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TONY STEWART

2008 NASCAR Season Snapshot
Rank Starts Poles Wins Top 5 Top 10 DNF Laps Led Laps Completed Winning Best Finish
6th 24 0 0 8 12 3 531 94.4% $4,129,214 2nd
NASCAR driver Tony Stewart
  • Born: May 20, 1971
  • Age: 37
  • Hometown: Rushville, IN
  • Team: Joe Gibbs Racing
  • Primary Sponsor: Home Depot
  • Car Make: Toyota
  • Car No: #20

TONY STEWART Career Statistics

Tony Stewart NASCAR Cup Series Career Statistics
Yr Rank Pts Sts Pole W 5 10 DNF Avg St Avg Fin Winnings
2007 6th 6242 36 0 3 11 23 4 17.60 13.10 $6,396,750
2006 11th 4727 36 1 5 15 19 4 16.67 13.78 $7,285,281
2005 1st 6533 36 3 5 17 25 1 12.00 9.90 $6,987,530
2004 6th 6326 36 0 2 10 19 2 15.30 12.90 $6,221,710
2003 7th 4549 36 1 2 12 18 5 13.89 14.58 $5,227,500
2002 1st 4800 36 2 3 15 21 6 13.20 12.60 $4,695,150
2001 2nd 4763 36 0 3 15 22 4 17.00 12.60 $3,493,040
2000 6th 4570 34 2 6 12 23 5 16.70 12.40 $3,200,190
1999 4th 4774 34 2 3 12 21 1 12.60 10.30 $2,615,226
Totals   47,284 320 11 32 119 191 32 15.00 12.48 $46,122,377

Tony Stewart Season Statistics

Tony Stewart 2008 NASCAR Season Statistics
Race St Fin Pts/BP Laps Status Winnings
Daytona 500 [Daytona] 6th 3rd 170/5 200/200 Running $871,049
Auto Club 500 [California] 6th 7th 146/0 250/250 Running $158,061
UAW-Dodge 400 [Las Vegas] 25th 43rd 39/5 107/267 Out of Race $128,839
Kobalt Tools 500 [Atlanta] 32nd 2nd 170/0 325/325 Running $162,886
Food City 500 [Bristol] 6th 14th 131/10 506/506 Running $139,911
Goody's Cool Orange 500 [Martinsville] 9th 5th 155/0 500/500 Running $131,236
Samsung 500 [Texas] 24th 7th 146/0 339/339 Running $184,236
Subway Fresh Fit 500 [Phoenix] 12th 14th 121/0 311/312 Running $117,611
Aaron's 499 [Talladega] 2nd 38th 59/10 173/188 Accident $138,886
Crown Royal 400 [Richmond] 15th 4th 160/0 410/410 Running $157,911
Dodge Challenger 500 [Darlington] 4th 21st 100/0 365/367 Running $125,061
Coca-Cola 600 [Lowe's] 31st 18th 114/5 399/400 Running $152,961
Best Buy 400 [Dover] 39th 41st 40/0 199/400 In Pit $124,256
Pocono 500 [Pocono] 10th 35th 63/5 198/200 Running $112,561
LifeLock 400 [Michigan] 12th 5th 160/5 203/203 Running $136,986
Toyota/Save Mart 350 [Infineon] 39th 10th 134/0 112/112 Running $136,261
Lenox Industrial Tools 301 [N Hampshire] 28th 13th 134/10 284/284 Running $132,211
Coke Zero 400 [Daytona] 17th 20th 103/0 162/160 Running $141,786
LifeLock.com 400 [Chicagoland] 12th 5th 160/5 267/267 Running $164,011
Allstate 400 at The Brickyard [Indy] 14th 23rd 94/0 160/160 Running $197,461
Sunoco Red Cross Pennsylvania 500 [Pocono] 20th 2nd 170/0 200/200 Running $196,536
Centurion Boats at The Glen [Watkins Glen] 9th 2nd 175/5 90/90 Running $192,036
3M Performance 400 [Michigan] 21st 12th 127/0 200/200 Running $126,461
Sharpie 500 [Bristol] 28th 8th 142/0 500/500 Running $0

Tony Stewart Track Statistics

(Click the track name to see Tony Stewart's race results at that track.)

