TONY STEWART: Thinking Outside
the Box
ATLANTA (April 9, 2008) – The saying, “Think outside the box,”
always carries a bit of irony, considering that it’s typically
spoken to people who must work within a box, as their office cubicle
promotes monotony instead of creativity.
And while crews in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series never have to work
in the boxes beholden to corporate America, they’re still working
in, or rather on, a box that requires them to – you guessed it –
think outside the box.
Their box is the current generation stock car, which as it was being
developed was referred to as the Car of Tomorrow (CoT). Thanks to a
taller greenhouse that allows for more room inside the cockpit and a
boxier overall shape that allows for more energy dissipating “crush
zones,” the current generation car is far safer than its
predecessor. But it also lost a bit of the uniqueness of the old
car, with Toyota, Chevrolet, Dodge and Ford teams working with the
same basic piece sans slight alterations in the contours of each
make’s hood, nose and rear side window areas.
The result is a tighter box in which to work, but since the car’s
debut last March at Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway in a limited,
16-race rollout before becoming the de facto car in 2008, Joe Gibbs
Racing found a way to make it fast right away.
Rewind to last year’s Subway Fresh Fit 500k race at Phoenix
International Raceway. It was just the third race for the CoT, but
already the three-car Joe Gibbs Racing Team had led 579 of the 1,004
laps available in the previous two races. The trend continued at
Phoenix, with Joe Gibbs Racing leading 202 of the 312 laps available
(64.7 percent).
Leading Joe Gibbs Racing’s CoT charge was Tony Stewart. The two-time
Sprint Cup champion wheeled his No. 20 Home Depot machine to a total
of 400 laps led in the first three CoT races in 2007, with 132 of
those laps coming in last year’s Subway Fresh Fit 500k.
Stewart appeared ready to pick up his second career Sprint Cup win
at Phoenix and his first of the 2007 season when he was handily
leading laps 155-212 and laps 214-286 of the 312-lap race. But a
caution on lap 285 for a three-car accident in turn four jumbled the
running order, for just before the caution came out, Jeff Gordon –
Stewart’s nearest pursuer – pitted for four tires and fuel.
Stewart pitted under caution, but came out in second as Gordon was
awarded the No. 1 spot following the series of pit stops.
When the race restarted on lap 293, Stewart pursued Gordon, and made
up considerable ground when the four-time Sprint Cup champion became
stuck behind the lapped car of Martin Truex Jr. Stewart brought the
estimated crowd of 105,000 to its feet with a daring three-wide pass
of Gordon entering turn three. Stewart split the middle, with Gordon
down low and Truex on the outside. Stewart emerged off turn four
with the lead, but Gordon came back, and in the same corner where
the two traded the lead a lap earlier, Gordon got underneath Stewart
and made the pass stick for good coming off turn four.
Gordon led the final 13 laps, taking his first win at Phoenix and
the 76th of his career, putting him in a tie with the late Dale
Earnhardt for sixth on NASCAR’s all-time win list. Stewart finished
second.
It was a bitter pill to swallow. After dominating at the track he
calls his West Coast home away from home, for it’s where Stewart’s
professional racing career began via a second-place finish in the
1993 USAC Silver Crown race of the famed Copper World Classic,
Stewart made an angry beeline to the comfort of his motorcoach.
Stewart’s fortunes would improve later in the year as he rattled off
three wins in a four-race stretch that included the Allstate 400 at
the Brickyard. Still, it never sat well with Stewart that he came oh
so close in last year’s spring race at Phoenix. Now he returns to
the desert oval a year later ready to capture the win that eluded
him in 2007.
Tony Stewart, driver of the No. 20 Subway/Home Depot Toyota for
Joe Gibbs Racing:
How long does it take you as a driver to accept your finishing
position?
