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Hi Fans, I'm Tony!

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Discover interesting facts about the driver of the #20 Home Depot Chevrolet. Some things could surprise you!

Vote Tony Stewart as NASCAR's Most Popular Driver in 2004

Show your support of Tony Stewart in the race to become the most popular NASCAR driver for 2004. Log onto
www.mostpopulardriver.com, to vote for Tony Stewart, driver of the #20 Home Depot Chevrolet as 2004's most popular NASCAR driver. Tony was voted #5 for 2003 let's make sure he comes out on top this year! You may vote as many times as you would like between now and November 22, 2004.

Tony StewartTony Stewart
Race Driver
TonyStewart.com

NASCAR champion. Indy Racing League (IRL) champion. United States Auto Club (USAC) champion. Karting champion. From the beginning of his career 25 years ago to his present role as driver of the #20 Home Depot Chevrolet in the NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Tony Stewart has proven to be a champion every step of the way.

The Columbus, Ind., native has scored a total of nine driving championships since he first wheeled a go-kart at a Westport, Ind., race track in 1978. But it was his NASCAR championship in 2002 that Stewart puts first on his list of accomplishments.

“If I had to retype my resume tomorrow, I’d put my NASCAR championship at No. 1,” said Stewart. “All of the championships I’ve been a part of were hard to acquire. None of them were easy. They had their unique set of circumstances, obstacles and challenges to overcome. But my heart tells me that this championship – right here in NASCAR – was my greatest accomplishment in racing.

“With the caliber of teams, car owners, crew chiefs and drivers that are in this series, that alone makes you respect this championship. It doesn’t take away from any of the other ones I’ve earned, but this is one that’s so pressure packed it’s an obstacle to itself. That’s something I never had with the other championships. This deal is quite a bit different. You do a lot more work here, but that’s what makes this one so special.”

Even with Stewart’s experience of winning three karting championships, four USAC titles and one IRL crown, the 36-race grind that comprises the Nextel Cup schedule makes the series championship one of the most difficult and elusive in all of motorsports, regardless of one’s racing background. Still, Stewart earned his NASCAR crown in just his fourth year of Cup competition, joining only six other active drivers to have won the series championship – Jeff Gordon, Bobby Labonte, Dale Jarrett, Terry Labonte, Rusty Wallace and Bill Elliott.

Stewart wasn’t able to defend his title in 2003, as he finished seventh in points with two wins and one pole. While the season was not what he had expected performance-wise, it was everything he expected outside of the race car.

“Winning the championship was like having a weight lifted from our shoulders,” said Stewart. “We didn’t have to answer the question, ‘When are you going to win a championship?’ We proved to everyone that we could win one, so last season just felt more fun. But we’re competitive people and we want to win.

“Every day when I go home, and every morning, when I leave the house, I get to see a Winston Cup championship trophy on the mantel. It’s something I’m very proud of. Winning that first one is always the hardest, because you’ve never really been in that position before and it makes you so nervous. But now we have that experience behind us, and we know what to expect. I think I can speak for everyone on the team when I say we all want another championship trophy on our mantle.”

But as each year passes, earning another championship becomes more and more difficult.

“The competition level is so tight now,” said Stewart. “At the beginning of the year you used to be able to pick about five guys who you thought had a realistic shot at winning the championship. But now, you can pick anywhere from 10-12 guys who have a legitimate shot at the championship. If you have a good year and some luck goes your way, you can run for a championship.”

And that’s just what Stewart and his #20 Home Depot Racing Team look to in the future. But to understand the possibilities that lie in Stewart’s future, one must look to the past.
Stewart’s racing career began at age seven behind the wheel of a go-kart, with his father, Nelson, serving as car owner and crew chief.

“He never let me settle for second,” said Stewart of his dad, who still frequents races whenever his schedule permits. “He didn’t like it when we ran second, and he knew that I didn’t like it when we ran second. If he saw that I wasn’t giving 100 percent, then he was on me pretty hard about it. He pushed me to be better.

“He never pressured me to be the best race car driver in the world, but he did pressure me to be the best race car driver that I could be. He never compared me to anybody else. He expected that what I could do was what I could do. He never said that because this guy over here could do something, that I should be able to do it, too. He pushed me hard, but he was fair about it. That’s probably why you see so much fire in me today, because he always wanted me to be the best that I could be.”

In 1980 at the age of eight, Stewart had won his first championship – a 4-cycle rookie junior class championship at the Columbus (Ind.) Fairgrounds. Two more karting championships followed, but this time on a national level – the 1983 International Karting Federation Grand National championship and the 1987 World Karting Association National championship.

