SHORT-TRACK BRISTOL PLAYS INTO TEAM DUPONT’S STRENGTHS
BRISTOL, Tenn. (March 21, 2006) – Team DuPont and Jeff Gordon have
improved on their weakness – 1.5-mile and two-mile tracks, also referred to as
“intermediate” tracks – during the early stages of the 2006 NASCAR NEXTEL Cup
season. This Sunday in the Food City 500 at Bristol Motor Speedway, they plan to
capitalize on one of their strengths.
Since the season-opening Daytona 500, Gordon has climbed from 25th to sixth in
the point standings. He has posted three consecutive top-15 finishes – including a fifthplace
finish at Las Vegas and a fourth in Atlanta – on “intermediate” tracks.
While their struggles on those types of track could be blamed for Gordon missing
last year’s “Chase for the NASCAR NEXTEL Cup,” he believes their inability to capitalize
on their strengths was also to blame. The four-time champion hopes to correct that in the
first short track event of the season.
"Short tracks are good tracks for us, but we have to take advantage of them,” said
Gordon. “That was the one area last year that really bit us. Other than Martinsville, we had
issues that kept us from posting good finishes at the short tracks and the road courses.”
In the Spring race at Bristol in 2005, Gordon battled back from two laps down and
an accident to run third with 10 laps remaining in the 500-lap event. Unfortunately, a
suspension failure led to a 15th-place finish – and a loss of 47 valuable points in the
standings.
“The finish to that race was definitely frustrating for us,” Gordon said. “It was a great
effort by the team, especially to fight back from two laps down, but we were in a position to
finish in the top five and we didn’t.
“We need to take advantage of our strengths and post good finishes. In our sport,
there will be days like that.
“But you have to limit them.”
In 26 career starts at the 0.533-mile high-banked track, Gordon has five wins, four
poles, 10 top-fives and 16 top-10's. He has a 4.7 average starting position and has started
from inside the top 10 on 23 occasions.
“Starting up front here is definitely an advantage,” Gordon said. “It allows you to be
patient in dealing with the traffic.
“Traffic is something you can’t get away from here. It always seems like there are 42
cars right behind you, and another 42 cars right in front of you.”