“It depends on the day. If you’ve run between fifth and 10th all
day, and at the end of it you get to third, you’re pretty happy
about it. If you’ve been leading the race all day and you end up
third, you’re disappointed about it. It depends on the circumstances
that led up to it. There’s days that it goes both ways. It just
depends on the scenario leading up to it.”
How much has it helped not having to work with two different
types of cars this year?
“I don’t think it’s been a big deal for the drivers, but I know it
has been huge for the race teams and the crew guys not having to
have two different sets of equipment for two different types of
cars. It’s allowed everybody to focus on this car versus dividing
your attention 50-50 on two different types of cars.”
What’s the biggest difference between the current generation car
and the car you used to run?
“These cars don’t have near the downforce that our cars had last
year. With the limited amount of shock travel in the front, you’re
hitting bump rubbers, and last year we weren’t allowed to have bump
rubbers. It doesn’t float around the race track like it used to.
It’s a lot harsher ride.”
The current generation car was built with a particular emphasis
on safety. After witnessing some of your competitors take some nasty
hits, how much safer can this car become?
“I haven’t felt unsafe in it. I don’t think they’re ever going to
get them 100 percent safe, and if you do get to that point, you’re
going to have guys wrecking all the time if they know they can’t get
hurt if they wreck. It’s not saying that you don’t want to make them
safer, but you’re still driving 3,400-pound cars at 190-200 mph and
at the end of the straightaway is a corner that has a wall around
the outside of it. It’s still laws of physics. It’s not like we’re
going to come up with one magical solution that’s going to solve
this. I don’t feel like there’s a big safety issue now, anyways. You
look at the hit that Jeff (Gordon) took (at Las Vegas) and the one I
took at Vegas and we were both in cars testing the next day. I don’t
feel like we’re in a crisis to figure things out. NASCAR has people
in place to make sure we stay ahead of that program and never lose
focus on the issue of safety. They’re constantly working on it.”
How has the current generation race car made the racing 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.”
Seven races into the season, the switch to Toyota seems to have
been seamless. Did you spend any time worrying about the
manufacturer change, or did you just figure you’d race with whatever
you were given?
“It is what it is every week. I know it sounds real elementary and
plain, but the race car is still going to do one of three things.
It’s going to be tight, it’s going to be loose, or it’s going to
four-wheel drift. We’re not reinventing the wheel here. We’re just
driving a different car. It’s a matter of just getting the cars to
drive the way you want it to each week. It’s been a non-event.”
How long have you been racing at Phoenix?
“I started racing there in ’93 when I ran a Silver Crown car. And
since then, I’ve run USAC Midgets, Indy cars, Supermodifieds,
Nationwide Series cars, and of course, Sprint Cup in The Home Depot
car. So, I’ve logged a bunch of laps there. To think that it all
kind of started at Phoenix, I guess you could say it’s the place
where my career came full-circle.”
Did all those laps you made over the years at Phoenix help
prepare you for when you first went there in a Sprint Cup car?
“I think so. With every different division of car that I’ve run
there, I’ve ended up running a different line. With that, I’ve
learned a lot about that race track and where the sweet spots are on
that race track. I was used to the place when it came time to run
there in Sprint Cup. I knew a lot about that race track and the
different places that can make you go fast or slow. It gave me an
opportunity to adapt a lot more to the car than to the race track.”
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2008 RACE
REPORT ARCHIVE
PRE-RACE
REPORT :
Martinsville
TONY
STEWART: Something Wicked This Way Comes
Team
Report - Martinsville

