INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (July
22, 2008) - After enjoying a
weekend off, Jeff Gordon is
"geared up" for the final
stretch of 17 consecutive
races to close out the 2008
season. That stretch of
events begins at
Indianapolis Motor Speedway
this Sunday, and the
four-time Allstate 400 at
The Brickyard winner cannot
wait for the No. 24 DuPont
Chevrolet to roll onto the
hallowed grounds.
"I was here a couple
weeks ago to promote the
event and, man, it was cool
just touring the track
again," Gordon said. "It was
neat to see the changes
being made for the MotoGP
race, but it just got me
pumped up for our race.
"There is something about
this place that gets me
fired up." Gordon, who grew
up in nearby Pittsboro,
dreamed of racing at the
famed speedway. But that was
during an era when only
open-wheeled cars raced at
the famed track, and the
dream appeared distant when
Gordon chose stock cars as a
career path.
"As a kid, I remember
taking the bus around here,
going to the museum and just
thinking how cool it would
be to race on the track one
day," said Gordon.
"The opportunity to race
here in open-wheeled cars
never materialized, and I
chose to pursue racing stock
cars in NASCAR."
The dream to race over
the yard of bricks came to
fruition in 1994 when the
inaugural stock car race was
held at the speedway. And in
dream-like fashion, Gordon
raced to victory.
"That is still one of the
most memorable moments of my
career," said Gordon. "I
thought I'd lost that chance
to race here. Then, to get
that chance in a stock car
and to win was just
incredible. "Now I get the
opportunity to race here
every year, and I've been
fortunate to win the event
four times." Gordon is part
of an elite group of drivers
that have posted at least
four wins at the speedway.
Al Unser, Rick Mears and A.J.
Foyt each have four
Indianapolis 500 victories
while Michael Schumacher was
the winner of five United
States Grand Prix's. Along
with his victories in 1994,
1998, 2001 and 2004, the
driver of the No. 24 DuPont
Chevrolet has three poles,
eight top-fives and 11
top-10's in 14 starts.
"We've had a lot of
success here, so it's a race
that I always look forward
to and this team looks
forward to," Gordon said.
"You gear up to win the
Brickyard - pretty much
every team and driver is
geared up to win this race.
"There is just so much
history here, and a win
makes you part of that
history." A fifth win,
though, will only add to
Gordon's Brickyard lore.