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Gordon wins at Atlanta; Takes sole possession of third in the all-time win list

Jeff Gordon held off teammate Jimmie Johnson in the final 10 laps on Tuesday to win in the rain-delayed AdvoCare 500 at Atlanta Motor Speedway.

[media-credit name=”CIA Stock Photo” align=”alignright” width=”204″][/media-credit]”We used it up there in the end and I was slipping and sliding. The track really changed a lot after that rain delay. Our car was real, real tight and we had to free it up. I tell you what, that was a lot of fun racing with him (Jimmie Johnson). I was slipping and he was slipping. The throttle control was very tough there at the end. There were a couple of moments where I really thought he got us. But what an incredible victory for this Drive to End Hunger Chevrolet.” Gordon said.

“Man, that is what racing is all about. That was a lot of fun. I am grateful that I got to grow up racing off-road trucks and buggies because I was dead sideways those last probably 10 or 15 laps there trying to get by him. Just great hard racing.” Johnson said.

This was Gordon’s third win of the season and 85th of his career, moving him into sole possession of third in the all-time win list behind David Pearson (105) and Richard Petty (200).

“I totally forgot about that. Eighty-five, wow! That is un-believable. With the kind of day we had, the kind of year we’re having, I feel rejuvenated.” Gordon said.

With this win, Gordon also became the Modern Era (1972-Present) wins leader, breaking a tie with Darrell Waltrip. NASCAR President Mike Helton presented Gordon with an “85” mosaic featuring images from each of the four-time champion’s victories and special commemorative “85” hats were worn by Gordon and his No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports team in Victory Lane.

Tony Stewart finished third, Kurt Busch fourth and Carl Edwards finished fifth.

Tony Stewart battled back for a third place finish and remains in 10th place in the series standings with only Richmond left before the chase begins.

“The points are big going into next week, that’s for sure. I’m proud of the effort everybody gave this week. It may come down to one point. Having the strong finish we had here, maybe that will be the difference in making it or not making it next week.” Stewart said.

Kurt Busch’s fourth place finish clinched a spot in the chase.

“A great day for Penske and the Shell/Pennzoil Dodge team today. It was a great run, a Chase-type effort.” Busch said. “A great run for our Shell/Pennzoil Dodge. It’s great to be locked into the Chase. Just all of our sponsors, AAA, Lennox, Snap-On, and Coca-Cola. A good, solid season. Now it’s go time. We’ve got Richmond as a buffer, but we’ve got 10 weeks ahead of us that are the most important 10 weeks of the season.”

Ryan Newman is also locked in and Brad Keselowski has at least wrapped up a wild card berth.

“We’re not proud of our performance today, but we’re proud of what we accomplished. We got the Soldiers’ car in the Chase, a credit to our Stewart-Haas Racing organization. The opportunity to make the Chase is what we’ve been striving for all year long. This accomplishment is for our Army Strong Soldiers who give this No. 39 team an immense amount of pride and inspiration.” Newman said.

Clint Bowyer saw his Chase hopes diminish when he got together with Juan Montoya on lap 241.

“I was tight up off the corner,” Bowyer said. “You can’t race around a jackass. You just can’t. He dive-bombs the restarts, and before you know it, he’s in the way up there. I’m just tired of it.” Bowyer said.

Dale Earnhardt finished 19th and is in ninth place, just two points ahead of Stewart heading into Richmond.

“It was not a good day.” Earnhardt said. “We lost a little bit of ground (in the Chase standings) and it’s a little bit tighter going into Richmond but we still feel pretty good. But it doesn’t matter if we can’t figure out how to make the car run. It don’t matter where we are.”

“I mean we are 26 ahead of Brad (Keselowski) I think. With all the start-and-parks and stuff it makes it a little bit easier on us but we should be able to go in there and make that happen.” Earnhardt added.

