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| Birthdate: 4/21/67 |
| Hometown: Berlin,
Conn. |
| Residence: Huntersville,
N.C. |
| Wife: Nanette |
Children:
Son, Zachary
Daughter, Elwina |
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ABOUT GREG
Greg's Biography:
Tony Stewart’s meteoric rise to the top of NASCAR wasn’t done alone.
From his rookie of the year title in 1999 to his two NASCAR Sprint
Cup Series championships and the 32 wins and 10 poles garnered in
nine years, crew chief Greg Zipadelli has been the man providing
Stewart with the proper tools for success.
For almost a decade Stewart’s engines have been powerful, his cars
have been reliable and his pit stops have been fast – all under
Zipadelli’s watch. Proof is in The Home Depot Racing Team’s average
point finish of fifth.
“When we started this team back in late ’98, we put a young group of
people together and we all made a commitment to work together and
take care of each other as best as we could as a company,” said
Zipadelli, quick to defer credit to those who surround him. “Without
them, we couldn’t have gotten as far as we have in the past nine
years.
“Everyone takes a lot of pride in what we’ve been able to accomplish
and how we’re structured. They ought to. They’re the hardest working
group of guys in the garage. I’d be willing to put them up against
anybody. I’ve been lucky that they’ve all hung together and I
haven’t had any indication that any of them wanted to leave. To me,
that’s good. They all plan on being here this year and in the years
to come.”
Zipadelli’s mechanical skills are matched by his human resources
abilities – a must for the modern-day crew chief, who wears the hat
of full-time mechanic, visionary and coach. What needs to be done to
the race car, what needs to be done in time for the next race, and
what needs to be done to keep the team happy, are all under the crew
chief’s job description.
Thanks to many years of motorsports experience, Zipadelli knows race
cars and team chemistry, allowing him to continue the juggling act
that no crew chief can ignore.
“From the time I get up in the morning to the time I go home, I wear
those hats,” Zipadelli said. “With today’s job, you wear those hats
all the time – with the crew and the driver.”
As evidenced by the team’s nine-year tenure, Zipadelli wears those
hats well, which is why he and Stewart have the longest active
tenure of any driver/crew chief relationship in the garage.
“We’ve done a good job with working together,” Zipadelli said. “It’s
all about having confidence in each other. I’m going to do whatever
I can for him, and in return, he’s going to drive as hard as he can
every lap for everybody involved.”
No one has driven harder than Stewart. He’s won at least two races
every year he’s been in Cup and has led almost 10,000 laps. In 2005,
he won five races and scored more top-five and top-10 finishes and
led more laps than any other Sprint Cup driver. The end result was a
second Cup Series championship for Stewart and Zipadelli, with the
first championship having come in 2002.
“Each year we try to improve upon all the things we need to improve
on from years past,” said Zipadelli, “from finishing laps to leading
laps to winning races – all in the same year. And it’s meaningful to
me because we do it as a group.”
“From day one we realized we both had the same passion and desire to
win races,” said Stewart regarding Zipadelli, the only crew chief
he’s ever worked with in Sprint Cup. “When you get two people with
the same desire and the same passion, you always find a way of
working well together.
“For me, it’s kind of like having a big brother who you learn from –
whether it’s stuff that goes on at the race track or away from the
race track, I lean on Greg quite a bit. We both have the same
passion and desire to win, and I think that’s a pretty strong bond
right there.”
Building championship race teams through strong bonds is nothing new
to Zipadelli. The Berlin, Conn.-native first began working on a
NASCAR Modified Series car owned by his father at age seven, and by
age 14, he was preparing race cars for his family-owned Sherwood
Racing Team.
By the time he was 20, Zipadelli was a championship-winning crew
chief, leading Modified Series driver Mike McLaughlin to the series
championship on the heels of five wins and 15 top-five finishes. Two
years later, McLaughlin was offered a ride in the NASCAR Camping
World Series East with prominent New England car owner Mike Greci.
At the behest of the driver, Greci named Zipadelli as crew chief for
the Series East effort. The tandem recorded five wins between 1990
and 1993.
McLaughlin departed Greci’s operation at the end of the 1993 season,
but Zipadelli stayed with the team and worked with a handful of
drivers in 1994 and 1995. Zipadelli’s perseverance paid off in 1996
when driver Mike Stefanik joined the team with substantial
sponsorship backing. While no wins were recorded that year, eight
top-five and nine top-10 finishes made way for a championship season
in 1997. Stefanik marched to the Series East title that year riding
a wave of consistency with two wins, 14 top-five finishes and 16
top-10 finishes, giving Zipadelli his second NASCAR touring series
championship in less than a decade.
Upon receiving his second championship ring at age 29, Zipadelli
headed south in 1998 to join Roush Fenway Racing’s Cup operation as
the chassis specialist for the No. 99 team of then driver Jeff
Burton. With Zipadelli’s astute recommendations for chassis setups,
Burton won two races, earned 18 top-five and 23 top-10 finishes and
finished fifth in points.
Zipadelli’s ascension up the racing ladder wasn’t over. In fact, it
had just begun.
When team owner Joe Gibbs began laying the groundwork for a second
team with Stewart behind the wheel, he conferred with Jimmy Makar,
Joe Gibbs Racing’s senior vice president of racing operations, as to
who would be the best choice to lead the No. 20 Home Depot Racing
Team. They looked no further than Zipadelli.
“As I worked and grew up, racing in Sprint Cup and winning a
championship – never mind multiple championships –was obviously my
dream,” Zipadelli said. “All I’ve ever wanted to do is race. That’s
pretty much all I’ve ever done. It’s pretty cool to be here.
“We’ve got the biggest group of competitive people ever put together
under one roof at Joe Gibbs Racing. We’re all focusing and aiming in
the same direction all at the same time. That’s the key thing. It’s
not myself. It’s not Tony. It’s everybody.”
Keeping that competitive fire in check is yet another job of the
crew chief. In Zipadelli’s case, it’s a job that has made him a
better crew chief.
“Tony has helped me mature as a person and as a leader by having to
adjust to some of the situations we’ve encountered over the years,”
Zipadelli said. “We’re both emotional people, and sometimes we wish
that we didn’t have to be so emotional about things. But this sport
is an emotional sport. When you put a lot of time and effort into
something, and you wind up disappointed, sometimes it’s hard to
control your emotions.
“On the positive side, I think that is what makes Tony such a
passionate person for the sport because he has so much emotion. He’s
a winner. He’s a racer. He has a lot of love and passion for this
sport and its competitiveness. He’s not a good loser. But like the
old saying goes, show me a good loser and you won’t find a good
winner. That’s what makes him special. He’s brought a lot of fun
moments and some tough moments to this race team. But that’s what
this sport is about, and it’s made this race team better.”
“Zippy cares about me as a person and not as a piece of equipment,”
adds Stewart. “Having that kind of support from that kind of a
person is what gets you through the tough times. And when you do
have success, that’s what makes it more gratifying.”
Zipadelli makes his home in Mooresville, N.C., with his wife Nan,
son Zachary and daughter Elwina Sophia.
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