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Aaron's 499 - Tony Stewart Notes

TONY STEWART
Second City

ATLANTA (April 25, 2007) – Six times Tony Stewart has finished second at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway. The driver of the No. 20 Home Depot Chevrolet in the NASCAR NEXTEL Cup Series has watched as Bobby Hamilton Sr., Dale Earnhardt Jr., Jeff Gordon, Dale Jarrett and Jimmie Johnson have taken Talladega’s checkered flag just ahead of him.

And while Stewart is always determined to win and typically treats anything less than first with a bit of disdain, his run of runner-ups – which includes three of the past four Talladega races – leaves Stewart with a sense of satisfaction.

So much about racing at Talladega and at its restrictor plate cousin in Daytona (Fla.) is out of a driver’s control. To go fast and advance toward the front, drivers must use their 3,400-pound race cars and the air they collectively split to draft off one another. By using the vacuum created by the car cutting through the air in front of them, a driver can tuck up behind a fellow driver, and then, when the moment is right, slingshot by him with the momentum gained from riding in his wake.

It’s an art, one unknown to Renoir and Degas but practiced fervently by guys better known as Ricky and Dale.

Stewart is a reluctant restrictor plate artist. While unnerved by the fact he needs another driver’s push or draft to help him move toward the front, Stewart is more often than not at the front of a restrictor plate race. Of the 1,688 laps available in the past nine restrictor plate races (2005-2007), Stewart has led 478 of those laps (28.3 percent).

Elevating that number are Stewart’s back-to-back wins in the Fourth of July race at Daytona, where for the past two seasons, Stewart has dominated by leading 237 of the 320 laps available (74 percent).

And while Stewart has yet to record a win at Talladega’s vast, 2.66-mile oval, it seems only a matter of time before Stewart’s orange and black Chevrolet Monte Carlo is the one a different driver sees beating him to the checkered flag.

You’ve finished second six times at Talladega and logged eight top-fives and 10 top-10s in 16 career Nextel Cup starts. Despite those strong finishes, does not having won bother you?
“No, not at all. I mean, Talladega is a track where you can’t do anything on your own. You have to strictly rely on what everybody else around you is doing. It’s still not real racing when somebody else has to go with you and somebody else can dictate how you run. If you don’t ever have anybody go with you all day you never have a shot at winning. But if you have guys go with you, you have a shot. We haven’t won there, but look at how many second-place finishes we’ve had. Anytime you can finish in the top-two is like a win at Talladega, especially when you’ve done it as consistently as we have. As volatile as Talladega can be with getting caught in a wreck and this or that, for us to have finished second there six times, and three times in the past four races, that’s something to be pretty proud of because Talladega is not a race track where you can do it all on your own. You’ve got to have help. Our finishing average is pretty high – higher than most for the amount of races we’ve run there. So I’m pretty satisfied with the way we’ve run there.”

Since it seems as though you’ve mastered restrictor plate racing, do you still dislike it?
“I dislike anything where you have to rely on somebody else. To me, what you and your team do should be what it’s all about. I don’t like having to have a guy behind you or in front of you dictate what you do and where you go. That’s really the one reason why I dislike it. It’s very nerve-wracking when you can’t plan your moves unless you know what the guy behind you or in front of you is going to do.”

Is there any strategy involved in running a restrictor plate race, or is it just a matter of taking advantage of the opportunities that are presented?
“The strategy is making sure you’ve got somebody you can draft with. You have to take the opportunities as they come, but with those opportunities you have to make a very quick decision. You’ve got to think, ‘What happens if I try this and it doesn’t work? What are the ramifications going to be?’ You don’t have the luxury of sitting down and taking the time to analyze the situation. You’ve got to make a split-second decision. A lot of times it’ll work, but there are times when the decision that you made doesn’t work. But once you’ve committed yourself to doing something, there’s not much you can do about it.”

Patience is an obvious virtue on the short tracks, but how important is it at a restrictor plate track?
“It’s the gospel, basically. There are a lot of times when you think you can pull out and pass, but if you do, once you get there you realize that you can’t pass. It makes it real critical that you take your time and that you don’t get caught up in trying to make a move too fast. Just stay in line, and sometimes you’ll have more patience than 20 other guys.

“It’s such a chess match. You can be leading the race one second and you can be fifth the next second. I think it’s just a matter of timing and getting yourself in the right place at the right time.”

Is a fast car all you need to be successful in restrictor plate races?
“You have to have a fast car. But with that fast car, you’ve got to have a good team that gets you in and out of the pits fast, and you’ve got to have a driver who knows what he’s doing. Get all that together, along with a little bit of luck, and you can have a good day.”

Do you enjoy racing at Talladega?
“You can say the track hasn’t been kind to me with as many second place finishes as we’ve had, but there are 41 guys who didn’t have it as good as we had it those days. There have been a lot of days where we ran second and it was as good as a win for us. Last year’s spring race was a perfect example. We knew we didn’t have the best car, but we ended up with a second-place finish. That was the best we could do and we left the track with smiles on our faces.