RACE REPORT : Charlotte
Speedy Stewart Penalized for Speeding at Charlotte
Home Depot Driver Rallies to Finish 11th in Bank of America 500
PHOTOS:
Charlotte
PRE-RACE
REPORT :
Charlotte
TONY
STEWART: It Ain’t the Coca-Cola 595.5
Team
Report - Charlotte

RACE REPORT : Talladega
Finally, ‘The Big One’ for Stewart at Talladega
Home Depot Driver Escapes Two Big Wrecks, Last-Lap Challenge to
Score First Career Sprint Cup Victory at Legendary Superspeedway
PHOTOS: Talladega
PRE-RACE
REPORT :
Talladega
TONY STEWART: Kansas Giveth and
Taketh Away
Team
Report - Talladega

RACE REPORT : Kansas
Stewart Forced to Run with the Bulls in Kansas
Mishaps with Team Red Bull’s No. 83 Squad Yields 40thPlace Finish
PHOTOS: Kansas
PRE-RACE
REPORT :
Kansas
TONY STEWART: Kansas Giveth and
Taketh Away
Team
Report - Kansas

RACE REPORT : Dover
Stewart Scores 11th at Dover
Home Depot Driver Picks Up 22 Spots in 400-Mile Race
PHOTOS: Dover
PRE-RACE
REPORT :
Dover
TONY STEWART: D’Oh! It’s Dover
Team
Report - Dover

RACE REPORT : New Hampshire
Stewart Earns Rock-Solid
Run in Granite State
Home Depot Driver Overcomes Pit Road Speeding Penalty to Finish
Eighth
PHOTOS: New Hampshire
PRE-RACE
REPORT :
New Hampshire
TONY STEWART: Just Win, Baby
Team
Report - New Hampshire

RACE REPORT : Richmond
Runner-Up Result at Richmond Runs Stewart Into Chase
Fourth Second-Place Finish of Season Earns Stewart Fourth Chase Berth
PHOTOS: Richmond
PRE-RACE
REPORT :
Richmond
TONY
STEWART: Half-Full or Half Empty?
Team
Report - Richmond

RACE REPORT :
Fontana
Stewart Fights Loose-Handling Race Car at
Fontana
Home Depot Driver Finishes a Disappointing 22nd
PHOTOS: Fontana
PRE-RACE
REPORT :
Fontana
TONY STEWART: “You Better Lock It Up”
Team Report - Fontana

RACE REPORT :
Bristol
Eighth at Bristol Keeps Stewart Sixth in
Points
Home Depot Driver Picks Up 20 Spots in Sharpie 500
PHOTOS: Bristol
PRE-RACE
REPORT :
Bristol
TONY STEWART: Too Many of “Them
Racin’ Deals” at Bristol
Team
Report - Bristol

RACE REPORT :
Michigan
Stewart Earns Points in 3M Performance 400
Home Depot Driver’s 12th-Place Finish Bumps Him to Sixth in Points
PHOTOS:
Michigan
PRE-RACE
REPORT :
Michigan
TONY STEWART: Hitting on All Cylinders
Team
Report: Michigan

RACE REPORT :
Watkins Glen
Centurion Boats at The Glen
PHOTOS: Watkins Glen
PRE-RACE
REPORT :
Watkins Glen
TONY STEWART: Victorious Maximus
Team
Report: Pocono

RACE REPORT :
Pocono
Fill ‘Er Up: Stewart Fueled by Finishing
Second at Pocono
Home Depot Driver Earns 68-Point Buffer from Chase Cutoff
PHOTOS: Indy
PRE-RACE
REPORT :
Pocono
TONY STEWART: Like Beijing, Only Different
Team
Report: Pocono

RACE REPORT :
Indianapolis
Motor Speedway
Indy “Tires” Stewart Out
Home Depot Driver Scores Worst Indy Finish as Tire Issues Take Top Billing
PHOTOS:
Indy
PRE-RACE
REPORT :
Indianapolis
Motor Speedway
TONY STEWART: Round No. 20 to the No. 20?
Team
Report: Indianapolis

RACE REPORT : Chicagoland
Stewart Snags Another Top-Five at Chicagoland
Home Depot Driver Rises to 10th in Points
PHOTOS: Chicagoland
NEWS FROM JGR:
Joe Gibbs Racing and Tony Stewart to
Part Ways after 2008 Season

PRE-RACE
REPORT : Chicagoland
TONY STEWART: Channeling the Blues
Brothers in Joliet
TEAM REPORT:
Chicagoland

RACE REPORT : Daytona
Stewart & Yeley Combine for Top-20 at Daytona
Home Depot Driver Relived on Lap 72 Due to Illness
PHOTOS:
Daytona
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