Tony Stewart's Performance on NASCAR Nextel Cup Tracks
Track Races Pole Win 5 10 Best Avg Fin Avg Start Avg Pts
Atlanta Motor Speedway19 1 2 8 12 1st 12th 17th 137
Auto Club Speedway14 0 0 3 7 4th 16th 15th 120
Bristol Motor Speedway20 2 1 5 7 1st 16th 13th 121
Chicagoland Speedway8 1 2 6 6 1st 10th 15th 148
Darlington Raceway16 0 0 2 8 4th 13th 17th 128
Daytona International Speedway20 1 2 6 10 1st 18th 11th 118
Dover International Speedway19 0 2 9 12 1st 12th 19th 136
Homestead-Miami Speedway9 0 2 3 4 1st 12th 14th 136
Indianapolis Motor Speedway10 1 2 4 6 1st 9th 16th 146
Infineon Raceway10 1 2 3 6 1st 10th 10th 143
Kansas Speedway7 0 1 3 5 1st 11th 15th 138
Las Vegas Motor Speedway10 0 0 4 6 2nd 14th 16th 127
Lowes Motor Speedway19 1 1 6 11 1st 13th 14th 131
Martinsville Speedway19 3 2 7 11 1st 12th 14th 137
Michigan International Speedway20 0 1 9 13 1st 12th 22nd 133
New Hampshire Motor Speedway19 1 2 10 11 1st 13th 13th 135
North Carolina Speedway11 0 0 3 6 4th 11th 19th 134
Phoenix International Raceway13 0 1 6 8 1st 10th 14th 142
Pocono Raceway20 1 1 6 14 1st 13th 12th 131
Richmond International Raceway19 0 3 7 13 1st 11th 16th 140
Talladega Superspeedway19 0 0 8 11 2nd 14th 16th 131
Texas Motor Speedway13 0 1 3 8 1st 13th 22nd 131
Watkins Glen International10 1 4 6 8 1st 6th 6th 163

Tony Stewart Track Type Statistics

Tony Stewart's Performance By Race Track Type
Track Type Races Pole Win 5 10 Best Avg Fin Avg Start Avg Pts
Short track 58 5 6 19 31 1st 13th 15th 132
Speedway 227 6 18 85 137 1st 12th 16th 134
Superspeedway 39 1 2 14 21 1st 16th 13th 124
Road course 20 2 6 9 14 1st 8th 8th 153

Tony Stewart Bio

Anthony Wayne "Tony" Stewart was born on May 20, 1971. He is a native of Columbus, Indiana.

He currently drives the #20 Chevrolet Monte Carlo, owned by Joe Gibbs Racing and sponsored by Home Depot and #33 Old Spice Chevy in Busch Series.

He is also nicknamed "The Columbus Comet" (for his hometown of Columbus, Indiana), "The Rushville Rocket", "Smoke" and "Tony The Tiger" (after the mascot of Frosted Flakes).

Born in Columbus, Indiana, Stewart grew up racing go karts, highly successfully, winning the world karting championship in 1987. He raced three-quarter midgets for a handful of years before moving up to the USAC series. Stewart was the USAC rookie of the year in 1991, and was the National Midget series champion in 1994.

In 1995, Stewart became the first driver to win USAC's version of the Triple Crown, earning championships in all three of USAC's major divisions, National Midget, Sprint, and Silver Crown.

When he wasn't racing Indy Cars, he raced stock cars. In 1996, Tony made his NASCAR's Busch Series debut, driving for Harry Rainer. In nine races, however, he had only a best finish of 16th place. He had more success in a one-time ride in the Craftsman Truck Series, where he finished 10th.

Tony was poised to improve his IRL standing in 1997, but struggled with finishing at times. He failed to finish the first three races of a ten race schedule, but recovered to finish second in Phoenix. At that year's Indy 500, Stewart had a good enough car to win his first IRL race, as he led 64 laps, but tailed off near the end of the race and settled for 5th.

