FONTANA, Calif. (August
26, 2008) - Leading a lap -
and the five bonus points
awarded for doing so -
during this Sunday's Pepsi
500 would certainly aid Jeff
Gordon's quest to secure a
spot in the 2008 edition of
the "Chase for the NASCAR
Sprint Cup."
If history is any
indication, it could also
lead to a strong finish for
Team DuPont at Auto Club
Speedway.
In 16 career starts at
the two-mile track, Gordon
has three wins, two poles,
eight top-fives and eight
top-10's. He has led nine
events for a total of 525
laps - more than any other
driver. In the nine events
when he has led at least one
lap, Gordon has eight
top-fives with an average
finish of 3.55.
In seven events when he
has failed to lead lap? An
average finish of 21.14 and
no top-10 finishes. Earlier
this year at the California
track, Gordon led 68 laps en
route to a third-place
finish in the rain-delayed
event - a run that the
four-time NASCAR Cup Series
champion believes can be
"bettered."
"We feel really good
about this weekend's event,"
said Gordon, who will drive
a specially painted No. 24
DuPont/Pepsi Chevrolet
during the 250-lap race. "We
were strong here in
February, and I think our
program is better now.
"Track position on these
big tracks plays an
important role during the
event. We started second in
February because qualifying
was canceled, and that
starting position certainly
helped.
"Our first goal of the
weekend is a strong
qualifying effort on
Friday."
With only two races
remaining before the
12-driver "Chase" field is
set, Gordon sits ninth in
the standings - 108 points
ahead of 13th place. No
matter the results of the
other competitors, finishes
of eighth or better at
California and Richmond mean
Team DuPont is racing for a
fifth championship.
"The level of intensity
has certainly risen the past
few weeks, and there's
definitely more pressure,"
said Gordon. "We have to be
sure we're on top of our
game. We can't make mistakes
and we have to be sure we're
doing everything right.
"We're racing the guys in
10th, 11th, 12th, 13th and
14th. If they take a big
risk, it may push us into a
corner to take a risk. "But
that's not our focus. Our
focus is - number one - to
make our car go fast.
Secondly, we must run our
race and not worry about the
other competitors. "We
shouldn't have to base our
decisions on what other
teams are doing."