TONY STEWART
No Rest for the Weary
ATLANTA (March 5, 2008) – Ready or not, round four of the 36-race NASCAR Sprint Cup Series schedule is upon us. The days and weeks leading into this weekend’s stop at Atlanta Motor Speedway have been harried, and for some, a bit hurtful.
After 10 days spent in Daytona Beach, Fla., for Speedweeks, teams journeyed west to Fontana, Calif. And after a rain-postponed race on Monday, picked up stakes and trekked to Las Vegas, site of last weekend’s Sprint Cup race. But teams did not come straight home to North Carolina. Instead, they visited Phoenix International Raceway for a two-day test before taking red-eye flights back to the Charlotte-area so they could spend all day Wednesday preparing for Atlanta.
And what if you tore up a perfectly good race car at Las Vegas? Tough. That’s why they build backup race cars. And what if you happened to be the driver of one of those torn up race cars? Tough. That’s why you make the big bucks, and why you’re nursing some soreness and general bruising while turning laps on a Monday and Tuesday at the desert oval in Phoenix.
That was the case for Tony Stewart, driver of the No. 20 Home Depot Toyota for Joe Gibbs Racing. Stewart was running solidly in the top-10 Sunday at Las Vegas before a blown right-front tire on lap 108 sent him hard into the SAFER Barrier that lines the outside retaining wall.
Stewart earned a 43rd-place finish and some nice bruises for his early exit. But that didn’t mean his tough day at the office excused him from punching his time card out in Phoenix. The two-time Sprint Cup champion grimaced through 14 hours of testing at Phoenix before getting a day of rest on Wednesday.
Hopefully, Stewart enjoyed his day off, for Thursday is busy, albeit away from the track. The Home Depot driver flew in for a full day at Home Depot’s Atlanta-based headquarters. When the day is done, it’ll be dark before Stewart is able to clap out for the evening and mentally prepare himself for three days back in a race car.
At least at Atlanta, it’s one less car. After opening the season with three straight weeks of double-duty by competing in Sprint Cup and the NASCAR Nationwide Series, Stewart is only competing in Cup at Atlanta. And while he might like to continue on in the Nationwide Series, for back-to-back wins at Daytona and Fontana have him atop the championship driver standings, Stewart knows that the downtime away from a race car will be a welcome reprieve for a body and mind bludgeoned by the modern-day schedule of a Sprint Cup driver.
Tony Stewart, driver of the No. 20 Home Depot Toyota for Joe Gibbs Racing:
After two hard hits in two days last weekend at Las Vegas, as you endured crashes in the Nationwide Series race on Saturday and the Sprint Cup race on Sunday, how are you feeling, especially after testing for two days at Phoenix?
“The test was fine. Obviously, I battled through a lot of soreness, but the (right) foot’s just bruised and I got a lot of bruises everywhere else, but that’s just a part of this deal. By the weekend, it’ll be healed, or almost healed, so it’s no different than a normal racing rheumatism, as the doctors call it, and we’ll be just fine. We’re race car drivers. We’re tough. It’s no different than anybody else who hit the wall. We’re all probably sore from this weekend, but we’ll all be fine for this weekend and I’m no different.”
After running at Fontana and Las Vegas with the current generation race car, have you found a lot of difference in terms of how the cars drive in comparison to the older generation-type race car you drove there last year?
“The common variable we’ve seen everywhere we’ve went on these bigger tracks is that they’re a lot freer on entry and exit and tighter in the center of the corners. Whether it’s Atlanta or anywhere else where we run a mile-and-a-half or bigger track, those are the variables that we’ve been fighting. I don’t think this weekend at Atlanta will be any different.”
Did this current generation race car handle the same way at Fontana and Las Vegas than it did when you tested it at Atlanta late last October?
“Yeah, it was pretty much in line with what we’ve had the last couple of weeks. I think everybody’s cars will probably drive better than what they did at the test at Atlanta just because we’ve now had some time to work with them a little bit, and hopefully, that’ll help make us more comfortable in our return to Atlanta.”
Atlanta is the fastest track on the Sprint Cup circuit. Does that hold any additional challenges for drivers?
“I don’t think there is anything to that. Whatever happens, happens. Anything can happen at whatever race track. Something weird happens to somebody every week. I don’t think it is because of where you go – it’s just the sport of racing. Weird things happen. Nobody can say why they happen or why they happen more at some tracks more than others. Stuff just happens. That’s why we keep racing.”
What are the keys to being successful at Atlanta?