“The Talladega weeks are always fun weeks for me because I go fishing and it’s a week where I don’t turn my cell phone on and I don’t worry about the race car. It’s just a week to kind of hit the reset button, and by the time I get to the track, I’m fresh and ready to go. I always have fun when I come to Talladega.”

What’s the difference between racing at Talladega and Daytona?
“You can run two- and three-wide all day at Daytona. At Talladega you can run three-wide all day easily, and sometimes four-wide. Essentially, Talladega just has an extra lane compared to Daytona, because its track is a little easier to get a hold of mechanically. Handling isn’t near as big of an issue as it is at Daytona. Talladega is just about speed, and finding more of it. It’s bigger, so its corners are a little bit bigger, which is why handling doesn’t seem to be quite as much of an issue.”

Despite having not won yet this season, you’ve run well, as you’ve led more laps (584) and more miles (604.61) than any other driver. From that standpoint, are you happy with where the No. 20 team stands among the competition?
“This business is strictly a week-to-week business. What you did last week may or may not work this week. The main reason for that is technology. Every week people are working to get their programs better than what they were the week before. If some organization hits on something, you could be a top-five car and all of a sudden struggle to be a top-10 car. That being said, I’m fairly happy with where we’re at. We just don’t have anything to show for it, and that’s what is so frustrating. Laps led, miles led – it’s finishing races that matters, and we’ve had some really good days go bad. Still, there’s a lot of racing left. We want to win everywhere we go, and our team is working hard to do just that.”

Chassis No. 96:
Talladega will mark Chassis No. 96’s first career start, despite the fact that it’s been in the No. 20 team’s stable for four years. It has served as a backup since it was first built in 2003. Typically, a race at Talladega would see Chassis No. 70, the workhorse restrictor plate car that carried Stewart to three wins (2005 & 2006 Pepsi 400s at Daytona, 2007 Gatorade Duel at Daytona) eight top-threes and 13 top-10s. But that car’s career ended on lap 153 of this year’s Daytona 500 when it crashed hard in turn four. The car that won this year’s Budweiser Shootout at Daytona – Chassis No. 119 – is being saved for a return trip to Daytona for this year’s Pepsi 400. There, Stewart will attempt to win the 160-lap race for the third straight time.

Notes of Interest:

