TALLADEGA, Ala. (April
22, 2008) - Attempting to
win his third consecutive
race at Talladega
Superspeedway, Jeff Gordon
does not yet know what
strategy he will use during
the Aaron’s 499 on Sunday.
There is one strategy he
prefers, though, and that is
racing from the drop of the
green flag.
Gordon, whose 12
restrictor-plate wins are
the most of any driver,
swept both events in 2007 at
the 2.66-mile track in very
differing styles. In the
spring event, Gordon started
from the pole and led a
race-high 71 laps en route
to victory. He was running
in the top 15 for 161 of the
192 laps with an average
running position of seventh.
When the series returned
to the track in the fall, it
was during the “Chase for
the NASCAR NEXTEL Cup” with
the debut of the “Car of
Tomorrow” (CoT) on a
restrictor- plate track.
Gordon started 34th, spent
only 45 of the 188 laps in
the top 15 and had an
average running position of
28th during the event. He
led only one lap – the final
one.
“We didn’t want to lay
back during the fall race,
but there were a lot of
unknowns with the new car at
the track,” said Gordon, who
will drive a specially
painted No. 24 DuPont/Pepsi
Chevrolet Impala SS this
weekend.
“Our qualifying position
played the biggest part in
determining our strategy.
Starting so far back, we
thought it would be best to
play it safe and work our
way into contention near the
end of the race.
“As uneventful as it was
in back, I was concerned
every single moment of every
single lap. I was concerned
that we would wreck amongst
ourselves. I was wondering
if we were going to lose the
draft.”
While the plan worked, it
went against the “racer” in
Gordon.
“I’ve never had to do
that before, and it was
difficult to get into that
mindset,” said Gordon, who
has six wins, 13 top-fives
and 16 top-10's in 30 starts
at the Alabama track. “We
talked about it before the
race and I said, ‘I can’t do
it.’
“It was tough because I
don’t like riding around in
back. I want to be up front,
battling for the lead and
leading laps from the drop
of the green flag.”
That mindset has helped
Gordon capture 81 victories
– sixth all-time, only two
behind Cale Yarborough for
fifth and only three behind
Bobby Allison and Darrell
Waltrip for third – and lead
19,647 laps during his
16-year career. But he may
have to adjust again this
weekend.
“Our plan right now is to
have a good qualifying run
on Saturday, start near the
front and race with the
leaders all day,” said
Gordon. “We may have to
rethink that plan if we
don’t start up front,
though.”
Either way, the plan is
to battle for victory as the
checkered flag waves, and
Gordon hopes the No. 24 car
is there first.