 

Unofficial Race Results
AdvoCare 500, Atlanta Motor Speedway
http://www.speedwaymedia.com/Cup/race.php?race=25
=========================================
Pos. St. No. Driver Make Points
=========================================
1 5 24 Jeff Gordon Chevrolet 48
2 17 48 Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet 43
3 20 14 Tony Stewart Chevrolet 41
4 10 22 Kurt Busch Dodge 40
5 7 99 Carl Edwards Ford 40
6 14 2 Brad Keselowski Dodge 39
7 21 29 Kevin Harvick Chevrolet 37
8 13 11 Denny Hamlin Toyota 37
9 6 17 Matt Kenseth Ford 36
10 11 43 A.J. Allmendinger Ford 34
11 4 83 Brian Vickers Toyota 33
12 15 16 Greg Biffle Ford 32
13 27 31 Jeff Burton Chevrolet 31
14 8 56 Martin Truex Jr. Toyota 31
15 12 42 Juan Montoya Chevrolet 29
16 25 1 Jamie McMurray Chevrolet 28
17 32 5 Mark Martin Chevrolet 27
18 22 27 Paul Menard Chevrolet 26
19 29 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. Chevrolet 25
20 9 39 Ryan Newman Chevrolet 24
21 18 9 Marcos Ambrose Ford 23
22 37 51 Landon Cassill Chevrolet 0
23 3 18 Kyle Busch Toyota 22
24 24 20 Joey Logano Toyota 20
25 31 38 J.J. Yeley Ford 20
26 40 32 Mike Bliss Ford 0
27 39 36 Mike Skinner Chevrolet 0
28 38 13 Casey Mears Toyota 16
29 43 195 David Starr Ford 0
30 42 71 Andy Lally * Ford 14
31 16 0 David Reutimann Toyota 13
32 30 46 Scott Speed Ford 0
33 26 78 Regan Smith Chevrolet 11
34 1 4 Kasey Kahne Toyota 11
35 19 6 David Ragan Ford 9
36 2 33 Clint Bowyer Chevrolet 9
37 36 34 David Gilliland Ford 7
38 23 47 Bobby Labonte Toyota 6
39 33 7 Robby Gordon Dodge 5
40 34 87 Joe Nemechek Toyota 0
41 28 66 Michael McDowell Toyota 3
42 41 55 Travis Kvapil Ford 0
43 35 60 Dave Blaney Toyota 1

Edwards NNS Richmond Advance

Jeff Gordon Nets Huge Win in Atlanta

Jeff Gordon won his 85th Sprint Cup race at the Atlanta Motor Speedway by winning the AdvoCare 500. With the win Gordon becomes takes the third position in all-time wins behind David Pearson (105 wins) and Richard Petty (200 wins).  The race was delayed for two days due to Tropical Storm Lee which caused storms over the area both Sunday and Monday. The race was slowed a couple of times for drizzle including a short red flag but the day belonged to Gordon.

[media-credit name=”NASCAR ” align=”alignright” width=”227″][/media-credit]Although Gordon dominated the race leading a race high 146 laps of the scheduled 325 but had to hold off a hard charger in Jimmie Johnson who closed the gap to under a car length as the laps wound down.  Gordon’s lead over his friend and team mate was over 2 seconds with about 20 laps left but both battled loose race cars and Gordon held him off.  It was an epic battle and Johnson came off turn four trying to catch Gordon almost sideways. Johnson said afterwards, “I’m sure glad I  had some dirt racing experience there because I  sure needed it to survive that. It was fun.”

“I have always liked him as a driver,” said David Pearson, next on Gordon’s march up the wins list. “He is smart, takes care of his equipment and when it is time to go, he gets right up there with them. Reminds me some of the way I drove. … He has been the ‘head honcho’ for a long time in NASCAR. He was good out of the box and has been very good ever since.”