“You just have to constantly adjust your race car. Atlanta cools off so much and changes so much that you always have to be on top of your setups. You need to make sure that you have enough adjustability as the day goes on. You don’t want to get your car so good at the first half of the day that it gets too tight at the end of the day. You almost have to be a little bit on the loose side to really be good at the end of the day.”
What makes Atlanta different from a lot of the other 1.5-mile ovals the Sprint Cup Series visits?
“Well, you move around a lot more. The surface gets more and more abrasive each time we go there. The neat thing is that the times fall off so guys move around on the race track more. Everybody starts at the bottom, and the fast guys normally end up right around the wall midway through a run. That is something that is different than Charlotte and some of the other tracks on the circuit. Fast guys ran at the top and at the bottom at Charlotte. Other than that, it’s shaped exactly like the other ones are.”
Do you like having the ability to try different grooves at Atlanta?
“I like having the flexibility to be able to move around. I know that if my car isn’t driving all that well in a particular spot that I have the flexibility as a driver to move around on the race track. You can make a difference. It’s like Michigan where you can move around and help yourself as a driver, versus being committed and whatever you’ve got, you’ve got. It does make you feel better as a driver to know you have that flexibility.”
Greg Zipadelli, crew chief of the No. 20 Home Depot Toyota for Joe Gibbs Racing:
How taxing has the last two months been in terms of getting ready for Daytona and then a West Coast swing to races at California and Las Vegas before ending with a test at Phoenix?
“You look at it and try to figure out how you get trucks lined up and cars out to Las Vegas and then to Phoenix for the test. It’s hard to get everything figured out. For us, we all have test trucks and we all have three drivers per team, basically, with two primaries per team and then a test truck driver, and we’re fortunate enough to have the resources to get things done. But for some of the team that are a little less fortunate than we are, I can’t imagine how they’ve gotten it done.
“It’s really crazy and I wonder why we’re doing all that we’re doing, but I guess when it’s all said and done, we got a lot of stuff out of the way and hopefully it makes the middle part of the year a little more enjoyable because we’ve got a lot of our testing out of the way. At least, that’s the way I’m looking at it.”
Have these West Coast races and the test at Phoenix given you information you can use this weekend at Atlanta, but also at future weekends on the schedule?
“I hope so, but this is all new – taking this CoT (Car of Tomorrow) to these mile and mile-and-a-half ovals. Obviously, there’s a lot to learn, but so far, so good. I thought Daytona was the best we’ve ever been at Speedweeks. We’re certainly not going back to what we had, so we’ve got to figure out what works for this car and what gets Tony comfortable. That’s the biggest thing – us coming up with some packages that we feel comfortable unloading with at the track. Then, we can kind of tune and adjust from there.”
Chassis No. 203:
This is still a relatively new race car, as it first turned a wheel on a race track when it made its rain-delayed debut at Auto Club Speedway in Fontana,
Calif., where Stewart finished a solid seventh in round two of the 36-race Sprint Cup schedule. Atlanta will mark Chassis No. 203’s second career start.
Joe Gibbs Racing Atlanta Anecdotes:
The Atlanta area has been very good to Joe Gibbs Racing. The team has earned a total of eight NASCAR Sprint Cup Series wins, two Sprint
Cup poles and one NASCAR Nationwide Series pole at Atlanta Motor Speedway in Hampton, Ga., while also garnering two NHRA Top Fuel
victories and one NHRA Funny Car win at Atlanta Dragway in Commerce, Ga.
Win: Tony Stewart on Oct. 29, 2006 at Atlanta Motor Speedway in Sprint Cup Series
Pole: Mike Bliss on Oct. 29, 2004 at Atlanta Motor Speedway in Nationwide Series
Win: Bobby Labonte on March 9, 2003 at Atlanta Motor Speedway in Sprint Cup Series
Win: Tony Stewart on March 10, 2002 at Atlanta Motor Speedway in Sprint Cup Series
Win: Bobby Labonte on Nov. 18, 2001 at Atlanta Motor Speedway in Sprint Cup Series
Pole: Bobby Labonte on March 12, 1999 at Atlanta Motor Speedway in Sprint Cup Series
Win: Bobby Labonte on Nov. 21, 1999 at Atlanta Motor Speedway in Sprint Cup Series
Win: Cory McClenathan on April 18, 1998 at Atlanta Dragway in NHRA Top Fuel
Win: Cruz Pedregon on April 18, 1998 at Atlanta Dragway in NHRA Funny Car
Win: Bobby Labonte on March 9, 1998 at Atlanta Motor Speedway in Sprint Cup Series
Win: Bobby Labonte on Nov. 16, 1997 at Atlanta Motor Speedway in Sprint Cup Series
Win: Bobby Labonte on Nov. 10, 1996 at Atlanta Motor Speedway in Sprint Cup Series
Pole: Bobby Labonte on Nov. 8, 1996 at Atlanta Motor Speedway in Sprint Cup Series
Win: Cory McClenathan on April 25, 1995 at Atlanta Dragway in NHRA Top Fuel
Notes of Interest:
The Atlanta 500 will mark Stewart’s 324th career NASCAR Sprint Cup Series start and his 19th career Sprint Cup start at Atlanta.
