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Jeff Gordon


Jeff Gordon Profile

Jeffery Michael Gordon

Born: August 4, 1971 (1971-08-04) (age 36)

Birthplace: Vallejo, California

Awards: 2001 Winston Cup Champion 1998 Winston Cup Champion 1997 Winston Cup Champion 1995 Winston Cup Champion 1993 Rookie of the Year Named one of NASCAR's 50 Greatest Drivers (1998)

NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Statistics

2007 Sprint Cup Position: 2nd

Best Cup Position: 1st - 1995, 1997, 1998, 2001.

First Race: 1992 Hooters 500 (Atlanta)

First Win: 1994 Coca-Cola 600 (Charlotte)

Last Win: 2007 Bank of America 500 (Charlotte)

Wins Top Tens Poles

81 317 63

NASCAR Nationwide Series Statistics

73 races run over 5 years.

Best NNS Position: 4th - 1992

First Race: 1990 AC-Delco 200 (North Carolina)

Last Race: 2000 Miami 300 (Homestead)

First Win: 1992 Atlanta Motor Speedway 300 (Atlanta)

Last Win: 2000 Miami 300 (Homestead)

Wins Top Tens Poles

5 32 12

Statistics current as of November 19, 2007.

Jeffery Michael Gordon (born August 4, 1971) is a professional American race car driver. He was born in Vallejo, California, raised in Pittsboro, Indiana, and currently lives in Charlotte, North Carolina. He is a four-time NASCAR Winston Cup (now Sprint Cup) Series champion, three-time Daytona 500 winner, and driver of the #24 Chevrolet Impala SS. His primary sponsor is DuPont, though he occasionally drives a Pepsi-themed car or a Nicorette-themed car. His other sponsors include Quaker State, Haas Automation, GMAC, Bosch Spark Plugs, and Georgia-Pacific/Sparkle. He, along with Rick Hendrick, are the co-owners of the #48 Lowe's sponsored team, driven by Jimmie Johnson, the 2006 and 2007 NEXTEL Cup series champion. Gordon also has an equity stake in his own #24 team.

Contents

1 Racing career

1.1 Early career 1.2 NASCAR Cup career

1.2.1 Winston Cup career 1.2.2 SPRINT Cup Career 1.2.3 2006 1.2.4 2007

2 2008

2.1 NASCAR career summary 2.2 Other racing

3 Personal life 4 In popular culture 5 References 6 External links

Racing career

Early career Jeff Gordon began racing at the age of five racing quarter midgets. Supporting his career choice, Gordon's family moved from Vallejo, California to Pittsboro, Indiana, where there were more opportunities for younger racers. Before the age of 18, Gordon had already won three short-track races and was awarded USAC Midget Car Racing Rookie of the Year in 1989. The next year Gordon won the USAC Midget title. In 1991, Gordon moved up to the USAC Silver Crown and at the age of 20 became the youngest driver to win the title. Gordon then went on to spend two successful years in the Busch Series in 1991 and 1992, driving for Bill Davis Racing (with whom he set a NASCAR record by capturing 11 poles in one season) with Ray Evernham as his crew chief. He was sponsored by Carolina Ford Dealers in 1991 and Baby Ruth in 1992. Coincidentally, Gordon's first NASCAR Winston Cup Series race, the 1992 Hooters 500 at the Atlanta Motor Speedway, was also the final race for Richard Petty. He went on to finish 31st, crashing after 164 laps of competition.

NASCAR Cup career

Winston Cup career In 1993, Gordon raced his 1st full season in Winston Cup for Hendrick Motorsports, in which he won a Daytona 500 qualifying race, the Rookie of the Year award, and finished 14th in points. Ray Evernham was placed as Jeff Gordon's first crew chief. Gordon's success in the sport reshaped the paradigm and eventually gave younger drivers an opportunity to compete in NASCAR. However, during the 1993 season, many doubted Gordon's ability to compete at such a level at such a young age because of his tendency to push the cars too hard and crash. Ronny Day helped him get over this problem. Wilma, Ronny's wife, supported his helping Jeff, as it was a passion for Ronny. She always said, "Ole Ronny just loves them cars". In 1994, Gordon collected his first career victory at the Lowe's Motor Speedway in the Coca Cola 600, NASCAR's longest and most demanding race. Additionally, Gordon scored a popular hometown victory at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in the inaugural Brickyard 400, passing Ernie Irvan for the lead late in the race when Irvan cut down a tire. Gordon finished eighth in the Winston Cup point standings for the '94 season, as Earnhardt grabbed the driving championship for the second straight year. In 1995, Gordon won the first of four NASCAR Winston Cup Championships. In 1998, Gordon had one of the best seasons in NASCAR history. He tied Richard Petty's modern era record with an incredible 13 wins in a single season. It was Gordon's third consecutive year to win ten or more races. He is also one of the most successful drivers at road course races such as Infineon and Watkins Glen., winning a record six consecutive road course races from 1997-2000. In 1999, Gordon along with crew chief Evernham formed Gordon/Evernham Motorsports. Though short lived, the race team enjoyed success. The co-owned team received a full sponsorship from Pepsi and ran six races with Jeff Gordon as driver and Ray Evernham as crew chief in the NASCAR Busch Series. GEM only survived one year as Evernham was pulled away by Dodge. Jeff Gordon extended his Busch experiment one more year, through 2000 as co-owner, with Rick Hendrick buying Evernham's half. After the departure of Evernham, the race team was renamed JG Motorsports.

