Win gives Stewart confidence for Pocono
LONG POND, Pa. — Tony Stewart ducked through a tarp-covered tent in the garage and was off to the No. 14.
“Make it two in a row, Tony!” a fan yelled as Stewart hustled through the Pocono Raceway garage.
With a second practice session on tap, Stewart had little time Saturday to dissect why his car is suddenly one of the ones to beat. But it sure is. Stewart is coming off his first win of the season at Dover and his second straight top-10 finish, results that have thrust the three-time Cup champion into the No. 1 wild-card spot in the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship.
For an added boost, Stewart was one of the few drivers who participated last month in an open Pocono test in the Gen6 race car. With practice and qualifying washed out Friday, Stewart and crew chief Steve Addington have additional resources on hand to help master the 2½-mile triangle track.
And there are more reasons to think Stewart can keep the push going at Pocono. His last win here in 2009 was his first as a car owner at Stewart-Haas Racing, and he finished fifth and third at the two Pocono races last season.
No Cup driver has won consecutive races this season, but a confident Stewart has always been a dangerous Stewart. That could be the difference Sunday.
“It’s definitely momentum that we need right now,” he said. “It’s hopefully quieted some of the rumors that were a big drama at the shop for us. So, getting that calmed down was as much of the problem as anything.”
Stewart used his postrace news conference at Dover to sternly deny he was ever considering giving Addington the boot because of a slow start that had the team mired around 20th in the points standings. Addington, who took over as Stewart’s crew chief last season, appreciated that his boss backed him so publicly.
Stewart sputtered along for most of the season to a series of middle-of-thepack finishes. He had seven straight races of 17th or worse and only one other top 10 before a seventh two races ago at Charlotte Motor Speedway.
He passed Juan Pablo Montoya with three laps left last week at Dover to snap a 30-race winless streak and remind everyone that it’s always a mistake to count ol’ Smoke out of the Chase picture.
DEVELOPMENTS
Castroneves wins in Texas: Helio Castroneves raced to his first IndyCar victory of the season, leading the final 132 laps Saturday night for his fourth career victory at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth.
Castroneves also won at the 1½-mile, high-banked track in 2004, 2006 and 2009. Former series champion Sam Hornish Jr. was the only other three-time IndyCar winner at Texas. Ryan Hunter-Reay of Andretti Motorsports finished second, more than 5 seconds back.