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Motorsports

New points format wears on Jeff Gordon

The pressure of the Chase for the Championship will shorten some careers says the winner of four Cup titles.

By MIKE READLING
Published November 22, 2004

[Getty Images]
Kurt Busch smokes his tires in celebration of his first Nextel Cup title. Busch, 26, finished fifth in the season-ending Ford 400 to edge Jimmie Johnson by eight points and Jeff Gordon by 16 in NASCAR's Chase for the Championship.
Photo gallery
Chase To The End
Biffle's victory has him giddy, wanting more
Johnson's rally comes up .342 seconds short
New points format wears on Jeff Gordon
NEXTEL Cup standings

Kurt Busch at a glance
AGE: 26
HOMETOWN: Las Vegas
NEXTEL CUP STARTS: 150
NEXTEL CUP WINS: 11 (three this season)
TOP FIVES: 34 (10 this season)
TOP 10S: 61 (21 this season)
PREVIOUS POINTS FINISHES: 27th in 2001, third in '02, 11th in '03
FAST FACTS: Busch won the Southwest Tour title in 1999 before graduating to Jack Roush's NASCAR truck series team, where he won four races and finished second in points in 2000. His crew chief, Jimmy Fennig, earned his first title as well after years toiling on Midwestern short tracks, then for Bobby Allison's underfunded Winston Cup team. Busch's younger brother, Kyle, was the runnerup in the Busch Series this season driving for Hendrick Motorsports.

HOMESTEAD - Jeff Gordon got out of his No.24 Chevrolet after the Ford 400 Sunday at Homestead-Miami Speedway and went through what has become a typical routine.

He drank some water, put on a baseball cap, loosened the collar of his driver's suit and waded through a crowd of reporters, stopping to answer some questions before he made for the team hauler and a clean change of clothes.

It didn't matter right then that Gordon had just competed in one of the most exciting runs at a NASCAR championship in the series' 56 seasons. It didn't matter that he had just captured third place in the new Chase for the Championship, one spot behind the car he owns and 16 points behind new champion Kurt Busch.

It didn't even matter that had NASCAR kept last year's championship system, Gordon would have cruised to his fifth title, just two short of the record.

"This is the new system," he said. "Those are the points we're going with."

All that mattered to Gordon was that it was over and he didn't have to look at another race car for more than two months. That's a new feeling for the 12-year veteran.

Every driver in the Nextel Cup Series learned something during the past 10 weeks as the new points system took hold. Gordon, 33, found out he may not be driving quite as a long as he originally planned.

"This points system is only going to make drivers and crew members careers' shorter," he said. "The intensity has increased to where it's greater than it's ever been before. The pressure is unreal.

"The way I feel right now, I can't wait to get out of this race suit, get away from this race track and not see another one for a few more months."

The new format produced what it was designed to, a tight finish for the championship. But the fatigue that comes from being one of three drivers with a clear shot at a championship with one race to go takes a toll, Gordon said. Double- and triple-checking everything that could go wrong and driving around slower and less experienced drivers all day while trying to protect his car and his chances creates great weariness, he added.

The little things pulled Gordon's focus from the big picture.

"It's not that we weren't thinking about it. I just wasn't talking and asking about it," Gordon said. "I could pretty much see in my mirror what was going on. I knew it didn't matter until it was all over. I knew Jimmie (Johnson) was behind me and Kurt was back there.

"Anything can happen down to the last lap and it got wild on that last lap. We just did what we could."

[Last modified November 22, 2004, 01:22:20]


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