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GORDON HOPES REIGN IN
BRISTOL RETURNS TO END DROUGHT |
BRISTOL, Tenn. (August 19, 2008) -
Five-time Bristol Motor Speedway winner Jeff Gordon won four
consecutive Spring races from 1995 to 1998 at the 0.533-mile track, but his last
win here occurred in 2002. That victory ended a 31-race winless streak, and a
win six years later could end a similar drought.
It has been 28 races since Gordon last visited Victory Lane -- at Charlotte in
2007.
The 81-time winner is ninth in the point standings, however, and 82 points ahead
of 13th with three races remaining before the 12-driver "Chase for the NASCAR
Sprint Cup" field is set. Team DuPont is determined to go "all out" to earn a
spot in the "Chase" beginning with Saturday night's Sharpie 500.
"We had a great car at Michigan, but obviously did not get the result we were
looking for," said Gordon, who finished 42nd after a cut tire sent the No. 24
car into the turn 2 wall. "We dropped positions in the standings, and now we
have to enter the next few races with a different mindset.
"Before, we were in a position where taking risks wasn't an option. We had a
pretty comfortable margin on the transfer spot, and we didn't want to jeopardize
that.
"We're not in that position anymore, so now we must go all out and see where we
end up."
Along with his five victories, Gordon has five poles, 12 top-fives and 18 top-10
finishes in 31 starts at the high-banked short track. But the four-time NASCAR
Cup Series champion has yet to finish in the top 10 since changes to the track
were introduced before this race last year.
"We haven't been as good here since they re-did the track, but I do like what
they've done," said Gordon. "I'm looking forward to the race and I'm confident
this DuPont team will perform better.
"Bristol used to be a one-groove race track where it was a little bit of Russian
roulette. But now, we've got multiple grooves and I love it. I think the racing
is three times better.
"Crashes don't happen as much. You're still going to see them but not as often
as you used to. When it was a one-groove track, drivers would get frustrated
with the car in front of them and just take them out. And that's not racing, in
my opinion - it's more bumper-cars.
"Now, we're going to Bristol and we're racing."
And racing for a spot in the "Chase."
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