Stewart had one of the best cars Monday at Chicagoland Speedway, where NASCAR's title-deciding series opened a day late because of rain Sunday.
That was a gift of sorts for Stewart, who had a migraine headache throughout the rainy day. Given an extra day's rest, the two-time champion broke a 32-race losing streak dating to California last October.
Stewart stretched his final tank of fuel to the finish — something he had failed to do in the Chase opener at New Hampshire in 2010. Stewart ran out of gas with a lap to go last year, a swing that cost him five spots in the standings, and he never recovered to challenge for the title.
Now it's the competition that has to worry. Stewart jumped from ninth in the standings to second, just seven points behind race runner-up and Chase leader Kevin Harvick.
Five-time defending series champion Jimmie Johnson, points leader Kyle Busch and Matt Kenseth were among the drivers who ran out of gas on the last lap, and all plummeted in the final finishing order.
Harvick, who started the race tied with Busch for the points lead, held on for second after his Richard Childress Racing team told him to run wide open and not worry about fuel.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. capitalized on so many drivers ahead of him running out of gas to finish third, his best finish since he was second at Kansas 14 weeks ago. The strong result pushed him from 10th to fifth in the standings.
Denny Hamlin, who used the second wild-card spot to make it into the Chase, had the worst day of the 12 championship contending drivers. A vibration forced him to pit out of sequence, which dropped him a lap down from the leaders. He could never make it back, and a flat tire later sealed his 31st-place finish.
A year after nearly ending Johnson's run, Hamlin is probably now out of title contention.