Nextel Cup race on Sunday.
Those three days of racing will culminate a fuel-filled week for Stewart, who will have spent Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday at the vaunted Knoxville (Iowa) Raceway watching his World of Outlaws team with driver Danny Lasoski attempt to defend their Knoxville Nationals championship.
Staying saturated in all forms of motorsports keeps Stewart sharp, and considering that he's won the past two road course races on the Nextel Cup schedule, Stewart enters The Glen as a veritable Ginsu knife, slicing and dicing his way through the twists and turns of the track's 2.45-mile layout.
He has four career road course wins to his Nextel Cup resume - two at The Glen and two at Sonoma (Calif.), the only other road course on the Nextel Cup schedule. Stewart could make it three road course wins in a row, bookending last year's race at The Glen with this year's race at Sonoma in between.
With a test of his Busch car on Aug. 1, a test of his Cup car on Aug. 2 - both of which took place at The Glen - and plenty of laps to be had amongst his Daytona Prototype, his Busch car and his Cup car during the Sirius At The Glen weekend, Stewart will be more than ready to add another trophy to his already crowded mantle.
Is there anything about The Glen's layout that suits you and the #20 Home Depot Racing Team?
"It's just like anyplace else. If you get the combination right you can go out and win. If you miss something and you're a little bit off, you're not going to win. The two races we won there we had a very, very good race car that drove well all day. In between those races there was a year where our car didn't drive real well and we didn't win. It's just a matter of doing the same things you do at any other race track. If you get the package right and your driver is good at road courses, then you've got a shot at winning a road course race."
You've won four road course races - two at The Glen and two at Sonoma. Does success at one venue transfer to the other?
"The two tracks, while both road courses, are still pretty different. At Watkins Glen you don't have to finesse the throttle near as much as you do at Sonoma. When you get the car turned, you can get in the gas and then stay in the gas. Watkins Glen is much faster than Sonoma. I think there are the same amounts of passing opportunities, but because of the speeds that you're able to run at The Glen, brakes become a much bigger factor than I think they are at Sonoma. It's pretty much a horsepower track. It's horsepower and aerodynamics just like it is anywhere else we go. It just happens to be in the form of a road course. Sonoma has a lot less grip in the race track. You have to really be careful with the throttle there, and that puts more of the race in the driver's hands. If anything, Sonoma is probably more technical than Watkins Glen because there's hardly any time where you get a chance to rest. You're always either shifting or accelerating or braking or turning or doing something. At Watkins Glen, at least on the frontstretch and on the backstretch, there are three straightaways where you get a little bit of time to take a break. Watkins Glen seems to be more in the crew's hands and the engine builder's hands. Obviously, there's still a job that I need to do in the race car, but I'm relying on the equipment and the crew a lot more at Watkins Glen."
Is a race at Watkins Glen more physical than a race at Sonoma?
"No, I don't believe so. You've got a couple of long straightaways at Watkins Glen to let your body relax, stretch out your arms and catch your breath. I feel like I have more opportunities to relax a little bit at Watkins Glen."
Does road racing require more finesse or more manhandling depending on where you are on the race track?
"Track position dictates where and when you need to finesse and when you need to just go at it. Track position is a big deal anywhere these days, but it's definitely a big deal at Watkins Glen. It's hard to pass there from the standpoint that there are a couple of good braking zones where you can pass. But the thing is, everyone is so even that you've got be able to out drag race them down the straightaways after you out brake them going into a corner. Getting the car to turn and handle is a big part of it, but you still have to be able to run well down the straightaway. At Sonoma, you've got to get your car handling or else it doesn't really matter how much horsepower you've got. Handling well at Watkins Glen is an important factor, but it seems like horsepower is a much bigger part of the equation versus Sonoma."
Since you race on ovals 34 times a year, do you have to adjust your mindset to run road courses twice a year?
"We've won at both of the road courses on the circuit. I always look forward to the road courses just because it's a weekend of something different from what we've done the past five or 10 weekends. We go to a road course just like we do any track. We go there to win."
How much has racing in the Rolex Sports Car Series helped for when you head to places like Sonoma and Watkins Glen with your Home Depot Chevrolet?
"I would like to believe I've learned some things. I'm not sure there is any one particular thing that I've noticed, but I do feel like the more you do it the better you are at it. Road racing isn't something I have to get acclimated to because running them feels pretty natural to me. I enjoy the road courses, and as we get ready to go to places like Watkins Glen I really look forward to it."
With seemingly half the field having a diverse racing background and with many of the Nextel Cup drivers having joined you in competing in the Rolex Sports Car Series, is there such a thing as a road course ringer anymore?
