TONY STEWART
The Not So Odd Couple
ATLANTA (Feb. 27, 2008) – When it was announced on Aug. 14, 2007 that Kyle Busch would join Joe Gibbs Racing (JGR) in 2008, many thought that Busch’s personality would conflict with the personalities of JGR’s other two drivers – Denny Hamlin and Tony Stewart.
More fingers pointed toward Stewart as the one who would most likely find friction with the addition of Busch, as the two had butted heads in the past. But two races and multiple test sessions into the 2008 NASCAR season, it appears that what some called NASCAR’s “Odd Couple” is anything but.
Whether it’s a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race or a NASCAR Nationwide Series race, Stewart and Busch have been bumper-to-bumper, working together to earn the best finish possible. It’s translated off the track as well, with the two drivers sharing insight into their respective car’s handling while also enjoying such serious discussions as which parts of Smokey and The Bandit are the best.
The results are black and white. Busch is atop the championship point standings in Sprint Cup and the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series and second in the NASCAR Nationwide Series. Stewart is third in Sprint Cup points while leading the Nationwide Series standings thanks to back-to-back wins at Daytona (Fla.) and Fontana (Calif.). Busch would lead the Nationwide Series standings as well if Stewart hadn’t elected to run the first two races of the season, for directly behind Stewart in both contests was Busch.
The addition of Busch also propelled Stewart and his No. 20 Home Depot Toyota to a strong second-place finish in the Gatorade Duel qualifying race at Daytona and a near-win in the season-opening Daytona 500. In between those two races during the latter part of Daytona Speedweeks, the two drivers met in Stewart’s motorcoach to simply hang out, with newcomer Busch bringing a gift to veteran Stewart – a DVD of Smokey and The Bandit.
With round three of the 36-race Sprint Cup schedule upon them, Stewart and Busch want to win more than ever. Sunday’s UAW-Dodge 400 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway is a race each driver covets.
For Stewart, Las Vegas is one of only four Sprint Cup venues where he has yet to win. The others are Fontana, Darlington (S.C.) and Talladega (Ala.).
For the 22-year-old Busch, Las Vegas Motor Speedway is his hometown track. He grew up racing across the street at the Las Vegas Bullring while also graduating with honors from Las Vegas’ Durango High School.
Just as the two drivers have pushed one another in pre-season testing and in the season’s first two races, they’ll continue to do so this weekend at Las Vegas. And to borrow a popular expression from the casino floors that line the Las Vegas Strip, they’ll be “all in” as soon as the green flag drops.
Tony Stewart, driver of the No. 20 Home Depot Toyota for Joe Gibbs Racing:
You have a new teammate in Kyle Busch. What does he bring to Joe Gibbs Racing?
“Kyle is a totally different guy than what a lot of people perceive him to be. I like Kyle. I’m proud to have him as a teammate and I’m proud of him as a competitor. He’s just a kid who’s happy-go-lucky. He’s always laughing about something, and that’s what we need. That kid loves racing more than anybody I know. He’ll run three races a weekend if the Trucks are here and not even think twice about it.
“Kyle and I, our relationship together when he first started was a little rough, but even before he signed the contract, we got things smoothed out and learned how to get along well with each other. It’s great having him here at Joe Gibbs Racing. I know people think he’s a little rough around the edges, but I see a lot of talent in him. He’s a great teammate. The test session that we had at Atlanta before the season was even over, working with him and talking to him and communicating with him, I knew then that he was going to be a strong asset to this team.
“He’s learned a lot of patience. He’s got a lot of qualities that are going to help this race team. Having all three cars up front every week is something that is going to make us that much stronger. Kyle is very much a team player already. He’s so willing to give information and talk about what his car is doing. Having that information and having three guys that are up front, with our cars driving fairly similarly, is going to make us that much stronger of a race team. We have three guys that have very similar personalities that I think are going to mesh really well.
“He’s got a different set of ideas that we haven’t had in the past. We had our first team meeting as far as the three crew chiefs, the three drivers and the three main engineers from each team, where we all got together after the shortened happy hour session that we had at California. And listening to how Kyle and Denny and I all work together, the crew chiefs all work together, I really believe that’s going to lead this team higher than it has ever been. That was really one of Kyle’s ideas with the team, was to try to get us all together after happy hour. I know we tried to do it some last year, but I think he was really adamant about all three teams being able to get together like that and share information. I really believe it is going to help us be a better race team. The three of us, even Denny and I, it’s got Denny and I communicating more than we ever have in the past.”
