Cool-Down Lap
Yes, Tony Stewart, simply making the Chase is important, too
June 3, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DOVER,
Del. -- With Sunday's victory in the FedEx 400 benefiting Autism Speaks
at Dover International Speedway, Tony Stewart improved
his chances of qualifying for the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup
exponentially.
Stewart jumped from a struggling 20th place in the standings without a win to 16th
with a victory in hand. That
gives him a leg up on one of the two Chase wild card spots, awarded to
the drivers in positions 11 through 20 in the standings with the most
wins.
Currently, Stewart is the only 11-20 driver who's been first to a checkered flag.
After
Sunday's race, the three-time Cup champion said that simply making the
Chase wasn't a meaningful goal to him, unless he felt he
was competitive enough to win the title.
"I've
done this enough, and I've been in the Chase enough that being in the
Chase is not a novelty for me," Stewart said. "I don't care
about being in the Chase, unless I have the opportunity to win the
championship."
If that statement is sincere, then Stewart has had a memory lapse.
Just
two years ago, the driver of the No. 14 Chevrolet made the Chase as the
ninth seed, and said essentially that he didn't deserve
to be there.
Despite finishing fourth at Michigan three races before the Chase field was set, Stewart discounted his chances for a title.
"I'll
be perfectly honest, at this point of the deal, if we are going to run
this bad, it really doesn't matter whether we make the
Chase or not," Stewart said after the race, "because we are going to be
occupying a spot in the Chase that somebody else that actually can run
for a championship is going to be trying take. Because our stuff is so
bad right now, we're wasting one of those
top-12 spots right now."
We
all know what happened after that. Stewart won the first two Chase
races to establish himself as a serious contender. He then won
three of the final four races to beat Carl Edwards in a tiebreaker
based on number of victories.
Had
Stewart not made the Chase that year, even with his performance
entering the Chase not up to par, he wouldn't have been eligible
for the championship.
So
when Stewart says that making the Chase isn't as important as making
progress within his Stewart-Haas organization, take it with
a grain of salt. You can't win the title unless you're in the Chase,
and as Stewart proved in 2011, any driver in the top 12 can come from
behind to grab the championship.
STEWART: RESTART FAVORS SECOND-PLACE DRIVERS
Jimmie Johnson may not like the call that dropped him from first to 17th
in Sunday's race, but under the current parameters,
NASCAR's call was the right one, and it was consistent with the
decision the sanctioning body made in black-flagging Elliott Sadler in
last year's Nationwide Series debut at Indianapolis.
With
19 laps left in Sunday's race at Dover, Johnson restarted from the
second spot to the inside of race leader Juan Pablo Montoya,
who appeared to spin his tires in the restart zone near the exit of
Turn 4, defined by red lines on the wall.
Johnson
edged ahead of Montoya before the cars reached the end of the restart
zone, and by the time the cars reached the start/finish
line, Johnson was two car-lengths ahead. NASCAR assessed a
drive-through penalty to the No. 48 Chevrolet, and Johnson went from the
lead to a lap down.
Tony
Stewart, who had an excellent view of the proceedings, said that, in
general, the restart zone favors the second-place driver,
even though the leader has lane choice.
"The
zone we have to restart in is not very conducive to being
leader-friendly," Stewart said. "Most of the time the guy that's second
has a huge advantage and most of the time will lay back and roll the
start and play it to his advantage.
"There
can be some adjustments made to the restart zone. My opinion, if you
lengthen that restart zone and give the leader more flexibility
of where they pick the restart up at, it takes away that opportunity
for the second-place guy to take advantage of the restarts."
The opinions expressed are solely those of the author.
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