SPRINT Cup Career Gordon won the Brickyard 400 in August of 2004, obtaining his 4th Indy win. He has claimed wins at the famed raceway in 1994, 1998, and 2001. He is the only NASCAR driver with four Brickyard 400 victories at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, and one of only five drivers to have four victories at the historic track. He finished 3rd in the 2004 NEXTEL Cup points standing behind Kurt Busch and teammate Jimmie Johnson even though he scored the most total points throughout the whole season, a consequence of the new Chase system implemented in 2004. Gordon started the 2005 season with a win in the Daytona 500, but inconsistency would plague him throughout the year. A late season (notably top 10s at Indy and Bristol) run put him in position to qualify for the Chase, but in the last race before the Chase at Richmond, Gordon made contact with the wall and failed to qualify for the chase. Despite this disappointment, on October 23 Gordon won the Subway 500 at Martinsville Speedway, his first win in 22 points races, and his 7th career victory at the 0.526 mile track, which leads all active drivers at the facility. He went on to finish 11th in the Championship and received a $1,000,000 bonus as the top driver finishing outside the Chase. It was Gordon's first time outside the top 10 in the point standings since 1993. On September 14, 2005 Crew Chief Robbie Loomis resigned from the #24 team. Loomis stayed on with Hendrick Motorsports as a consultant for Jimmie Johnson's #48 team through the Chase for The NEXTEL Cup in 2005. Steve Letarte, Gordon's car chief for most of the '05 season and long time member of the 24 crew, replaced Loomis as crew chief effective at New Hampshire International Speedway on September 18th, 2005 and began his first full season as crew chief for Gordon in the 2006 NEXTEL Cup Season.

2006 Gordon won his ninth road race, the 2006 Dodge/Save Mart 350, at the Infineon Raceway - his first win of the season and fifth at Infineon. The day before the race, he announced his engagement to Ingrid Vandebosch. On June 29, 2006, Gordon announced that he would participate in the Rolex 24 endurance sports car event at Daytona International Speedway, teaming up with SunTrust Racing drivers Max Angelelli and Wayne Taylor, who won the 2005 Rolex 24 race. On July 9, 2006, Gordon won his first race at the Chicagoland Speedway at the running of the USG Sheetrock 400(this was also the first win for Hendrick Motorsports at this track). Gordon made the "Chase for the NEXTEL Cup" with his improvements on the intermediate 1.5/2-mile downforce racetracks from 2005. His consistency in the latter portions of 2006 made him competitive week-in and week-out, eventually finishing 6th in the NASCAR NEXTEL Cup Series Standings. Jeff Gordon attended the awards ceremony at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York City for his top-10 finish in the NEXTEL Cup Standings. While there he collected a check for his 2006 winnings of $7,471,447 which brings his career winnings total to $82,838,526.