(The fourth paragraph just above comes courtesy of SIRIUS Satellite Radio’s “Tony Stewart Live” – Ed.)
Of the three drivers at Joe Gibbs Racing, it’s you who appears to be the leader.
“It’s a little frightening, right? The great thing about being the leader is that they can learn from my mistakes. I’m more than willing to give any information I can to keep them from having some of the problems that I’ve had in the past. I don’t know if I feel a sense of responsibility from that standpoint, but I remember what it was like when I came in and I remember how good Bobby Labonte was to me. Bobby was the guy I always leaned on for information. If I can help Denny and Kyle in that same way, then I’m more than willing to do that.
“There’s no manual that tells you how to adapt to the Cup Series. When you go from the Truck Series to the (Nationwide) Series, the transition isn’t huge, but when you make that last jump from (Nationwide) to Cup, it’s a huge jump. It always helps to have veterans that are willing to sit down and take time with you and help you get through some of the headaches and the hurdles that come with being a new guy.”
Last year at Las Vegas, you dealt with a freshly paved race track and an incredibly hard tire. The combination led to a lack of grip and a fair amount of discomfort in terms of the feel of your race car. But after testing at Las Vegas in January, where you had a new tire and the track had a year’s worth of weathering, did you feel that this year’s race would be a little bit more hospitable, at least from behind the wheel of the No. 20 Home Depot Toyota?
“The track has seasoned in pretty quick for a year, and to be honest, I’m surprised that it seasoned in as well as it has already. A different tire has helped it also.”
You’re pulling double-duty this weekend by competing in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race and in the NASCAR Nationwide Series race. It used to be that running in the Nationwide Series on Saturday would gain you some information that you could apply to Sunday’s Cup race. But now that the Cup Series is running a new generation car and the Nationwide Series continues to campaign the older generation car, how different are the two types of cars?
“The cars are quite a bit different. The Cup car is not supposed to handle like the other cars are, so you have to drive them totally different. They’re never going to be the same again. What you learn in the Nationwide race isn’t going to pertain to what you do in the Cup race because the cars are so different.”
How has the current generation race car made racing at a track like Las Vegas different than in year’s past?
“Because they’re not designed to handle as well, it obviously puts the driver more in the equation. But what it’s put a high emphasis on now is engineering. You’re still not going to make it any faster than it’s able to go. Now, you have to rely on the engineers to find the combination that will make the car go fast, and then you just wrestle the car from that point. A driver won’t be able to make up the difference. We’re not going to be able to take a 10th-place car and run first with it. A driver might be able to maintain what he’s got, but if his car isn’t driving well, he’s not going to win the race, and that’s where engineering is coming more into play.
“As technology and time have marched on, the window of getting your car right has become smaller and smaller and smaller. The engineers work within that window to get the car right, but you still have to have a driver who can put it in that window and drive it to its capabilities. So now, when you have a window that small, if you can pick up a half-tenth of a second as a driver, that makes that half-tenth more important than it used to be five years ago. Back then, a half-tenth might’ve been a tenth-and-a-half. With the window getting tighter and tighter, it makes the emphasis on the driver more important. But it’s not just the driver. It’s still about getting that car right. That’s why the engineers play such a critical role. If they can find a half-tenth, it’s just as important as a driver picking up a half-tenth. It makes every area from A-to-Z that much more critical than before.”
When you get to the race track, are you finding that what you have when you unload on Friday is what you pretty much have for the rest of the weekend?
“I think you’ll find a range that works. Everybody is still trying to figure it out, especially on the mile-and-a-half and two-mile ovals, where that ‘sweet-spot’ is. And once you find it, you don’t stray very far from one side to the other. A computer program is going to tell you what you have to run now. The Roush guys talked about that last year, that when they get to the track they get a sheet that says, ‘This is what the simulation program tells us is the setup to run.’ And the setup is pretty much right on.”
Chassis No. 194:
This is a brand new race car that has only seen the track twice in testing. The No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Team brought it to Las Vegas Jan. 28-29 and
California Speedway Jan. 31 during NASCAR Pre-season Thunder. It has also been tested numerous times in the wind tunnel.
Joe Gibbs Racing Las Vegas Anecdotes:
Joe Gibbs Racing has 2 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series poles at Las Vegas:
2003 UAW-DaimlerChrysler pole was won by former Joe Gibbs Racing driver Bobby Labonte
1999 Las Vegas 400 pole was won by Labonte
Joe Gibbs Racing has 1 NASCAR Nationwide Series pole at Las Vegas:
2004 Sam’s Town 300 pole was won by former Joe Gibbs Racing driver Mike Bliss
Joe Gibbs Racing comes into Las Vegas leading the championship point standings in Sprint Cup and in the Nationwide Series:
The No. 18 team of Kyle Busch leads the Sprint Cup point standings by six markers over the second-place No. 12 team of Penske Racing.
