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Jarrett urges Goodyear to listen to Stewart

Dale Jarrett said Tuesday Goodyear should listen to Tony Stewart's complaints and should build better tires for Sprint Cup racing.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Dale Jarrett Tuesday called on Goodyear to listen carefully to Tony Stewart's complaints about the tires the company has produced this season.

Although some drivers believe Stewart went overboard in his criticism of Goodyear following Sunday's race in Atlanta, Jarrett said the manufacturer needs to start constructing a better tire for Sprint Cup racing.

"I have no problem with what Tony Stewart said. I'm a huge supporter of Goodyear and all that they have done over the years, but somebody needs to wake up right now and listen to these guys," said Jarrett, the former series champion who is retiring following Sunday's race in Bristol, Tenn.

"We're talking about race drivers that have a huge amount of talent and very seldom complain about things like that."

Stewart was livid with Goodyear all last weekend, when he complained about a lack of grip on the hard tires the company sent to Atlanta. Following his second-place finish, the two-time series champion said Goodyear gave him "the most pathetic racing tire I've ever been on in my professional career."

Goodyear has staunchly defended its product. But Tuesday, Texas Motor Speedway officials said Goodyear will not bring the Atlanta tire to its track for next month's race.

Atlanta and Texas are essentially sister tracks with identical layouts and the same 24 degree banking in the corners.

Jeff Gordon and Dale Earnhardt Jr. were among the many drivers to echo Stewart's complaints after the Atlanta race, but a handful of drivers on Monday decided Stewart went too far.

As the exclusive tire provider of NASCAR, Goodyear is not subjected to competition from other manufacturers. And NASCAR can't allow other companies to enter the sport for risk of a "tire war" in which manufacturers are putting safety at risk while trying to develop a faster tire that teams will select.

On Tuesday, Jarrett said he has gone to NASCAR before to urge the sanctioning body to mandate Goodyear develop separate tires for the Sprint Cup and Nationwide Series. In using the same tire, the rubber must be strong enough to withstand a significant amount of downforce in the Nationwide cars.

The Cup cars have roughly 400 lbs. less downforce, and don't need such a hard tire, Jarrett said.

"We can't race the same tire on the Nationwide cars that is going to be any good for the Cup cars. That's just plain and simple," Jarrett said. "You're not going to be able to put on a good show. These guys cannot drive these cars to the point of putting on a good race for the fans, which is what our sport was built on.

"So somebody is going to have to swallow their pride right now, and we are going to have to have two separate tires done there."

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