Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Stewart cruises at Indy


Tony Stewart now has two wins in his hometown. Associated Press
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Jenna Fryer Associated Press

INDIANAPOLIS – Tony Stewart once said he’d trade all his wins and trophies for just one victory at his beloved Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Now he’s got two, and they couldn’t be more different.

The first gave him peace.

The second was pure joy.

Stewart scored his second victory in three years at the Brickyard on Sunday, beating buddy Kevin Harvick in a classic dual to the finish. Stewart showed he’s now mastered the track that caused him a decade of heartache and once even threatened his career.

“I’ll enjoy this one more than the first one,” he said. “The first one (in 2005) was like taking the weight of the world off your shoulders. When you grow up 45 miles from here, and driving down 16th and Georgetown in a wrecker and thinking ‘Man, what it would feel like to be 150 yards inside that fence running 200 mph?’

“I got to come here in stock car and win, that was such a weight off our shoulders … everyone knew how much. Today, it’s like we’re happy now. It wasn’t like it was the untouchable anymore.”

The kid from Columbus came to Indy with his father as a child, dreaming of someday winning an Indianapolis 500. But his shrine was also his demon, and the track taunted him with heartbreaking near-misses.

It made his 2005 breakthrough victory a tense but electric affair.

This time he made it look downright easy.

Stewart led a race-high 66 of the 160 laps, but was passed by 2003 race winner Harvick on a restart with 20 to go. But with one Indy win already on his resume, Stewart didn’t feel as if his world would end if he didn’t regain the lead.

“I just went down there on the restart and got real, real tight for some reason,” Stewart said. “Kevin got by us and I knew after 15 laps I could get around him. So I was just trying to be patient.”

He never panicked as he chased down Harvick, even taunting his friend over the radio.

“Here, kitty, kitty, kitty,” he called. “Come get you some of this.”

The two-time series champion closed onto Harvick’s bumper and made at least two attempts to pass, only to be rebuffed as Harvick held tight. Stewart finally powered alongside of him with 10 to go, but Harvick wouldn’t relent and the two Chevrolets touched as they drag-raced around the historic 2 1/2 -mile oval.

“That’s a hard guy to race there. He’s a clean guy. That’s one of my best friends,” Stewart said, calling the contact between the two cars his mistake.

“Would I, with 10 laps to go, crash somebody just to win the Brickyard? No. It’s not worth it. If I would have done it the wrong way, it would have ruined winning.”

The pass completed, Stewart held steady and cruised the final 25 miles. With six to go, his in-car camera caught him casually drinking from a water bottle with no hands on his steering wheel as he headed down the straightaway at more than 200 miles per hour.

He frantically pumped his fist through the window as he crossed the finish line, turned a brief victory lap, then stopped his car on the Yard of Bricks. He was embraced there by family and his Joe Gibbs Racing crew, which joined him for his celebratory fence climb.

Juan Pablo Montoya, who won the 2000 Indianapolis 500 in his only appearance, chased down Harvick to finish second – his best showing on an oval since leaving Formula One last summer.

“I don’t think anyone had anything for Tony,” Montoya said. “His car was way too fast. But second here at the Brickyard, it was awesome.”

Jeff Gordon, the series points leader and four-time Brickyard winner, was third followed by Kyle Busch, pole-sitter Reed Sorenson and Mark Martin.

Harvick faded all the way to seventh after Stewart’s race-winning pass.

Jeff Burton, Dave Blaney and Matt Kenseth rounded out the top 10.

The victory made Stewart the favorite to win the Nextel Cup title this season – six of the past nine Indy winners went on to win the Cup, including the last two.

Stewart himself did it in 2005.