The No. 20 team of Tony Stewart leads the Nationwide Series point standings by 30 markers over the second-place No. 32 team of Braun Racing.
Notes of Interest:
The UAW-Dodge 400 will mark Stewart’s 323rd career NASCAR Sprint Cup Series start and his 10th career Sprint Cup start at Las Vegas.
Stewart is currently third in the Sprint Cup point standings with 316 points, 19 markers behind series leader and Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Kyle
Busch as a result of his seventh-place finish Feb. 25 at California. At this point last year Stewart was 21st in the standings with 186 points, 149
markers behind series leader Mark Martin. Stewart has scored 130 more points this year than he did last year heading into the third race of
the season.
Race Rewind – Stewart led six times for 54 laps in the 2006 Sprint Cup race at Las Vegas, but a flat tire just nine laps short of the finish took a sure
top-five and replaced it with a 21st-place finish.
Stewart’s best Sprint Cup result at Las Vegas came in the rain-shortened race in 2000, where he finished second to winner Jeff Burton.
Stewart has six top-10s, four top-fives and has led a total of 179 laps in nine career Sprint Cup starts at Las Vegas.
Stewart has won at Las Vegas, just not at the 1.5-mile oval. It came in November 2002 when he swept the USAC (United States Auto Club)
Sprint/Midget doubleheader at the Las Vegas Bullring. It was the first single night USAC sweep for Stewart on pavement.
The No. 20 team tested at Las Vegas Motor Speedway Jan. 28-29 in preparation for the UAW-Dodge 400.
Home Depot store No. 6925, located in Shorewood, Ill., will be represented on the lower rear quarterpanel of the No. 20 Home Depot Toyota during
the UAW-Dodge 400. Store No. 6925 was judged to be the outstanding store of the past week, thereby earning its place on the No. 20 car.
Stewart in NASCAR Nationwide Series Race at Las Vegas:
Stewart will make a return to the NASCAR Nationwide Series on Saturday driving the No. 20 Old Spice Toyota for Joe Gibbs Racing in the Sam’s
Town 300 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. He’ll look for his third consecutive Nationwide Series victory, as Stewart won the first two races on this
year’s Nationwide Series schedule at Daytona International Speedway and California Speedway, respectively. It will be Stewart’s fourth career
Nationwide Series start at Las Vegas. Stewart’s best career Nationwide Series result at Las Vegas came last year when he finished third
driving for Kevin Harvick Inc. The Sam’s Town 300 will mark Stewart’s third race as part of his nine-race Nationwide Series schedule for 2008.
Stewart has a total of four wins, five poles, 21 top-fives and 29 top-10s in 79 Nationwide Series starts.
2 starts for Joe Gibbs Racing in 2008 (won at Daytona from the pole; won at Spring California)
4 starts for Joe Gibbs Racing in 2007 (finished 11th at Spring California; finished 10th at Spring Atlanta; finished 4th at Fall Daytona; finished 7th
at Fall Texas)
8 starts for Kevin Harvick Inc. in 2007 (finished 8th at Spring Daytona; finished 3rd at Las Vegas; finished 2nd at Spring Talladega to KHI
teammate Bobby Labonte; finished 7th at Darlington; finished 4th at New Hampshire; finished 8th at Chicagoland; finished 30th at Fall Michigan;
finished 11th at Kansas)
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 and 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)
Home Depot Corporate Notes:
The Home Depot will host a free NASCAR-themed Kids Workshop at all of its U.S.-based stores from 9 a.m. to 12 noon on Saturday, March 1.
With expert advice from knowledgeable Home Depot associates, thousands of children, ages 5-12, will get the satisfaction of building their own
wooden replica of the No. 20 Home Depot Toyota driven by Tony Stewart in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series. On average, 75 children per store
will attend the Kids Workshop, while many stores have more than 150 kids attend regularly. The Home Depot will provide complimentary project
kits, tools and the expertise to build the kits, along with special kid-sized orange aprons.
An award-winning program that Home Depot stores have offered since 1997, Kids Workshops are free, how-to clinics designed for children ages 5-
12 that are available monthly at all Home Depot stores. Children, accompanied by an adult, use their skills to create objects that can be used in and
around their homes or communities.