Tony finally got his first career win at Pikes Peak, where he led all but seven laps of a 200 lap race. He became the leading contender for the series' championship after a bad slump knocked points leader Davey Hamilton out of first place. Despite an average end to his season, finishing 7th, 14th, and 11th, and five DNFs, Stewart did just enough to beat Hamilton for the IRL title.

As he had done the previous year, he raced a handful of Busch Series races. This time, he was racing for Joe Gibbs, the former (and current as of 2006) coach of the Washington Redskins who was having a lot of success with driver Bobby Labonte in Winston Cup.

When Stewart was able to finish, he was in the top 10, and had a 3rd place in Charlotte. Stewart so impressed Gibbs that he was signed to drive the majority of the Busch schedule in 1998 to go along with a full-time IRL schedule.

The double duty did not affect his performance in either series. In the IRL, he won twice and finished 3rd in the championship. His season was something of a disappointment, especially as he finished last in the Indy 500 because of an engine failure.

On the Busch side, he finished in the top-five five times in 22 starts. He came extremely close to winning his first Busch Series race in Rockingham, but was beaten on a last lap pass by Matt Kenseth. Stewart finished a solid 2nd place in 2 (of 31) starts, ahead of six drivers with more starts, and had an average finish that was comparable to some of the series' top 10 finishers.

Gibbs had enough confidence in Tony that he was moved into Cup for the 1999 season. With that move, Stewart ended his three year career as a full time IRL driver.

Stewart started his Winston Cup career with a bang, as he qualified his No 20 Home Depot Pontiac in second place in his first Cup race, the Daytona 500. He showed courage in one of the Gatorade Twin 125 races, when involved in a great battle with Dale Earnhardt for the win. The Intimidator came out on top, but Stewart had nonetheless impressed quite a few people with his performance.

In the 500 itself, Stewart ran near the front until problems with the car relegated him to a midpack finish.

Stewart spent most of his rookie season wowing people, as his car was often in the top 10. He only failed to finish a race once, and even then he finished 9th. He won a pair of pole positions at short tracks, and tied a rookie record with three victories.

He finished his first year an unprecedented 4th in points, the highest points finish by a rookie in the modern era (since 1972), and only bested by James Hylton, who finished 2nd as a first-timer in 1966. Not surprisingly, he ran away with the 1999 Winston Cup Rookie of the Year award.

Tony also attempted to race 1,100 miles on Memorial Day, as he attempted to race the Indy 500 during the day and the Coca-Cola 600 in Charlotte, N.C., at night. His attempt at "The Double" was mildly successful, as he finished in the top 10 at both races, but he fell 10 miles short of completing all of the miles.

Stewart showed no signs of a sophomore slump in Winston Cup in 2000, as he won six races. However, he "slipped" to sixth place in the standings because of a handful of DNFs, and an increase in the number of competitive drivers, among them his teammate Labonte, who won the Cup championship.

Tony also began to get some bad press for his on-track incidents. The best known of these came at Watkins Glen, when he and Jeff Gordon tangled and crashed. Stewart made his displeasure toward Gordon known in an obscenity-laden tirade.

Tony's 2001 got off to a frightening start, as he was involved in a nasty crash in the Daytona 500 where his car violently flipped over several times. He walked away unscathed, recovered to win three more races and, as he'd done before, ran near the front most of the season. Statistically, he had a worse season than 2000, but he was the runner-up to Gordon for the Cup championship.

The season was not without controversy though. Gordon pulled a "bump and run" on Stewart to gain a better finishing position in a race in Bristol, and it resulted in Stewart retaliating in a post-race incident by spinning Gordon out on pit road. Stewart was fined and placed on probation by NASCAR. He got into further trouble at Daytona, when he confronted a Winston Cup official after ignoring a black flag. At the same race, he also got into an incident with a reporter, kicking away a tape recorder. This resulted in another fine and longer probation, and earned Stewart a reputation as a hot-tempered individual, which has stuck with Stewart to this day.

He confronted the same official at the race in Talladega after refusing to wear a mandated head-and-neck restraint. Stewart was not allowed to practice until wearing one and only managed to practice after his crew chief intervened. Tony, understandably, earned a reputation for being NASCAR's bad boy.

