Bristol is just what the doctor ordered for Tony Stewart
March 16, 2014
By Seth Livingstone
NASCAR Wire Service
BRISTOL,
Tenn. -- Tony Stewart isn't generally one to celebrate moral victories,
but the three-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion
enjoyed one Sunday after finishing fourth at Bristol Motor Speedway.
"It
feels like a win, even though it's not," Stewart said. "I'm really
excited. We had a long way to go from Friday and every day got
better and better.
"Come to Bristol and run 500 laps here and (record) a top five, that is just what the doctor ordered."
Stewart's previous finishes this season had been 35th, 16th and 33rd, relegating him to 27th in series points prior to the race.
With
500 laps, not to mention more than five hours of waiting due to rain,
Sunday was a long day for any driver let alone one recovering from
multiple leg surgeries.
"I
feel great," said Stewart after climbing from his No. 14 Bass Pro
Shops/Mobil 1 Chevrolet. "Let's do it again. This is a physical
place. If you look at the lap times, we were running mid-15 seconds
around here all day. It is no walk in the park, by any means."
EVERY MAN FOR HIMSELF
Ricky
Stenhouse Jr. said he would have considered turning Roush Fenway Racing
teammate Carl Edwards out of his way if he could have
gotten that close on the final lap.
"I
was thinking I would use the bumper if the opportunity was there," said
Stenhouse, whose second-place finish was the best of his
career in Sprint Cup. "If you get the win, you're in the Chase and you
can let the rest take care of itself later."
Team owner Jack Roush said he would be "disappointed" if Stenhouse thought any other way.
"When
it comes to really charge for the checkered flag, there are no team
orders," Roush said. "There are no rules. I expect them to
race one another as they expect to be raced. I expect Ricky, as a
fierce a competitor as there is out there, (to) bump and run and take
the prize if he could."
Edwards said he wouldn't have been surprised, given the importance of posting a win to qualify for the Chase.
"I
know what Ricky was thinking and it was going to be a battle," Edwards
said. "The way I envisioned it, probably neither one of us
would make it back to the start-finish line. Ricky was being aggressive
all night. I was fully prepared for smashing into each other, bouncing
off the walls. That's where we're at right now. You've got to go for the
win."
JOHNSON'S TRYING NIGHT
As
painful as it was for most drivers to sit through the 3-hour, 19-minute
early-race rain delay, the interruption was excruciating
for Jimmie Johnson, who finished 19th.
Johnson
had been battling Matt Kenseth for the lead in the Food City 500 when a
right front tire failure dropped him to 39th place,
two laps down.
Johnson
took the lead during the competition caution on Lap 52 when his team
took left-side tires only to gain track position. During
the rain delay, he also took exception to the notion that the strategy
had backfired.
"It
didn't wear out," said Johnson, who at that point had led a race-high
44 laps. "Something made it come apart. I don't know if we
clipped something on the track that kind of scored the tread and then
it unraveled as if something else happened with the tire."
But Goodyear spokesman Rick Heinrich said the tire was, indeed, a victim of wear.
"The
48 decided to take a pass on changing right sides and changed left
sides only during the competition caution," Heinrich told FOX
Sports. "What happens is you wear through the tread rubber (and)
beneath the rubber is fabric. That fabric started to come unwound."
NO HISTORY FOR JUNIOR
Dale
Earnhardt Jr. was bidding to become only the second driver to begin a
NASCAR Sprint Cup season with four consecutive first- or
second-place finishes. Richard Petty did it in 1974.
Starting
14th and finishing 24th, Earnhardt was never in serious contention
after developing handling problems midway through the race.
He dropped all the way to 33rd when his team raised his hood in the
pits on Lap 338.
WITHOUT PLAN B
Edwards said he thought twice about doing his celebratory backflip due to the slippery conditions Sunday night.
"I
thought, 'This is stupid. I shouldn’t do this,'" he said. "I stopped
right on the start-finish line and (the track) was awfully
glossy. That's why I kind of landed on my hands. I didn't want to stick
it perfectly and have my feet go that way and break my arm on the
concrete.
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