ap

Skip to content
Jeff Gordon, a four-time series champion, is in search of some light at the end of the tunnel as he heads into the Pepsi 400. He has five finishes of 3oth or worse this season, but won the Daytona 500 in February.
Jeff Gordon, a four-time series champion, is in search of some light at the end of the tunnel as he heads into the Pepsi 400. He has five finishes of 3oth or worse this season, but won the Daytona 500 in February.
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:
Getting your player ready...

Daytona Beach, Fla. – The time is now for Jeff Gordon to get on the gas and race his way back into NASCAR’s Chase for the Championship.

Gordon, the four-time series champion, has been in a free-fall the past six weeks, dropping from second to 14th in the standings.

With just 10 races left to qualify for NASCAR’s 10-race playoff series, Gordon is in danger of being shut out of the competition.

Will it actually happen? Well, he’s only 14 points away from the qualifying cutoff mark – hardly far enough back to be considered out of it. And he races Saturday night at Daytona International Speedway, where he’s taken over as the master of restrictor-plate racing: Gordon has won four of the past five plate races and two in a row.

So Gordon and his Hendrick Motorsports team are far from panicking.

“I feel like we’re as good and as strong as any team out there. We’ve just got to get things going in the right direction and make some good decisions,” Gordon said. “We haven’t really lost confidence. That’s still there. The attitude of the guys is as good as it can be under the circumstances.

“So I don’t think we’ve panicked or have lost control. We’re just trying to put those behind us and learn from them and go to the next one.”

Gordon started the season with a dominating win in the Daytona 500, then scored two more victories to emerge as a legitimate threat to win his fifth Cup title.

But since finishing sixth at Darlington two weeks ago, Gordon has five finishes of 30th or worse. It looked like he was going to right the ship last weekend at the road course in Sonoma, Calif., where he started from the pole. But a blown transmission took him out of contention and he ended up 33rd.

It was a frustrating finish, but with Daytona in front of him, Gordon didn’t get down. With 11 victories on Daytona’s 2.5-mile superspeedway, Gordon comes in to the Pepsi 400 as the driver to beat.

“This is a good weekend for us,” Gordon said. “I’m definitely looking forward to Daytona and hoping that one of these weekends, it’s going to get turned around. If it doesn’t happen, then you just put your best foot forward and go to the next one.”

RevContent Feed

More in Sports