Stewart is currently 11th in the Sprint Cup point standings with 355 points, 115 markers behind series leader and Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Kyle
Busch as a result of his 43rd-place finish last Sunday at Las Vegas. At this point last year Stewart was 13th in the standings with 332 points, 163
markers behind series leader Mark Martin. Stewart has scored 23 more points this year than he did last year heading into the fourth race of
the season.
Race Rewind – Stewart led five times for 121 laps in last year’s spring race at Atlanta, but finished second after a side-by-side battle with Jimmie
Johnson that ended on lap 322 when Johnson pinched Stewart’s No. 20 Home Depot machine into the turn two wall. While the damage to
Stewart’s car was minimal, the speed lost from scrubbing the wall allowed Johnson to motor on to a 1.311-second advantage when the checkered
flag dropped.
“He (Johnson) was faster than us right there. I just wish he would’ve given us enough room to race him for it,” Stewart said. “That’s racing, and
that’s why everybody loves coming to Atlanta. I wish we could have won it obviously, but we had a run like we needed today. We gained a lot of
points and gave this Home Depot team a boost.
“My Home Depot guys did an awesome job. We fought back after a bad pit stop to take the lead later in the race,” said Stewart, referring to a long
pit stop on lap 144 when a lugnut fell off the left rear tire. “We just didn’t have enough there at the end. We were both racing hard with three laps
to go. It is what it is. He’s in victory lane and I’m here talking about finishing second.”
Stewart’s win in the 2002 spring Atlanta race was his first win in a 500-mile Sprint Cup race. It was also his 13th career Sprint Cup victory.
Stewart now has five wins in 500-mile races – spring Atlanta in 2002, spring Pocono in 2003, fall Charlotte in 2003, fall Atlanta 2006 and fall
Texas 2006.
Stewart’s second win at Atlanta came in his October 2006 visit to Atlanta. In that race, Stewart led 146 of the 325 laps available (44.9 percent).
In his two wins at Atlanta, Stewart led 289 of the 650 laps available (44.5 percent).
Prior to his first Atlanta win, Stewart’s best finish at the 1.54-mile oval was ninth in the 2001 NAPA 500, for what was then his only top-10 finish
at Atlanta. Since winning at Atlanta, Stewart has finished within the top-10 all but twice, as he finished 17th in the 2005 spring race and 30th in
last year’s fall race.
Stewart has led a total of 789 laps in his 18 career starts at Atlanta (13.6 percent of the 5,777 laps available).
The No. 20 team tested at Atlanta Motor Speedway Oct. 29-30, 2007 with the Car of Tomorrow in preparation for this year’s Atlanta 500.
Home Depot store No. 3655, located in Jacksonville, N.C., will be represented on the lower rear quarterpanel of the No. 20 Home Depot Toyota
during the Atlanta 500. Store No. 3655 was judged to be the outstanding store of the past week, thereby earning its place on the No. 20 car.
Atlanta is home to Stewart’s Sprint Cup sponsor – The Home Depot.
Home Depot Corporate Notes:
Ten Years Strong for The Home Depot in NASCAR – Tony Stewart’s No. 20 Home Depot Toyota will sport a slightly different look when it
takes to the track for this weekend’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at Atlanta Motor Speedway. The traditional orange and black colors of
primary sponsor Home Depot will remain, but in celebration of the Atlanta-based company’s 10-year anniversary as a proud NASCAR sponsor and
staunch supporter of Stewart and Joe Gibbs Racing, a special paint scheme designed by one of The Home Depot’s 350,000 associates will adorn the
No. 20 machine. In a company-wide contest that began on Dec. 17, 2007 and ended on Jan. 18, 2008, Home Depot associates were encouraged to
design the car that Stewart would drive March 9 at Atlanta. From a total of 351 entries, the winning design came from the pen of Scott Foreman, a
Pro Desk Sales Associate who works at The Home Depot in Brighton, Colo.