GORDON GUNS FOR ROAD COURSE SWEEP
AMD at The Glen – Watkins Glen International Advance – 8/13/06
WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. (August 8, 2006) – Already a winner at Infineon Raceway this
year, Jeff Gordon has a chance to sweep the road courses in 2006 when the NASCAR
NEXTEL Cup Series visits Watkins Glen International for the AMD at The Glen this Sunday.
Gordon, who holds a record nine career road course victories in NASCAR’s premier
series, won seven before he captured his fourth championship in 2001. While NASCAR’s
“King of the Road” has only won on the serpentine tracks twice since then, Gordon and Team
DuPont have worked hard to regain that edge. And with only five races remaining before the
“Chase for the NASCAR NEXTEL Cup” field is set, reaching the double-digit plateau in road
course victories on Sunday would provide a boost as Gordon battles for one of 10
guaranteed spots in the “Chase.”
“We're pretty excited about this weekend’s race,” Gordon said. “We’ve stepped up our
road course program this year and we're looking to be strong again.
“You can’t run the exact same setup as you do at Sonoma, but I think that we'll be able
to learn a lot from that race which should improve our program here.
“This is a very fast road course. There's some big, sweeping, fast right-handers, so
you really have to have your car working well. But brakes are important as well, especially
getting into the inner-loop after the long backstraight.”
In 13 starts at the 2.45-mile track, Gordon has recorded four victories, two poles, six
top-fives and seven top-10's. His last victory, though, occurred in 2001. Since that win, he has
run out of fuel on the last lap (2003), had transmission failure (2004), a flat tire and was
penalized for pitting too soon under caution (both in 2005).
Last Sunday after a sway bar arm became unhooked from the sway bar at
Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Gordon and Team DuPont battled back from three laps down
to finish 16th. More importantly, they actually gained valuable championship points. Gordon,
who entered the event ninth in points and 50 ahead of 11th, exited the event eighth in points,
52 ahead of 11th.
“I’m proud of the team for that comeback,” Gordon said. “They really showed that
they’re a championship-caliber team with that effort.
“We were fortunate to make up those laps, but it was definitely frustrating to have such
a good car but only have a 16th-place finish to show for it.
“It’s a tight battle for those last few positions in the Chase, and we can’t afford to have
those types of problems.”
And a 10th at The Glen would move Gordon closer to securing one of the 10 spots
vying for the championship.