Jeff Gordon hopes to ride momentum into Watkins Glen
Aug. 9, 2012: Weekend preview
NASCAR Wire Service
The
twist of fate that inserted Jeff Gordon's name back into the Chase for
the NASCAR Sprint Cup playoff race was much like a parting of the seas.
But even with one win in hand
after a bizarre finish at Pocono Raceway, it's far from smooth sailing
from here for the four-time champion.
Gordon
shot from fifth to first when his rivals collided in front of him in
what turned out to be the final restart before a rainstorm prematurely
halted last Sunday's Pennsylvania
400. The result handed Gordon his first victory of the year and a
provisional grasp on a wild-card berth with five races left before
NASCAR's postseason.
The
next of those races may be a wild-card unto itself. Gordon and the rest
of the Sprint Cup field will shift to road racing at Watkins Glen
International for Sunday's Finger
Lakes 335 (1 p.m. ET, ESPN).
The
2.45-mile layout was once a playground for Gordon, who romped to four
wins in five years from 1997-2001. There would be no better time for
Gordon to rekindle his Watkins Glen
magic than now, as another win would do wonders for his Chase hopes.
"I
mean, that would be huge," said Gordon, who locked up his 86th career
win last weekend. "To follow up what just happened in Pocono, to know
what's happening with the wild card,
the battle for the Chase, I think that we know while we've made some
huge gains over the last several weeks, that we're certainly in no
position to take a breath or be comfortable with one win being, what,
13th in points.
"Not
only do we understand -- and that's why there is added pressure -- how
important it is to continue to keep up a high level of performance. I
don't know if we need the second
win as badly as we needed the first one, but it's not far off."
The
performance level of late has helped to offset dreadful early season
luck for the No. 24 team. Gordon was mired in 24th in points heading
into Charlotte's Coca-Cola 600 in
May, but six top-10 finishes in the last seven races -- including last
Sunday's win -- have helped him jump 11 spots in the Sprint Cup
standings.
Although
the level of competition on road courses among the stock-car crowd has
tightened immensely in recent years, two road pros in particular figure
to be among Gordon's toughest
challengers -- Tony Stewart, who has five wins in the last 10 races at
the Glen, and Marcos Ambrose, the race's defending champ.
Stewart
is a virtual lock to qualify for the Chase either via a top-10 ranking
in points (he's currently sixth) or one of the two wild-card berths for
top winners in positions
11-20 (his three wins are tied with Jimmie Johnson and Brad Keselowski
for most in the series). Ambrose, however, is on exceedingly shaky Chase
ground, winless and 18th in points, as he heads to the site of his only
Cup win. His position is not unlike Gordon's
scenario from a week ago -- in desperate need of a victory to merit
Chase consideration.
"I
have a lot of good memories from our win there last year, and I’m
hopeful we can go out and win No. 2 this weekend," Ambrose said. ". . .
My team has worked extremely hard
the last few weeks and it would be a good shot of momentum for the
second half of the season if we could pull off a win this weekend."
FELLOWS ON FAST TRACK IN NATIONWIDE
Ron
Fellows circles road course races on the NASCAR calendar like holidays,
primarily because they've been his greatest source of success.
The
winding road at Watkins Glen International stands out in particular for
the Windsor, Ontario native. Of his six combined wins in NASCAR
Nationwide and Camping World Truck
Series competition, all but one have come at the Glen.
Fellows,
whose part-time NASCAR slate has been exclusively on road courses since
1999, will get another chance to taste stock-car victory in Saturday's
Zippo 200 at The Glen (2:15
p.m. ET, ABC).
Fellows
hasn't won in NASCAR since 2008, when he captured the first national
series race to be contested on rain tires in Montreal, and hasn't
prevailed at the Glen since 2001.
He'll be bringing the same JR Motorsports entry that he drove to a
third-place finish at Road America in June.
"I
feel very good about it. We had a strong car at Road America. We played
catch-up the day following a flat tire, then we had an issue in the
pits just trying to fix some radios,"
Fellows said. "But, you know, Watkins Glen, we've had great success at
the Glen. It's a track that suits my driving style. Yeah, it's like a
second home. Really enjoy racing there."
Fellows
is one of several road-racing part-timers on the 48-driver Watkins Glen
entry list who will provide subplot to the Nationwide Series' points
chase, which remains a four-car
breakaway.
Elliott
Sadler, who locked down his fourth win of the season last weekend in
Iowa, continues to set the pace, with Richard Childress Racing teammate
Austin Dillon 18 points back
in second place. Defending series champ Ricky Stenhouse Jr. is 21
points off the top in third with Sam Hornish Jr., last week's winner of
the final Dash 4 Cash $100,000 bonus, 34 points behind Sadler in fourth.
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