Stewart's ride is memorable



He became the first driver to win the Winston Cup title while on probation.
HOMESTEAD, Fla. (AP) -- Tony Stewart's vision was blurred by tears as he drove down pit road and was met by dozens of crew members and other drivers who congratulated him on his first Winston Cup championship.
It proved to the temperamental 31-year-old Stewart that he's not hated in the garage, that everyone isn't out to get him.
"To have my peers come out and congratulate me, the feeling of satisfaction is more than money can buy," he said Sunday after sealing the title with an 18th-place finish at Homestead-Miami Speedway.
"You couldn't put a price tag on having that many guys from that many different teams feel happy for you and want to congratulate you on your year," he said. "That is probably what I am going to remember most about this championship."
Stewart's ride this year wasn't exactly smooth, becoming the first driver to win the title while on probation.
His crowning moment came at the end of the most trying season in his four-year Winston Cup career. He punched a photographer this season and sought help to control his temper.
"You learn as you go," he said. "You never get an instructional video, they don't give you a freshman pamphlet saying, 'This is what your life is going to be like, this is how you do things.'
"It is trial and error, and Lord knows I've had more errors than trials."
Bumping incident
Unable to avoid controversy even on the eve of the title, he was accused Saturday of bumping a photographer after practice. He apologized, then calmly held off runner-up Mark Martin in a race that was won by Kurt Busch.
To get here, he had to overcome controversy, fines and probation, as well as a last-place finish in the Daytona 500 -- a race he was favored to win, but his engine blew on the second lap -- and five other DNFs.
Stewart was humble after Sunday's race, his voice choked with emotion, his brooding eyes hidden behind dark sunglasses when he spoke at the championship presentation.
Later, still wearing his champagne-soaked firesuit, he was charming and funny as he talked about how far he's come -- from his days as a 20-year-old working in an Indiana machine shop for $5 an hour, to the low points of this season that nearly derailed his career.
"I practically destroyed this team by midseason, single-handedly," he said. "Guys wanted to leave the team, and some did, and I don't blame them. I wouldn't have worked for me with the attitude I had."
In the weeks leading up to Sunday, his critics questioned whether he was worthy of being Winston Cup champion.
It's no secret Stewart can't be bothered with NASCAR's little requirements. He doesn't want to sign autographs in the garage area, doesn't want to meet with the media, doesn't want to represent anything.
Foyt is hero
His hero is A.J. Foyt, one of the greatest drivers in history with a temper as volatile as Stewart's. And Foyt sees nothing wrong with who Stewart is.
"I respect him for that," Foyt said. "Why do you have to get into that? If you're a champion, you're a champion. If you're a good race driver, you're a good race driver."
Chip Ganassi, a car owner who shares Stewart's demand for excellence, jumped at the chance two years ago to put Stewart in one of his cars for a shot at winning the Indianapolis 500. He would have fielded a car for him again this season, but Stewart declined, focused instead on his own championship hopes.
"He's a racer, that's all, and there's good and bad in that," Ganassi said. "I choose only to see the good, and that is that he'll do anything to race and anything to win."
With his championship, he cemented his status as one of the greatest drivers ever. It was his ninth title in 23 years, and he's won them at every level, in go-karts, sprint cars, modifieds, even the Indy Racing League.
Give him the keys to anything, he'll drive the wheels off of it.
"He just loves to win," Foyt said. "He don't race for the money. He races for the glory."