Everyone recognizes how strong they are and you can never count them out, Gordon said in media center afterwards.  “In the last couple weeks we have been in battle with them. I’m excited we we’re on a half mile track last week and led so much and then came here and won.”  Gordon added, “It was so much fun, it was so slick. I have a lot of respect for Jimmie , he’s a five-time champion. We have great cars right now.”  Gordon spoke of how the race unfolded, “All of a sudden with 15 to go it got lose and here he comes.  We’re having a lot of fun right now and we can’t wait for the chase.”

This was the culmination of the Sprint Summer Showdown that had Brad Keselowski, Marcos Ambrose and Paul Menard in a position to win $1 million for themselves,  a fan and the charity of their choice. The closest one was Keselowski who finished 6th. After the race Sprint announced that they would donate $10,000 to each driver’s charity of their choice.

Tony Stewart, fighting for a place in the chase made up 8 seconds at the end of the race finishing in a surprising third place at the end. Stewart was excited with the performance but noted that there was still work that needed to be done.

Headed in the Right Direction: Victory in Atlanta Keeps Hornaday’s Season Alive

Ron Hornaday knew that he got lucky on Friday night in Atlanta and he didn’t care. In fact, he’d rather be lucky the last eight races of the 2011 season compared to what his No. 33 ARMOUR Chevrolet team has been to start the season.

[media-credit name=”CIA Stock Photo” align=”alignright” width=”247″][/media-credit]“See that trophy? We stole it tonight,” Hornaday said. “But we’ll take it any way we can get it.”

Hornaday’s 49th career victory in 292 Nascar Camping World Truck Series (NCWTS) starts was on a fuel mileage gamble. After getting behind early, real early from a lap one incident, Hornaday’s team spent much of the night repairing the damage to the nose of the truck.

“Brain fade on my part,” Hornaday said about lap one. “Billy O [spotter] said everybody was checking up and I ran into the back of the 15 and I locked the brakes up. I do something weird with my brakes on the restarts and I had nothing left, I was already down to the floor and I skid into the back of him.”

Crediting his team with doing and awesome job in the pits, part of Hornaday’s break came from the tape they used to repair the damage. Repeatedly saying it’s amazing what tape does to a truck at Atlanta and that it ended up helping the team with their adjustments.

Crew chief Jeff Hensley and Hornaday thought they had brought a contending truck to the track but after qualifying 17th it appeared to be the start of another frustrating weekend.

Said Hensley, “We had a decent truck in practice and I don’t know why we qualify as slow as we have on these bigger tracks.”

Because of the damage and having to pit numerous times, Hornaday went into fuel conservation mode after pitting for the final time on lap 75. Then as the dominant trucks made their final stops he found himself out front during the final 16 laps.

Their second win of the season wasn’t unexpected for the team, but how they earned it was. Just like in Texas when leader Johnny Sauter was black-flagged and Hornaday inherited the lead and the win. For Hornaday, those have been the only two times that things finally went right for the team.

In a season that’s has been hit or miss for the Kevin Harvick Inc team, they never gave up on the championship fight but have been busy climbing out of an early hole.

“Well, we go back to where we lost 25 points for the gear [following Charlotte] and me having brain fade about four races and wrecking trucks, puts us where we’re at,” said Hornaday.

In the early part of July, Hornaday finishes 17th or worse in three straight races, knocking him to ninth in points where he had been entering Atlanta. Since then the team has finished no worse than 24th in the last five races with four top nine finishes, including Friday’s win.

“Once I can put my head back on straight, get the trucks driving little bit better we’ll be fine. This right here is a boost,” said Hornaday.

Now sitting fifth in points, only 48 markers behind leader James Buescher, the four-time series champion could become a player. The veteran who was counted out early is working toward becoming the favorite through better the truck and himself.

This week he says he’s looking at putting a new seat in the truck. Right now he’s using a carbon fiber one but he’s looking to use something different heading forward.

“Maybe I can feel these trucks better these next couple of races, something I’m going to try differently for myself,” Hornaday said and in turn, “hopefully that will keep the front of the truck from bouncing.”