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GORDON TO ENJOY 'OLD'
DAYTONA ONCE LAST TIME |
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (June 29, 2010) -
With hot summer temperatures
expected this weekend, six-time Daytona International Speedway winner Jeff
Gordon plans to enjoy the "slip 'n slide" during Saturday night's 400-miler.
Earlier this year during the Daytona 500, the pavement
began breaking up in turn 2 on the 2.5-mile track. While a 'quick fix' allowed
the race to run its scheduled distance (and beyond), the track will be repaved
after this weekend giving the driver of the No. 24 DuPont Chevrolet one last
opportunity to race on a surface he might just consider the best.
"That old pavement - how it wears, what it does to the
tires, how the cars drive on it and how you have to drive it as a driver - is
the best," said Gordon, who holds the record for most all-time restrictor plate
victories with 12. "We're going to miss that old pavement.
"Other than the problem with it coming up like it did
during the '500,' that's what you want everywhere you race.
"New pavement just doesn't wear out the tires like old
pavement. When we come back here for Speedweeks, it's going to be a totally
unique and different Daytona. That can be great - or not.
"This weekend, we're going to try to take advantage of
the old pavement, enjoy it as much as we can, and slip and slide around here
like we normally do in July."
Along with six victories at the Florida track, Gordon
has three poles, 11 top-fives and 17 top-10's in 35 starts. But this Saturday
night's event will be like none before because it features a restrictor-plate
opening of 1 1/32 inches - the largest restrictor plate since the
horsepower-reducing plates were mandated in 1988 - and a return to the spoiler.
"I expect handling to be at a premium this weekend,"
said Gordon, who is fifth in the standings and 187 points behind leader Kevin
Harvick. "Handling was important here in February, so it should be real
important this weekend with the higher track temperatures.
"The spoiler adds a little drag, but the bigger plate
should make up for it."
And a trip to Victory Lane could make up for the fact
Daytona will never be the same again.
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