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The Associated Press
Tony Stewart celebrates after winning the Price Chopper 400 auto race at Kansas Speedway.
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Published: October 5, 2009
KANSAS CITY, Kan. - Tony Stewart found himself in danger of letting a title slip away after just two rounds in the Chase for the Sprint Cup Championship.
The two-time champion wasn't exactly in a must-win situation Sunday at Kansas Speedway, but a rocky start to the Chase put him in search of some very big finishes before leaders Mark Martin and Jimmie Johnson put the title out of reach.
With a gutsy call on the final pit stop, Stewart ended his slide and sliced into Martin's lead in the standings. His fourth win of the season - but first in eight races - moved him up one spot in the standings to fourth, and his deficit was cut from 106 points to 67 behind Martin.
"That's almost half," Stewart said in Victory Lane.
Martin, the polesitter, finished seventh and maintained his lead in the standings. He's up 18 points against three-time defending series champion Johnson, who finished ninth after a series of bad pit calls took him out of contention.
But Martin wasn't in a celebratory mood. There were only three drivers within 106 points of him at the start of the race. As he left Kansas, the field had been doubled to six.
"Look at it however you want," Martin said. "What is there, seven more to go? I don't think we should be getting all hyped up about the tally right now, you know? We've got a lot of racing to go."
The final outcome came down to strategy, and it started to shape up as a race that would be decided on fuel mileage. Then Dale Earnhardt Jr. brought out the final caution of the race when an engine problem spilled oil on the track.
Greg Biffle went to pit road as the leader, with Stewart second. Biffle and his crew still didn't seem sure of what to do as he pulled into his spot, but Stewart crew chief Darian Grubb was confident two tires was the answer.
Stewart raced off pit road into the lead, with Kasey Kahne and Johnson in pursuit.
Biffle, the first driver to take four tires, restarted in fourth and admitted to overruling crew chief Greg Erwin, who only wanted to take two tires.
"I feel bad. Probably the wrong thing to do," Biffle said.
Stewart took off on the restart with 26 laps to go, and all the drivers on four tires quickly sliced through the field.
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