TONY STEWART: Get Rich Quick
Scheme at Richmond
ATLANTA (April 30, 2008) – Tony Stewart has won over $67 million in
his 10 years competing in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series. Granted, the
money isn’t all his, as substantial portions have gone to Joe Gibbs
Racing – the team that has fielded Stewart’s No. 20 Home Depot
machine since he debuted as a rookie in February 1999 at Daytona
(Fla.) International Speedway.
Still, Stewart has done quite well, thanks in large part to two
Sprint Cup championships, 32 point-paying victories, six non-point
wins and 122 top-fives and 196 top-10s in 329 career Sprint Cup
starts.
Three of those point-paying victories, along with six top-fives and
12 top-10s, have come in 18 career Sprint Cup races at Richmond
(Va.) International Raceway, site of Saturday night’s Crown Royal
presents the Dan Lowry 400.
Stewart has gotten rich quick at Richmond simply by being quick. The
driver of the No. 20 Home Depot Toyota has led a total of 792 laps
at Richmond – 11 percent of the 7,192 laps available to him. And its
seemingly always been that way, for Stewart’s first career Sprint
Cup victory came at Richmond in September 1999, when he absolutely
dominated by leading 333 of the 400 laps (83.2 percent).
Stewart returned to Richmond’s victory lane in May 2001 and 2002
when he scored his 10th and 14th career Sprint Cup wins,
respectively. And after his third Sprint Cup win at Richmond,
Stewart came back in September 2002 to notch his first career NASCAR
Craftsman Truck Series triumph. Stewart successfully defended that
victory by making his fifth trip to Richmond’s winner’s circle after
taking the checkered flag in the 2003 Truck Series race.
In all, Stewart has raced a Sprint Cup car, a Craftsman Truck, a
NASCAR Nationwide Series car, a USAC Silver Crown car and a USAC
Midget at Richmond, and taken an impressive $2.25 million in purse
money from Richmond’s coffers.
And as Stewart gets ready to make his 19th career Sprint Cup start
at Richmond and the 330th of his Sprint Cup career on Saturday
night, he’ll do using a get-rich-quick scheme that actually works –
his heavy right foot.
Tony Stewart, driver of the No. 20 Home Depot Toyota for Joe
Gibbs Racing:
With three Sprint Cup wins and two Craftsman Truck Series wins,
you’ve had a lot of success at Richmond. Is it one of your favorite
tracks?
“It is my favorite track. It’s not one of them, it’s the favorite
track of mine on the circuit. I’ve won two Truck races and three Cup
races there. It’s where I got my first win. It’s definitely a place
I enjoy coming to, and considering how it factors into the Chase,
it’s definitely an important stop for us.”
You’ve run well this year, as you’ve spent more laps in the
top-15 than any other driver, yet you don’t have the results to show
for your efforts. Does that get you and the team down, or does it
make you and team more determined to get that next win?
“We don’t settle for anything less than winning races. When we know
that we let one slip away, that’s something that we do let ourselves
get down about, but that’s also what got us 32 wins and two
championships. We have such a high standard of what we feel our
performance should be on the race track. I think that shows the
caliber team that we have.”
Does coming so close and not winning put additional stress on the
team, or does it give the team more incentive to win because they
know they’re right on the cusp of getting that first win?
“That’s just how competitive we are. Zippy (crew chief Greg
Zipadelli) and I have been through the thick and the thin together,
but that’s why we’re a perfect driver/crew chief combination. We
understand each other well. We have the same passion, the same
desire, the same frustrations. We’re on the same playing field, side
by side, on the way we think and feel about things. Not winning
might add a little bit of stress, but if you look at Zippy’s past
before he came to NASCAR, he was pretty successful. I had good
fortune before I came here. I think we’ve both had good fortune
since we’ve been here. It’s personalities. We’re not two guys that
are going to sit back and be happy with second or third. If that’s
detrimental, then that’s what it has to be. That’s just who we are.
We can’t change that.”
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.”
Short track racing has been known for beating and banging, where
contact between two cars usually results in at least one car getting
spun out. But has the current generation race car, with its common
nose and rear bumpers, changed that dynamic?
“It has. With these cars you don’t have the kinds of accidents where
guys get turned around because the bumpers on all these cars match
up so well. If you get in a situation where a guy checks up in front
of you and you run into him by accident and the guy behind you hits
you, you’re not going to spin each other out. That’s made short
track racing fun again. You’re not worried about having to explain
to somebody that whatever contact you had was an accident. And short
tracks aren’t cookie-cutter. They’re all one-of-a-kind and they all
have their own personality.”
Richmond is the first of four straight race weekends where the
race begins in the late afternoon daylight and then ends well into
the evening. As a driver, how do you adjust from dealing with the
setting sun to then running under the lights?
“What you’ll do is either run a clear visor or you’ll run an amber
visor, and you’ll have colored tear-offs on top of it, and we can
pull those off as the sun goes down. That gives us the ability to
use some tinting without using a tinted visor that we’re stuck with
for the whole night. That makes it easy, and especially for us dirt
track guys that are used to pulling them off anyways, it’s no big
deal.
“As far as the track is concerned, from day to night it normally
just gains a lot of grip and normally it doesn’t change the balance
of your car. It just gets faster as the surface temperature cools
down. Wherever your balance is, whether you’re loose or tight, you
just gain more grip and go faster.”
Sunday after the Richmond race you’ll be back at a race track –
Rockingham (N.C.) Speedway for the ARCA race. What are you going to
be doing there?
“I’m going to wave the green flag and Zippy (crew chief Greg
Zipadelli) is going to drive the pace car during the parade laps. It
should be pretty cool. I always liked that track and I’m glad to see
that racing has returned to there.”
What is your most vivid memory from Rockingham?
“Probably the Busch Series race back in 1998. Matt Kenseth and I
were racing pretty hard, and both of us were looking for our first
Busch Series win. I didn’t know Matt, and he really didn’t know me.
What I remember most about it is that I basically burned my tires
off, and Matt did a better job of managing his tires for the length
of the run. I didn’t do a very good job of getting through (turns)
three and four on the last corner of the last lap and he gave me a
little nudge. He could’ve hit me hard enough to crash me, but he
didn’t. He just barely nudged me up out of the way and I ran second
and he won. He was a gentleman about it, but he did what he had to
do to win, and if the roles were reversed, I would’ve done the same
thing that he did. Looking back, we both had good days there.”
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2008 RACE
REPORT ARCHIVE
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
PRE-RACE
REPORT : Daytona
TONY STEWART: Zeroed in on
Coke Zero 400
TEAM REPORT: Daytona

