MARTINSVILLE, Va. (March 25,
2008) - It could hardly be
considered an upset if a No.
14 “seed” wins this weekend.
Jeff Gordon, who is
currently 14th in the NASCAR
Sprint Cup Series point
standings, has a great track
record at Martinsville
Speedway – site of this
Sunday’s Goody’s Cool Orange
500. In 30 starts at the
Virginia short track, Gordon
has seven victories, six
poles, 18 top-fives and 24
top-10's. In fact, Gordon
has never posted a DNF (Did
Not Finish) at the
0.526-mile track and has
finished outside the top 12
only three times.
And his success can be
attributed to a test here
early in his career.
“I don’t even remember
what year it was – maybe
1994 ,” Gordon said. “We
made a ton of laps but
nothing was working for us.
I couldn’t get the car to
turn the middle of the
corner.
“So I tried some
different things – the way I
drove the car, the way I
attacked the track – and we
hit on something. Ever since
then, my focus has been
giving the DuPont team good
information so that we can
get the car to turn the
middle of the corner.” But
there is a balance required
to run well at the
“paper-clip” track, and it
presents a challenge to the
four-time NASCAR Cup Series
champion.
“You can’t overdrive the
corners here,” said Gordon.
“And you must be smooth on
the gas. If you drive the
corner too easy and you
don’t get in the gas hard
enough off the corners,
you’re not going to be
fast.”
With so much success at
the track, you would expect
Gordon to be immediately
fast when practice starts on
Friday.
“That’s what’s funny,”
Gordon said. “Every time I
come here it takes me about
eight or 10 laps to find
that rhythm again. The first
couple of laps here during a
race weekend, I tend to
overdrive the car. I have to
tell myself, ‘slow it down,
slow it down.’
“Then, boom, the lap
times start falling.
“It’s a fine line to find
the balance to go fast
here.”
If Team DuPont finds the
balance this weekend, a No.
14 seed could advance
further up the standings