Tony started 2002 even more inauspiciously than in the previous season, as his Daytona 500 lasted just two laps due to a blown engine. He went on to win twice early in the season but was only seventh at the halfway point of the season.

The second half of his season was plagued by an altercation with a photographer after the Brickyard 400. NASCAR put Stewart on probation for the rest of the season. He went on to win the very next week at Watkins Glen, and went on a tear in the final races, finishing consistently in the top five.

At the end of the year, Stewart held off a charging Mark Martin to win his first Winston Cup championship.

As defending champion, Stewart managed to have a relatively incident-free 2003. Driving a Chevrolet instead of his previous Pontiac (Gibbs switched among manufacturers), Stewart actually had his worst Cup season, but it was still good enough for seventh in the points.

He only won twice that season but led more laps than he had the previous year and was highly competitive in the final races of the year.

In November 2004, Stewart became the owner of one of the most legendary short tracks in America, Eldora Speedway. Located in Rossburg, Ohio, Eldora is a half-mile dirt track known to many as "Auto Racing's Showcase Since 1954." Stewart began racing there in 1991 and continues racing in special events alongside other Nextel Cup drivers and dirt track legends.

He also still makes the occasional cameo on dirt tracks, appearing regularly at an ARCA race on dirt and at many prominent midget car events, USAC's Turkey Night Grand Prix, and the indoor Chili Bowl Midget Nationals.

In 2004, Stewart teamed with Englishman Andy Wallace and Dale Earnhardt, Jr. in a Boss Motorsports Chevrolet to take fourth in the 24 Hours of Daytona sports car race. The result does not show the trio's performance, however; They had dominated the race until the last two hours, when the suspension cracked. With 15 minutes left in the race, and with Stewart at the wheel, one of the rear wheels came off, finally ending their run. In addition to placing fourth, the trio placed third in the Daytona Prototype class.

2005 was one of Stewart's most successful years in the Nextel Cup. He won five races, including the Allstate 400 at The Brickyard, a race that Stewart said he would give up his championship to win, and took with it the No. 1 seed headed into NASCAR's Chase for the Nextel Cup 10-race playoff.

On August 16th Stewart was fined $5,000 for hitting the car of Brian Vickers, after the completion of the Busch Series Zippo 200 at Watkins Glen International. Stewart was driving a Busch series car owned by Kevin Harvick Incorporated at the time. Stewart also was placed on probation until December 31st.

In an apparently unrelated incident, Kyle Busch was fined $10,000 and placed on identical probation for ramming Anthony Lazzaro's car after the Sirius Satellite Radio race, also at Watkins Glen.

Following his second win of the season, Stewart started a tradition of climbing the fence separating the fans from the race track after each victory, a practice adopted from two-time Indy 500 winner Helio Castroneves. Tony was quoted as saying "I'm too fat for this," and recently purchased $17,000 worth of exercise equipment to remedy the problem.

It also led to sponsor Home Depot cashing in on Stewart's success with some promotions reminiscent of Stewart's Eldora Speedway drivers. After his second full climb of the fence in Loudon, N.H., they ran a discount on ladders and fencing at the stores with a campaign named, "Hey Tony, we've got ladders," where anyone who presented the advertisement in national newspapers in their stores earned the discount.

After his victory in Indianapolis, Home Depot presented fans who presented the advertisement of his Allstate 400 win with a discount on purchasing bricks. He mentioned in a press release from his sponsor, "I plan to keep winning races and helping to drive down the cost of home improvement for The Home Depot customers."

On November 20, Stewart won his second NASCAR Nextel Cup Championship, joining Jeff Gordon as the only active, full-time drivers to have won multiple championships. He also is one of the youngest drivers to win multiple championships. He was praised by fellow competitors, notably NASCAR veteran Mark Martin who proclaimed Stewart as the greatest NASCAR driver of his era.

During the 2005 season, Stewart won a total of $13,578,168, including $6,173,633 for winning the championship, making this the largest season total in NASCAR history.

Source: Wikipedia GNU

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