RACE REPORT : New Hampshire
Rain Thwarts Stewart’s Winning Effort at New
Hampshire
Home Depot Driver Leads Race-High 132 Laps, but Winds up an Unlucky 13th
PHOTOS: New Hampshire
PRE-RACE
REPORT : New Hampshire
TONY STEWART: New Yankee Workshop
TEAM REPORT: New Hampshire

RACE REPORT : Sonoma
Stewart Rallies Twice to Nab Top-10 at Sonoma
Second Looked Likely Until Chain-Reaction Crash Forced Late-Race Charge
PHOTOS:
Sonoma
PRE-RACE
REPORT : Sonoma
TONY STEWART: Sonoma Brings a Breath of
Fresh Air
TEAM REPORT: Sonoma

RACE REPORT : Michigan
Stewart and Co. Lock-Up Top-Five
at Michigan
Home Depot Driver Rises to 11th in Points after LifeLock 400
PHOTOS: Michigan
PRE-RACE
REPORT : Michigan
TONY STEWART: Post Pocono Perspective
Leads to Michigan Motivation
TEAM REPORT: Michigan

RACE REPORT : Pocono
Pocono Speeding Ticket Thwarts
Solid Run for Stewart
Home Depot Driver Leads Laps and Contends for Top-10 Before Pit Road
Speeding Penalty
PHOTOS: Pocono

PRE-RACE
REPORT : Pocono
TONY STEWART: Pulling for a Pole at Pocono
TEAM REPORT: Pocono

RACE REPORT : Dover
Monster Mile Takes a Bite Out of
Stewart
Home Depot Driver Caught in Massive Pileup on Lap 17 at Dover
PHOTOS: Dover

PRE-RACE
REPORT : Dover
TONY STEWART: Monster Mile Mojo
TEAM REPORT: Dover

RACE REPORT : Charlotte
Déjà vu for Smoke in Coke 600
Cut Tire Takes Sure Win from Tony Stewart and No. 20 Team at
Charlotte
PHOTOS:
Charlotte

PRE-RACE
REPORT : Charlotte
TONY STEWART: Indiana Stewart and the
Temple of Vrrooom!
TEAM REPORT: Charlotte

RACE REPORT : All-Star Race
Stewart Solid in Prelude to Coke
600
Home Depot Driver Finishes Fifth in NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race
PHOTOS: All-Star Race

PRE-RACE
REPORT : All-Star Race
TONY STEWART: All Set for All-Star Race at
Charlotte
TEAM
REPORT: All-Star Race
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