By 1989, Stewart had begun the transition from go-karts to higher-horsepower, open-wheel machines. He raced Three-Quarter Midgets before turning his attention to the USAC ranks in 1991 where he won Rookie of the Year honors.

Stewart notched his first USAC championship in 1994 by winning five times in 22 starts in the National Midget category. It was a prelude to even bigger things, as 1995 was the year Stewart made USAC history by winning the Triple Crown. He won the National Midget, Sprint and Silver Crown titles all in the same year, a feat never accomplished by anyone before Stewart.

That success led to Stewart earning a ride in the fledgling IRL. After earning the Rookie of the Year award in 1996, Stewart won the series championship the following year.

While 1997 bore an IRL championship, it also bore the seeds to Stewart’s current NASCAR success. A slate of 22 NASCAR Busch Series races with Joe Gibbs Racing in 1998 prepared Stewart for his assault on the Cup ranks in 1999.

During that remarkable rookie season, where Stewart won three races and was crowned Rookie of the Year, he also competed in both the Indianapolis 500 and the Coca-Cola 600 on the same day. The grueling trek, known as “Double Duty,” saw Stewart compete in a Home Depot-sponsored Dallara Aurora IRL entry at Indianapolis before flying to Concord, N.C., to compete in the Coca-Cola 600 that evening in his Home Depot Pontiac. He became the first driver to complete both races in the same day, finishing ninth and fourth, respectively. All told, Stewart drove a total of 1,090 miles.

Stewart repeated this feat in 2001, when he drove a Target/Home Depot G-Force Aurora for Chip Ganassi at Indy. He bettered his mark from 1999 by finishing on the lead lap in sixth before jetting off to Charlotte for the Coca-Cola 600. He improved that finish as well, coming home third in the 600 miler. When it was all said and done, Stewart completed all 1,100 miles – breaking his own record for most racing miles driven in one day.

While it wasn’t a driving championship, Stewart earned another championship on the World of Outlaws circuit. His team – Tony Stewart Motorsports with driver Danny Lasoski – won the 2001 World of Outlaws championship in their rookie year. In 2002 and 2003, they were runner-up to 18-time champ Steve Kinser.

In addition to being devoted to racing, Stewart is also devoted to philanthropy, so much so that he formed his own charitable foundation in 2003. Known simply as the Tony Stewart Foundation, its goal is to raise funds that will be primarily distributed to organizations that help care for critically ill children, as well as to lend support to families of race car drivers who have been injured in motorsports.

Stewart, single, makes his home in Davidson, N.C., while also owning his boyhood home in Columbus. He has a sister, Natalie, who helps run the Tony Stewart Fan Club along with their mom – Pam Boas.



Crew Chief : Greg Zipadelli
Car: Number 20, Pontiac Grand Prix
Series: Winston Cup
Primary Sponsorship: Home Depot


 
Age: 36
HEIGHT: 5'10"
BIRTHDATE: April 21, 1967
WEIGHT: 155 lbs.
HOMETOWN: New Britain, CT
RESIDENCE: Huntersville, NC
WIFE: Nanette
Children: Zachary


Tony Stewart's meteoric rise to the top of the NASCAR Winston Cup Series wasn't done alone. From his Rookie of the Year title in 1999 to his 2002 Winston Cup championship and the 15 wins garnered in between, crew chief Greg Zipadelli has been the man providing Stewart with the proper tools for success.

For four straight years Stewart's engines have been powerful, his cars have been reliable and his pit stops have been fast - all under Zipadelli's watch. Proof is in The Home Depot Racing Team's point finishes of fourth, sixth and second in 1999, 2000 and 2001, respectively - all of which laid the groundwork for a championship season in 2002.

"When we started this team back in late '98, we put a young group of people together and we all made a commitment to work together and take care of each other as best as we could as a company," said Zipadelli, quick to defer credit to those who surround him. "Without them we couldn't have gotten as far as we have in the past four years.

"Everyone takes a lot of pride in what we've been able to accomplish and how we're structured. They ought to. They're the hardest working group of guys in the garage. I'd be willing to put them up against anybody. I've been lucky that they've all hung together and I haven't had any indication that any of them wanted to leave. To me, that's good. They all plan on being here this year and in the years to come."

Zipadelli's mechanical skills are matched by his human resources abilities - a must for the modern day crew chief, who wears the hat of full-time mechanic, visionary and coach. What needs to be done to the race car, what needs to be done in time for the next race, and what needs to be done to keep the team happy, are all under the crew chief's job description.