"Yes and no. There are road course guys who are good at road course racing, but they're not used to running stock cars. But there are guys who are used to running stock cars who aren't used to running road courses. But if you look at the history of road course racing, the guys who come from a road racing background seem to be able to get into any kind of car and do fairly well. So I think they do have an advantage, but maybe not as much as they had six or seven years ago."
Considering your recent history of racing sports cars on road courses, do you consider yourself a road course ringer?
"I don't think so. If you look at how many Nextel Cup races I've run on road courses (13), there are a lot of veterans who have run two or three times the amount of road course races I have. I don't think you can call me a ringer. I think you can call me a guy who is solid on the road courses because we've won at Sonoma and Watkins Glen, but I don't think you can call me a ringer."
If a driver hates racing at road courses, is he already beaten simply because he doesn't have the proper mindset to compete there?
"They've already got a strike against them for that reason. If a guy goes there with the attitude that they're not going to enjoy it no matter what, then that's probably what'll happen. Until they get the mindset that they're going to enjoy running a road course and that they're going to have fun with it, they'll have a strike against them. Success on a road course breeds success. If you have some success on a road course you're probably going to like racing there. If you don't have success on a road course, it's probably a style of racing you're not going to like."
Why are some guys better road course drivers than others?
"Because some work harder at it than others. With some of those guys it's the old saying 'it's hard to teach an old dog new tricks.' Some of these guys have done nothing but race stock cars on ovals all their lives, but even though it's still a stock car, when it comes time to run the road courses it's something totally different. It just depends on their attitude when they get there and how good they want to be."
Is it a matter of experience, or are there other factors?
"It plays a big role, especially with guys who have a good road racing background. They're still only going to be as good as their car is. But if their car is right, they're tough. And they make you earn every bit of it because they have the knowledge to be good on road courses."
To prepare for the IRL IndyCar Series' visit to Watkins Glen, the track has removed the sand trap at the end of turn one and replaced it with an asphalt strip, while the curbing along the esses has been knocked down a bit. Will those adjustments change the way you drive the track?
"I think they're positive changes. I mean, I think the sand trap was always good. The theory behind sand traps was always to slow the cars down before they got to the wall. But with a downhill corner like that into turn one, most of the time when cars got off over there, they either got stuck or went through the sand trap and hit the wall. With pavement there, the same guys who would get stuck will at least be able to get going again and the guys who were going to hit the wall are still going to hit the wall, regardless of whether there's sand or pavement there now."
Chassis No. 48:
This car is responsible for all four of Stewart’s road course victories, having scored two wins apiece at Sonoma (2001 and 2005) and Watkins Glen (2002 and 2004). It is one of the oldest cars in the Joe Gibbs Racing stable, but it has obviously proven its worth in its 10 career starts – all of which have come at road courses. Chassis No. 48 has only two qualifying efforts outside of the top-10, and its eight top-10 starting positions are highlighted by the pole it scored at Sonoma in 2002. In all, Chassis No. 48 has led 137 of the 1,002 laps available (13.7 percent), including two occasions where it led the most laps – Watkins Glen in 2004 (46 laps led) and Sonoma in 2005 (39 laps led). The #20 team tested Chassis No. 48 at Watkins Glen Aug. 2.
Notes of Interest:
The Sirius At The Glen will mark Stewart’s 234th career NASCAR NEXTEL Cup Series start, his seventh career start at Watkins Glen and his 14th career road course start.
As a result of his win on Aug. 7 at Indianapolis, Stewart gained one position in the Nextel Cup point standings to take the lead in the championship point standings with 2,923 points. Second-place Jimmie Johnson trails Stewart by 75 points, third-place Greg Biffle by 111 points, fourth-place Rusty Wallace by 218 points and fifth-place Kurt Busch by 277 points. At this point last year Stewart was fourth in the standings with 2,761 points, 334 points behind series leader Johnson. Stewart has scored 162 more points this year than he did last year heading into the 22nd race of the season.
With a second-place finish June 19 at Michigan, a win June 26 at Sonoma (Calif.), another win July 2 at Daytona (Fla.), a fifth-place effort July 10 at Chicagoland, another win July 17 at New Hampshire, a seventh-place finish July 24 at Pocono and yet another win Aug. 7 at Indianapolis, Stewart advanced from 10th in points to first in just seven races while picking up a staggering 455 points on former series leader Jimmie Johnson. Stewart comes into Watkins Glen with an average finish of third in his last seven races.
Stewart has won four of the last six races – Sonoma, Daytona, New Hampshire and Indianapolis. And with his win Aug. 7 at Indianapolis, Stewart moved into a tie with Ricky Rudd for 24th on NASCAR’s all-time win list.
