Tony Stewart Confident He'll Be Ready For Daytona 500
Jan. 9, 2014
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DAYTONA
BEACH, Fla. -- The way Tony Stewart sees it, there's no chance he won't
be ready, willing and able to compete in NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
racing throughout February's Speedweeks at Daytona.
Injured
in a Sprint Car accident Aug. 5 in Iowa and sidelined for the balance
of the 2013 season, Stewart has undergone three surgeries on his broken
right leg -- followed by a physical therapy regimen that has taken him
from bedridden … to a wheelchair … to crutches … to the ability to stand
and walk on his own.
"I'm
100-percent confident that when I get here in February, I'll be fine to
drive and race and be able to do everything I need to do," Stewart
said Thursday morning in the media center at Daytona International
Speedway. "Today, I can't sit here and say I'm 100 percent, but I've got
four more weeks.
"And
with four weeks to go, I'm a lot further along now than I was four
weeks ago, so I'm confident that when we come back, I'll be fine."
In
a sense, Stewart was on equal footing with the rest of the NASCAR
Sprint Cup drivers Thursday. No one turned a lap at the 2.5-mile
superspeedway,
due to a persistent rain that washed out all track activities of the
first day of Preseason Thunder, the first two days of which were to be
devoted to NASCAR Sprint Cup.
"It's
nice to be back at the track," Stewart said. "I would definitely like
to be in a car this week, but we're still on schedule to be cleared
the day before [the Feb. 15 Sprint Unlimited race], so we'll be down
here for two days, hanging out and watching our teams run."
The
hanging out part was right, at least, but the rain quashed the
possibility of testing the cars. With a rod in his leg from the second
surgery,
Stewart joked that he was more sensitive than ever to the weather.
"I'm
a pretty good barometer right now," he said. "Seems like, if the rain
comes, or snow or cold comes, I know it right before it changes.
"But
I feel pretty good. I still have a little ways to go, but we've got
four weeks to get ready the rest of the way. Even when we get here in
February,
it's not going to be 100 percent. Physically, I'm not going to feel 100
percent, but I'll be able to do my job 100 percent, so that's the main
thing."
Stewart is thankful he'll make his return at Daytona, rather than at a more physically demanding track.
"Luckily,
this is a smooth race track," he said. "It's not rough and bumpy. If it
were Dover, I'd be a lot more concerned. But the hard part here
is just with your throttle, with your right leg; you're on the gas so
long. That's the only thing we're worried about right now."
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