Stewart to retire after 2016 season : Tony Stewart, a
three-time Sprint Cup Series champion, plans to retire after the 2016
season, team and industry sources told ESPN's Marty Smith. Mired in one
of the worst seasons of his career at 25th in the standings, Stewart
will run one final season before handing over the driving duties of the
Stewart-Haas Racing #14 Chevy to Clint Bowyer, sources said. #15-Bowyer
is driving for Michael Waltrip Racing in 2015, but that team is closing
operations after the season. He does not currently have a ride for
2016. Stewart won the Sprint Cup in 2002, 2005 and 2011. He missed out
on the Chase for the Sprint Cup this year after posting zero wins and
two top-10s leading up to the Chase. The 45-year-old Stewart is tied
for 13th in career victories with 48. Stewart, who has 582 career Cup
starts, missed the final 15 races of the 2013 season with a broken leg
suffered in a sprint car accident. He missed three races last season
after the sprint car he was racing struck and killed 20-year-old Kevin
Ward Jr., who had approached Stewart's car on foot at Canandaigua
Motorsports Park.(ESPN.com)(9-27-2015)
UPDATE: Stewart-Haas Racing has scheduled a news conference for 1:00pm/et on Wednesday at the team's Kannapolis, N.C., headquarters, at which time driver and team co-owner Tony Stewart is expected to announce that 2016 will his last season behind the wheel. Gene Haas, Stewart's partner, will attend the news conference, the team confirmed.(FOXSports.com)(9-28-2015)
UPDATE: Stewart-Haas Racing has scheduled a news conference for 1:00pm/et on Wednesday at the team's Kannapolis, N.C., headquarters, at which time driver and team co-owner Tony Stewart is expected to announce that 2016 will his last season behind the wheel. Gene Haas, Stewart's partner, will attend the news conference, the team confirmed.(FOXSports.com)(9-28-2015)
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