Wins puts Gordon closer to his fifth NASCAR title
CONCORD, N.C. - Jeff Gordon took a big step toward a possible fifth Nextel Cup championship Saturday night with a dramatic victory in the Bank of America 500 at Lowe's Motor Speedway.
Jeff Gordon seemed to be well on his way to his 81st career victory, his second in a row and fifth at this 1.5-mile track until some late dramatics produced a heart-pounding finish.
Jeff Gordon was leading Kyle Busch by nearly four seconds before Johnny Sauter spun in turn four on lap 321 to bring out a yellow flag.
Race officials stopped the field while fluid flowing from Jeff Green's Chevrolet was cleaned up around the track. By the time the green flag came, only five laps remained.
Jeff Gordon's car was sputtering and low on fuel, as he tried to get going again.
The No.24 Chevrolet faltered heading toward turn 1, but instead of Kyle Busch going by it was pole-winner Ryan Newman who shot to the outside and rocketed into the lead.
On the next lap, Newman's Dodge snapped around coming off turn 2 and hit the wall. That put Jeff Gordon back into the lead, but not out of the woods.
Newman's wreck set up a green-white-checkered finish, and Jeff Gordon's car faltered again on the restart. Clint Bowyer was behind him this time, but instead of going low and passing the leader, Bowyer wound up running into Jeff Gordon's bumper.
"That really got me going again," Jeff Gordon said. He pulled away by a couple of car-lengths.
Jeff Gordon's fuel lasted -- long enough even for him to do a burnout --and so did his luck.
"Somebody's got a horseshoe up his butt, but keep it up there," Jeff Gordon said on the team's radio after he crossed the finish line.
"I can't tell you how many times we tried to give this one away," Jeff Gordon said in Victory Lane. "This is what we've been looking for, getting a win at Charlotte."
It had been a while.
This was Jeff Gordon's first win here since Oct.11, 1999, and, perhaps more relevant, the first time in six races at the track that his car had been running at the checkered flag.
He came into the night nine points ahead of teammate Jimmie Johnson in the Nextel Cup standings, but Jeff Gordon's win and a near disaster for Johnson changed that.
Johnson's No.48 Chevrolet appeared to be the car to beat early, but he spun off turn 2 on lap 231 and clipped the outside wall.
Johnson dropped to 30th on the restart after his crew made quick repairs, then rallied to finish 14th.
That's still Johnson's worst finish at the track since his first Cup race on Oct. 7, 2001, and it leaves the defending series champion, 68 points behind Jeff Gordon halfway through the Chase.
Bowyer, the second-year driver who refuses to go away in this championship battle, is 78 points behind after holding on to second. Kyle Busch was third, Jeff Burton fourth and Carl Edwards fifth.
"I think Jeff has been the guy to beat all year long," Bowyer said of Jeff Gordon. "But for me and my team, we just have to pick it up a little. They are going to have to stub their toe a little bit for us to catch them."
Tony Stewart stubbed his toe a little, first running into Paul Menard and then Kasey Kahne on pit road just past the halfway mark.
He battled back to finish seventh, but he dropped from 154 points back to 198 behind.
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