  • The Aaron’s 499 will mark Stewart’s 293rd career NASCAR NEXTEL Cup Series start and his 17th career Nextel Cup start at Talladega.
  • Stewart is currently seventh in the Nextel Cup point standings with 994 points, 332 markers behind series leader Jeff Gordon as a result of his second-place finish last Saturday night at Phoenix. The result gained Stewart two positions in the Nextel Cup point standings. At this point last year Stewart was fifth in the standings with 1,141 points, 77 markers behind series leader Matt Kenseth. Stewart has scored 147 fewer points this year than he did last year heading into the ninth race of the season.
  • Seventh in Points, but No. 1 in Laps Led/Miles Led: Stewart has led a series-best 584 laps (21.7 percent) in the eight races held this season. Second is Jeff Gordon with 467 laps led (17.3 percent). Stewart has led 117 more laps than Gordon. Stewart has led a series-best 604.61 miles in the eight races held this season. Gordon is second with 580.79 miles led. Stewart has led 23.82 more miles than Gordon.
  • Stewart has finished second at Talladega six times (Spring 2006, Fall 2005, Spring 2005, Fall 2002, Spring 2001 and Fall 2001), tying him with Bobby Allison and Mark Martin for the most runner-up finishes without a victory at a track currently on the Nextel Cup schedule. Allison finished second six times and never won at Martinsville, while Martin holds this distinction at Pocono.
  • Stewart has eight top-fives and 10 top-10s in 16 career Nextel Cup starts at Talladega.
  • Of the 654 laps Stewart has led in the 33 point-paying restrictor plate races he has run, 516 have been at Daytona (78.9 percent). The remaining 138 laps led have come at Talladega. Stewart has made 17 starts at Daytona and 16 starts at Talladega.
  • Of the 747 laps available in the four restrictor plates run in 2005 – 203 laps in the Daytona 500, 194 laps at Talladega in May, 160 laps at Daytona in July and 190 laps at Talladega in October – Stewart led 325 of those laps (43.5 percent). And in those four races, Stewart finished seventh, second, first and second, respectively, to log an average finish of third.
  • Of the 739 laps available in the four restrictor plate races run in 2006 – 203 laps in the Daytona 500, 188 laps at Talladega in April, 160 laps at Daytona in July and 188 laps at Talladega in October – Stewart led 118 of those laps (16 percent). And in those four races, Stewart finished fifth, second, first and 22nd, respectively, to log an average finish of seventh.
  • Of the 1,688 laps available in the past nine restrictor plate races (2005-2007), Stewart has led 478 of those laps (28.3 percent).
  • What happened in Stewart’s most recent restrictor plate race? – After scoring back-to-back wins in the two non-point races held this year at Daytona – the Budweiser Shootout and the Gatorade Duel – Stewart was intent on capping the week with a victory in the Daytona 500, thereby becoming the only driver to ever sweep all three Nextel Cup events held during Daytona Speedweeks. But after leading twice for 35 laps, including laps 150-152 when Stewart paced Kurt Busch around the 2.5-mile oval, a nudge from the nose of Busch’s Dodge into the left rear bumper of Stewart’s No. 20 Home Depot Chevrolet sent Stewart hard into the turn four wall. Stewart emerged from his mangled race car unscathed, as did Busch, who also smacked the turn four wall after his contact with Stewart. However potent Stewart’s run had been, it ended with a 43rd-place finish, 50 laps off the pace.
  • In his Nextel Cup career, Stewart has two point-paying victories in restrictor plate races – the 2005 July race at Daytona where Stewart won the pole and led all but nine of the race’s 160 laps (94.4 percent) and last year’s July race at Daytona where Stewart started second and led a race-high 86 laps (53.8 percent).
  • Stewart has five other Nextel Cup wins in non-point restrictor plate races. All have been at Daytona, with three victories in the Budweiser Shootout (2001, 2002 and 2007) and two victories in the Gatorade Duel (2005 and 2007).
  • “You Must Be a Local” – Two members of The Home Depot Racing Team are from Alabama.
  • Shock Specialist Ronny Crooks is from Hueytown, Ala.
  • Rear Tire Changer Todd Foster is from Birmingham, Ala. (Upon graduating high school, Foster worked with driver Stanley Smith in various Late Model, Busch Series and Nextel Cup endeavors between 1989 and 1993. When Smith was seriously injured following an accident at Talladega in 1993, Foster worked for Smith’s drywall company from 1993 to 1997. Foster moved to Charlotte in 1998, where his first job in Nextel Cup was with Cale Yarborough Motorsports and driver Rick Mast. He joined Joe Gibbs Racing following the 2001 season.)
  • Home Depot store No. 3702, located in Bismarck, N.D., will be represented on the lower rear quarterpanel of the No. 20 Home Depot Chevrolet during the Aaron’s 499. Store No. 3702 was judged to be the outstanding store of the past week, thereby earning its place on the No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing machine.

    NASCAR Busch Series Notes of Interest:

  • Stewart will make a return to the NASCAR Busch Series on Saturday driving the No. 33 Old Spice Chevrolet for Kevin Harvick Inc., in the Aaron’s 312 at Talladega. It will be Stewart’s fifth career Busch Series start at Talladega. His best Talladega result came in 2005 when Stewart started 23rd and led 11 laps en route to a 20th place finish. The Aaron’s 312 will mark Stewart’s fifth race as part of his 12-race Busch Series schedule for 2007. Stewart has a total of two wins, four poles, 16 top-fives and 21 top-10s in 69 Busch Series starts.
  • 2 starts for Joe Gibbs Racing in 2007 (finished 11th at spring California; finished 10th at spring Atlanta)
  • 2 starts for Kevin Harvick Inc. in 2007 (finished 8th at spring Daytona; finished third at Las Vegas)
  • 1 start for Joe Gibbs Racing in 2006 (finished 2nd at Fall Texas)
  • 1 start for Dale Earnhardt Inc., in 2006 (finished 16th at Fall Charlotte)
  • 10 starts for Kevin Harvick Inc., in 2006 (won at spring Daytona; 12th at Las Vegas; led 25 laps at Talladega before a crash left him with a DNF, finished 39th; led 12 laps at Darlington before a crash with a lapped car dropped him to 29th; DNF at Charlotte, finished 42nd; 12th at Daytona; ninth at Chicagoland; 11th at Michigan; sixth at fall California; fourth at Kansas)
  • 11 starts for Kevin Harvick Inc. in 2005 (won at spring Daytona; 2 poles – California & Watkins Glen; 2nd at Atlanta; 4th at Watkins Glen; 5th at Phoenix; 15th at Spring Richmond; 23rd at Indianapolis; 5 DNFs – California, Texas, Talladega, Charlotte and Richmond)
  • 1 start for Joe Gibbs Racing in 2005 (crashed while contending for the lead at Fall Charlotte)
  • 1 start for Richard Childress Racing in 2004 (2nd at Spring California)
  • 1 start for Dale Earnhardt Jr. in 2004 (led a race-high 115 laps at Kansas but crashed while leading last lap – finished 25th)
  • 2 starts for Kevin Harvick Inc., 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 Racing in 1998 (2 poles – Spring and Fall Rockingham; 5 top-five finishes)
  • 5 starts for Joe Gibbs Racing 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)



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