Stewart has scored nine top-fives and 13 top-10s in the 21 races run this season.
Twenty-one races into 2005, Stewart is tied for first with Greg Biffle in bonus points earned with a total of 85. Jimmie Johnson and Kurt Busch are tied for second in bonus points earned with 65 bonus points apiece, while Ryan Newman is third with 60 bonus points. (Bonus points are awarded only for laps led. Five points are given for leading a lap, while another five points are given for leading the most laps.)
Stewart has led the most laps in seven races this year – 107 laps in the Daytona 500, 247 laps at Martinsville (Va.), 97 laps at Michigan, 39 laps at Sonoma (Calif.), 151 laps in the Pepsi 400 at Daytona, 232 laps at New Hampshire and 44 laps at Indianapolis. Stewart has led a total of 1,107 laps in the 21 races run this season, the most of any driver. Greg Biffle is second in laps led with 1,012. No other driver has led more than 500 laps.
Of the five races remaining before the Chase for the Championship, Stewart has won at four of those venues – Watkins Glen, N.Y. (8/11/2002 & 8/15/2004), Michigan (6/11/2000), Bristol, Tenn. (8/25/2001) and Richmond, Va. (9/11/1999, 5/5/2001 & 5/4/2002). The only venue where Stewart has yet to record a victory is Fontana (Calif.).
Stewart has four road course wins in Nextel Cup competition, including the past two road course races – Watkins Glen in 2004 and earlier this year at Sonoma.
In his 13 career road course starts, Stewart has five top-twos and eight top-10s. He has only one finish lower than 15th – a 26th place result at Watkins Glen in 2001.
Stewart has never recorded a DNF in any of his 13 career road course races and has a lap completion rate of 100 percent.
Before coming to Sonoma as a Nextel Cup rookie in 1999 – his first road course race in a stock car – Stewart attended the Bob Bondurant Driving School in Phoenix to polish his road racing skills.
Before attending the Bondurant school, Stewart’s last foray into road racing had been while he was competing in the World Karting Association in 1987. He was 16 years old.
Home Depot store #525, located in Dallas, Texas, will be represented on the lower rear quarterpanel of the #20 Home Depot Chevrolet during the Sirius At The Glen. Store #525 was judged to be the outstanding store of the past week, thereby earning its place on the #20 Joe Gibbs Racing machine.
Road Scholar – Stewart has raced in two Grand Am Series races this year as part of the Rolex Sports Car Series. His first race came in Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona Feb. 5-6, where he and his Howard-Boss Motorsports co-drivers Jan Lammars and Andy Wallace were leading with less than two hours remaining when a broken gearbox dropped them off the lead lap. But the crew was able to make repairs so that the trio could rejoin the race, whereupon they finished third. It was Stewart’s first podium finish in the Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona. Stewart competed for Howard-Boss Motorsports again in the June 30 Brumos Porsche 250 – also at Daytona – where he and Wallace finished 22nd. Stewart will join Wallace once more Friday afternoon at The Glen when they compete in the CompUSA 200 Grand Am race.
Stewart will make a return to the NASCAR Busch Series on Saturday driving the #33 Old Spice Chevrolet for Kevin Harvick Inc. (KHI) in the Zippo 200 at The Glen. It will be Stewart’s first career Busch Series start at Watkins Glen, and it will also be Stewart’s 10th race as part of his 11-race Busch Series schedule for 2005, all of which will come with KHI. Stewart has a total of one win, three poles, 11 top-fives and 12 top-10s in 50 Busch Series starts.
9 starts for Kevin Harvick in 2005 (1 win – Daytona; 1 pole – California; 2nd at Atlanta; 5th at Phoenix; 15th at Richmond; 23rd at Indianapolis; 3 DNFs – Texas, Talladega and Charlotte)
1 start for Richard Childress in 2004 (2nd at Spring California)
1 start for Dale Earnhardt Jr. in 2004 (led a race-high 105 laps at Kansas but crashed while leading last lap – finished 25th)
2 starts for Kevin Harvick in 2004 (5th at Spring Charlotte and 11th at Atlanta)
1 start for Dale Earnhardt Jr. in 2003 (led a race-high 46 laps at Michigan but finished 11th when rain cut race short)
22 starts for Joe Gibbs in 1998 (2 poles – Spring and Fall Rockingham; 5 top-five finishes)
5 starts for Joe Gibbs in 1997 (1 top-five – 3rd at Fall Charlotte; two top-10s – Fall Charlotte and Fall Rockingham)
9 starts for Harry Ranier in 1996 (best start and finish were at Spring Bristol, 7th and 16th, respectively)