Jeff Gordon Wins at Martinsville Speedway
October 27, 2013
By Joe Menzer
Special to NASCAR Wire Service
MARTINSVILLE,
Va. – Jeff Gordon passed Matt Kenseth with 21 laps to go and went on
to win the Goody’s Headache Relief Shot 500 Sunday at Martinsville
Speedway.
It was
Gordon’s first win of the season and the eighth of his career at the
.526-mile track that has been hosting NASCAR races since 1949. It also
helped Jimmie Johnson, Gordon’s
teammate at Hendrick Motorsports, hang onto at least a piece of the
lead along with Kenseth in the Chase for the Sprint Cup standings with
three races remaining in the season.
Johnson
finished fifth. He and Kenseth are tied for the Chase lead heading into
next Sunday’s AAA 500 at Texas Motor Speedway, while Gordon moved into
third.
Kenseth,
who had struggled mightily at the past at Martinsville, appeared in
command but ended up barely holding off Clint Bowyer to finish second
after Gordon made his nifty
pass to the inside going into Turn 1 on Lap 479 of the 500-lap event.
Johnson
entered the day with a four-point advantage on Kenseth in the Chase
standings. The pair spent the day sparring, trying different strategies
as the numerous cautions
continued to mount on the .526-mile paper clip, the only short track on
the 10-race Chase schedule.
At times, Johnson and Kenseth took turns running up front. Then one would fall back, only to rally again.
Gordon,
meanwhile, kept lurking in the vicinity of the Chase leaders. Now he
can be called one of them, as he at least injected himself into the
championship conversation heading
to Texas.
It
appeared heading into the race that Johnson would have a huge advantage
over Kenseth at Martinsville. While Johnson entered with eight career
wins, 16 top-five and 20 top-10
finishes in 23 career starts at the track, Kenseth had never won and
had registered only three top-five and eight top-10 finishes in 27
career starts. To put it in even better perspective, Johnson entered the
day having led a total of 2,327 laps in his career
at Martinsville; Kenseth had led a total of 169 out of more than 13,000
laps he had run there.
Those numbers meant nothing when it came right down to it Sunday.
Kenseth
led early, fell as far back as 21st, then rallied again when a series
of repeated pit stops for fresh tires and chassis adjustments cycled his
No. 20 Toyota back to
the front. He ended up leading a race-high 202 laps to 123 for Johnson,
gaining a crucial bonus point in that head-to-head battle. But he could
not hold off Gordon in the end.
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