JOLIET, Ill. (July 8,
2008) - Saturday night,
live, is the debut of the
"Car of Tomorrow" (CoT) at
Chicagoland Speedway, and
Team DuPont does not want to
experience intermediate
track blues, brothers.
It has been an up and
down year for Jeff Gordon on
mile-and-a-half and two-mile
tracks. At California, the
four-time NASCAR Cup Series
champion led 68 laps en
route to a third-place
finish in the rain-delayed
event. One week later,
Gordon led 19 laps at Las
Vegas before a
frightening accident
relegated him to a
35th-place finish. In March
at Atlanta, Gordon posted
another top-five finish. One
month later, he battled the
handling at Texas, was
involved in an accident and
finished 43rd. At Lowe's in
May and Michigan in June -
two races where fuel
strategy played an outcome
in the final running order,
Gordon had finishes of
fourth and 18th,
respectively. "I thought we
started out the year well
with good runs at
California, Las Vegas and
Atlanta," said Gordon, who
will drive a specially
painted No. 24 DuPont/Nicorette
Chevrolet Impala SS this
weekend. "Texas, though, was
probably the low point of
the season for us. "We ran
terrible and I lost control
of the car. When you go
through those types of
races, you look back at it
and try to figure out how we
could have improved and
where we are missing
something.
"Everybody's pretty
tightly matched. Sometimes
it might look like you're
way off, but it could be
something that's small that
makes a big difference."
A difference Team DuPont
hopes to find during a test
this week in Kentucky. "I
still don't feel like we've
really figured out what we
need to be battling for wins
and leading laps, but we're
working really hard on
that," said Gordon, who has
one win, one pole, four
top-fives and five top-10's
in seven starts at
Chicagoland. "In terms of
sheer speed, we still need
to gain. But we feel like we
have until September to make
all those gains. "We need to
secure a spot in the Chase
and then start off solid. We
have a strong team - one
that's capable of winning
races anywhere.
"One that's capable of
winning a championship."