Cool-Down Lap: Jeff Gordon misses an epic moment -- and likely misses the Chase
Sept. 3, 2012: Commentary
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
I feel sorry for Jeff Gordon -- a sentiment that, on its face, is almost ludicrous.
Married
to a model, the father of two lovely children, a multimillionaire and a
four-time champion at the highest level of his chosen profession,
Gordon leads a life unlikely
to evoke pity.
But
on Sunday night at Atlanta Motor Speedway, a knot of regret had
tightened in Gordon's stomach even before he pulled onto pit road after
the AdvoCare 500.
Gordon
had finished second to Denny Hamlin in a race he desperately needed to
win. A victory likely would have propelled him into the Chase for the
NASCAR Sprint Cup.
My
sympathy for Gordon, however, has little to do with the probability
that he will now miss the Chase for only the second time in his career. I
feel for Gordon because he missed
a moment -- a rare moment, a defining moment -- and immediately rued
not doing what a champion of his stature should have done.
A
two-lap shootout decided Sunday night's race. Gordon restarted third
behind Hamlin, with Martin Truex Jr. second on the outside of the front
row. When Truex spun his tires on
the restart, Gordon took second, and with a run off the second corner,
he pulled alongside Hamlin on the backstretch.
But
as the drivers entered Turn 3, and Hamlin started to pull ahead, Gordon
failed to do what the heroes who have preceded him into the NASCAR Hall
of Fame would have done.
Richard
Petty would have used his bumper to move Hamlin out of the way. So
would David Pearson. So would Darrell Waltrip, Cale Yarborough, Bobby
Allison, Junior Johnson and Rusty
Wallace.
So would a younger Jeff Gordon.
"I
guess I'm just getting soft in my old age," said Gordon, who turned 41
last month. "Fifteen years ago, I would have just moved him right up the
racetrack. I don't know why
I didn't do that."
Gordon hesitated, because he thought he might have another option.
"I
thought I could get to his quarter panel and slow him down and stay
there," Gordon said. "But I got there, I just carried too much speed
into 3, and it pushed up the racetrack."
And what could have been an epic moment was gone.
Make
no mistake. When Gordon chose to affiliate with the AARP Foundation's
Drive to End Hunger, it did not mark the end of his own. Gordon's
foremost goal in racing is to win
a championship under the Chase format.
Gordon
likewise craves a title in the Jimmie Johnson era. Since Gordon
introduced his heir apparent to team owner Rick Hendrick more than a
decade ago, Johnson has won five championships,
Gordon none.
So
why didn't he move Hamlin? The race winner attributed the lack of
aggression to good will he's accumulated since breaking into the Cup
series six years ago.
"The
reason he didn't is because we have a mutual respect," Hamlin said. "I
haven't moved him out of the way for a win or anything like that, and we
race each other with respect.
We have my entire career. So I'm sure that had something to do with
it."
Wrong.
Gordon didn't knock Hamlin out of the way because he thought,
incorrectly as it turned out, that he had an alternative. And perhaps
their history of clean racing bought
Hamlin the split second of hesitation that sealed the outcome.
On
Monday morning, though, Gordon posted to his Twitter account the same
comments he made when he climbed from his car: "I should have just run
into the back of him going into
3 & moved him up the track. . . ."
Yes,
with a Chase spot on the line for himself, his team, his organization
and his sponsor, that's exactly what he should have done.
Deepening
Gordon's regret is the realization that next Saturday's last-chance
race at Richmond is unlikely to present a similar opportunity. True,
Gordon can still make the Chase
by winning at the .75-mile track, or by beating Kyle Busch by more than
12 points (provided neither Ryan Newman, Marcos Ambrose nor Joey Logano
steals a Chase spot with a win).
But
Gordon hasn't won at Richmond since 2000. Busch, on the other hand, has
been to Victory Lane there four times in the last seven races, and he
and Hamlin together have won
six of the last seven.
No,
Gordon's moment came Sunday night, when a late caution gave him a
starting spot on the bottom lane, right behind Hamlin. Gordon roared
into Turn 3 with a Chase berth in front
of him, his season distilled into a single decision, and failed to
seize the moment.
Gordon still has the heart and desire of a champion, but his instincts betrayed him -- and we share his pain.
ITAL/The opinions expressed are solely those of the author/ITAL
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