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GORDON GOING "ALL
OUT" FOR RECORD BREAKING ALL-STAR VICTORY |
CONCORD, N.C. (May 13, 2008) -
Saturday night's All-Star event at Lowe's Motor Speedway is a
"Sprint" race, and Jeff Gordon believes there is only one way to approach the
annual event.
"Go 'all out.'"
Gordon is currently tied with the late Dale Earnhardt
for most victories in the non- points event for race winners. Each of Gordon's
three victories, coincidentally, occurred in years he won the NASCAR Cup Series
championship (1995, 1997 and 2001).
"I think the All-Star race is a fantastic event,"
Gordon said. "We all look forward to it because of the excitement, the prestige,
the bragging rights and the million dollars that goes to the winner. There are
no points on the line which means there is less pressure on the teams, but it
seems there is more excitement surrounding the event.
"You just have fun and race hard.
"Most importantly, though, I think it's a great race
for the fans. You hope it's a great race for them because that is really what
this event is all about. It's sort of giving back to the fans for their support
and everything they do for us."
In 1995, he won all three segments en route to his
first victory in the event. He won again in 1997 and, in 2001, he drove a backup
car to victory after being involved in a first- lap crash. His favorite moment?
"Probably the year we crashed and came back to win,"
Gordon said. "There is such a buildup prior to the race that is was deflating to
be involved in a crash in the first corner on the first lap because the track
was wet. Then we got word we could run the backup car, and to see all the
Hendrick Motorsports (HMS) teams working to get the car ready was incredible.
"Winning that event was a testament to HMS and the guys
on the DuPont team."
Last Saturday night, Gordon posted a third-place finish
in the 500-mile event at Darlington. Next weekend is a 600-miler at Lowe's Motor
Speedway. Sandwiched between 1,100 miles of racing is this weekend's 150-mile
event broken up into four segments of 25 laps. The format and the shorter
distance mean a very aggressive approach is required to battle for the victory.
"You have to be aggressive," said Gordon. "You only
drive different in this event because it's basically a short, sprint race. It's
going to be tough to win the race just being consistent.
"That's not going to work in the All-Star event. It's
about being aggressive in the pits and being aggressive on the race track.
"It's about going all-out."
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