Thanks to well over a decade of motorsports experience, Zipadelli knows race cars and team chemistry, allowing him to continue the juggling act that no crew chief can ignore.

"From the time I get up in the morning to the time I go home, I wear those hats," said Zipadelli. "With today's job, you wear those hats all the time - with the crew and the driver."

As evidenced by the team's four-year Winston Cup tenure, Zipadelli wears those hats well. Which is why many are picking the #20 team of Joe Gibbs Racing to successfully defend their 2002 championship.

"After our first season, we looked back on the year and pinpointed some areas where we needed to grow in order for us to become a threat to win races week-in and week-out," said Zipadelli. "We won six races in our second year, so I think we did that. But at the same time, our consistency is what seemed to hurt us, and that's why we finished sixth in points.

"But that also showed the strength of this race team, which is a very positive thing to have. If you looked back on that season and saw how many times we were one or two laps down and wound up finishing in the top-five, it would be impressive. Those are the things that made us a championship contender.

"We went into 2001 knowing we could win, but also knowing that we had to improve our consistency," continued Zipadelli. "We finished second in points that year, so that showed me that we were a better team than the year before.

"We still battled with consistency last season, but so did everyone else. When it came time to capitalize and make the championship ours, we were able to that. We proved more to ourselves than anybody else that we could do that. Can we come back and win another one? You bet. Winning one championship has made me more determined to win another one, and that's true for this entire team. Everyone on this team knows how we got here, but we also know that we can be even better. To defend a championship, you have to be."

Building championship race teams is nothing new to Zipadelli. The Berlin, Conn., native first began working on a NASCAR Featherlite Modified Tour car owned by his father at the age of seven, and by age 14, he was preparing race cars for his family-owned Sherwood Racing Team.

By the time he was 20, Zipadelli was a championship-winning crew chief, leading Modified Tour driver Mike McLaughlin to the series championship on the heels of five wins and 15 top-five finishes. Two years later, McLaughlin was offered a ride in the NASCAR Busch North Series, Grand National Division with prominent New England car owner Mike Greci. At the behest of the driver, Greci named Zipadelli as crew chief for the Busch North effort. The tandem recorded five wins between 1990 and 1993.

McLaughlin departed Greci's operation at the end of the 1993 season, but Zipadelli stayed with the team and worked with a handful of drivers in 1994 and 1995. Zipadelli's perseverance paid off in 1996 when driver Mike Stefanik joined the team with substantial sponsorship backing. While no wins were recorded that year, eight top-five and nine top-10 finishes made way for a championship season in 1997. Stefanik marched to the Busch North title that year riding a wave of consistency with two wins, 14 top-five finishes and 16 top-10 finishes, giving Zipadelli his second NASCAR touring series championship in less than a decade.

Upon receiving his second championship ring at the age of 29, Zipadelli headed south in 1998 to join Roush Racing as the chassis specialist for the #99 Winston Cup team of driver Jeff Burton. With Zipadelli's astute recommendations for chassis setups, Burton won two races, earned 18 top-five and 23 top-10 finishes and finished fifth in points.

Zipadelli's ascension up the racing ladder wasn't over. In fact, it had just begun.

When team owner Joe Gibbs began laying the groundwork for a second team with Stewart behind the wheel, he conferred with veteran Joe Gibbs Racing crew chief Jimmy Makar as to who would be the best choice to lead the #20 Home Depot Racing Team. They looked no further than Zipadelli.

"We've got the biggest group of competitive people ever put together under one roof at Joe Gibbs Racing," said Zipadelli. "We're all focusing and aiming in the same direction all at the same time. That's the key thing. It's not myself. It's not Tony. It's everybody."

Keeping that competitive fire in check is yet another job of the crew chief. In Zipadelli's case, it's a job that has made him a better crew chief.

"Tony has helped me mature as a person and as a leader by having to adjust to some of the situations we've encountered over the years," said Zipadelli. "We're both emotional people, and sometimes we wish that we didn't have to be so emotional about things. But this sport is an emotional sport. When you put a lot of time and effort into something, and you wind up disappointed, sometimes it's hard to control your emotions.

"On the positive side, I think that is what makes Tony such a passionate person for the sport because he has so much emotion. He's a winner. He's a racer. He has a lot of love and passion for this sport and its competitiveness. He's not a good loser. But like the old saying goes, show me a good loser and you won't find a good winner. That's what makes him special. He's brought a lot of fun moments and some tough moments to this race team. But that's what this sport is about, and it's made this race team better."

Zipadelli makes his home in Mooresville, N.C., with his wife Nan and infant son Zachary.



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