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TEST AT CALIFORNIA
PROVIDED ANSWERS, MORE QUESTIONS FOR GORDON |
FONTANA , Calif. (February 19, 2008) -
Three-time California Speedway
winner Jeff Gordon expects a "totally different challenge" this Sunday in the
Auto Club 500.
Gordon, whose wins occurred in 1997 (inaugural event),
1999 and 2004 at the two-mile track, learned a lot during a test here in the
"Car of Tomorrow" (CoT) at the end of January. But many questions remain
unanswered as the CoT makes its 2008 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series debut on an
intermediate track this weekend.
"There has always been somewhat of a draft here because
of the long straightaways," said Gordon, driver of the No. 24 DuPont Chevrolet
Impala SS. "To me, drafting at California Speedway has never really been that
big of a deal. You could hang with someone down the straightaway, but it sort of
evened itself out when you got into the corners.
"But with these cars, the change is significant. When
you get up close to another car, these cars take off.
"During the test, we did a lot of single-car runs
but would encounter a car or two.
What we don't know is how the car will react in a pack of cars here. Once you
get the draft off several cars and get a run, will the car 'stop' because of the
air hitting the nose? Or will you be able to carry that momentum and complete
the pass?
"While these cars punch such a big hole in the air and
it provides a great draft, it's also doing that in the corners and that takes
downforce away. I think that is going to cause everyone to really search for
different lines in the corner."
Team DuPont would have preferred to enter the second
race of the season on a high note, but a broken suspension part relegated Gordon
to a 39th-place finish in the season-opening Daytona 500 last Sunday.
"That was unfortunate because I was having a blast
during the race," said Gordon. "The car was driving great and I was just
cruising, and then the handling just went away and we started wearing right
front tires out.
"But we've put that behind us and the focus for us is putting together a strong
run until the checkered flag waves this weekend."
Along with three wins, Gordon has two poles and seven
top-fives in 15 starts at the California track. But this is a new weekend with a
new car.
"Tracks like California Speedway present a totally
different challenge to us with the new car -- and we're looking forward to
facing that challenge," Gordon said. "I don't think anyone knows what to expect
until we actually get into race conditions.
"But, I do believe it will be an entertaining race for
the fans."
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