2007

Pulling into the pits at Texas in 2007

Carrying Earnhardt flag at Phoenix after tying Dale with 76 wins in 2007

Gordon started the 2007 Cup season off by winning his Gatorade Duel qualifying race. Due to a rear shock bolt breaking during the race on his car, he failed the post-race inspection which found that the rear of his car was too low and, as a result, had to start 42nd in the 2007 Daytona 500. He went on to finish 10th in the race despite being involved in a crash during a spectacular last-lap finish. On March 23, 2007, Gordon won his 58th career pole for the 2007 Food City 500 at Bristol, the first race for the Car of Tomorrow. He went on to a 3rd place in the race, which gave him the points lead for the first time since the 2005 Daytona 500. At Texas Motor Speedway, Gordon started on the pole because qualifying was rained out. He led the most laps before brushing the wall coming out of turn 4 and finishing 4th.. On April 19, 2007 at Phoenix International Raceway, Gordon won the pole, and tied Darrell Waltrip's modern day record of 59 career poles. Two days later, at the Subway Fresh Fit 500, he won, ending a streak of 21 races of non-pole winners at PIR. He has now won a Cup race at all but two NASCAR racetracks (Texas Motor Speedway and Homestead-Miami Speedway). With the win, he also tied Dale Earnhardt for 6th all time in overall number of NASCAR NEXTEL Cup series wins (second in the modern era). After winning the race, he held a black flag with the number 3 to honor the late Dale Earnhardt. On April 28, 2007, Gordon earned the pole at Talladega Superspeedway, his 60th career pole (and third consecutive in 2007), passing Darrell Waltrip's record of 59 to become the modern era pole leader. On May 13, 2007, Gordon held on despite an overheating car and a late charge by Denny Hamlin to win the Dodge Avenger 500, the 78th win of his career, and his 7th at Darlington Raceway. In the 2007 Coca-Cola 600, Gordon crashed after contact with Tony Raines on lap 63 at Lowes Motor Speedway, only 94.5 miles into the race, On June 11, 2007, Gordon earned his 4th win of the year and 79th of his career in a rain shortened race at Pocono Raceway. Six days later, he scored a ninth place finish at the Citizens Bank 400 at Michigan International Speedway, the 300th top-ten finish of his career. On September 8, 2007, Gordon earned a place in the Chase for the NEXTEL Cup. With his four wins in the first 26 races, he earned the second seed (teammate Jimmie Johnson earned the top seed with six wins) in the chase. On October 7, 2007, Gordon led only the final lap in winning the UAW-Ford 500 at Talladega Superspeedway for his 80th career victory, using a strategy of staying near the end of the field until nearly the end of the race to avoid the inevitable "big one", especially with the unknowns involved in racing the Car of Tomorrow. With the win, he swept the 2007 season races at Talladega, and won his 12th race at a restrictor plate track (Daytona and Talladega), making him the all-time leader for restrictor plate wins. On October 13, 2007, Gordon led 71 laps and, although fuel was a question near the end of the race, he was able to finish the race and earned his 81st career victory in the Bank of America 500 at Lowe's Motor Speedway. Finishing fourth in the 2007 Ford 400, Gordon finished the 2007 Chase for the Nextel Cup 2nd in the standings to Hendrick Motorsports teammate Jimmie Johnson, trailing by 77. However, Gordon's top-ten finish at Homestead left him with a total of 30 top-ten finishes for the season, setting a new modern era Cup Series record. 2007 was also the sixth time that Gordon has amassed the most total championship points in a season, and the second time that the "Chase" has named a champion other than Gordon despite this (2004-Busch, 2007-Johnson).

2008

2008 Cup car

Jeff Gordon finished 4th in the Budweiser Shootout and finished 3rd in the Gatorade Duel qualifying race. He started the 50th annual Daytona 500 from the 8th position and led 10 laps, but on lap 159 suffered suspension failure and would go on to finish in 37th position. His Hendrick teammates would struggle except for Dale Earnhardt Jr. who would go on to finish 10th, Jimmie Johnson was 30th and Casey Mears was 35th.

NASCAR career summary

Year Wins Top 5s Top 10s Poles Earnings ($) Season Rank

1993 0 7 11 1 765,168 14

1994 2 7 14 1 1,779,523 8

1995 7 17 23 8 4,347,343 1

1996 10 21 24 5 3,428,485 2

1997 10 22 23 1 6,375,658 1

1998 13 26 28 7 9,306,584 1

1999 7 18 21 7 5,858,633 6

2000 3 11 22 3 3,001,144 9

2001 6 18 24 6 10,879,757 1

2002 3 13 20 3 6,154,475 4

2003 3 15 20 4 6,622,002 4

2004 5 16 25 6 8,439,382 3

2005 4 8 14 2 7,930,830 11

2006 2 14 18 2 7,471,447 6

2007 6 21 30 7 7,030,344 2

Career* 82 234 317 63 89,397,060

* Complete as of November 21, 2007.

Other racing Gordon has also participated in some off-road events, including a winning drive with Team USA at the 2002 Race of Champions. He was slated to run it again in 2004 against Formula 1 Champion Michael Schumacher but was sidelined by the flu, and Casey Mears took his place. In 2005, Gordon competed in the Race of Champions event again, this time held in Paris, France, where he was partnered with famed motocross racer/X Games winner Travis Pastrana.In 2007, Gordon competed in the Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona for the first time. He raced the #10 for Wayne Taylor racing. His teammates consisted of: Max Angelli, Jan Magnussen, and Wayne Taylor. The team placed third in Jeff's first ever Rolex 24.

Personal life Gordon's parents are Carol Ann Bickford (née Houston) and William Grinnell Gordon of Vacaville, California. He has an older sister, Kim. Gordon met first wife Brooke Sealey after he won a Busch race. Sealey was then a college student and had been present as "Miss Winston" in the victory lane in 1992. The pair began dating in secret, due to a rule that didn't allow drivers to date Miss Winston, and were married in 1994. In 2003, Gordon's divorce from Sealey became tabloid fodder. In court papers, she asked for "exclusive use of the couple's oceanfront home, valued at $9 million, as well as alimony, two cars and periodic use of their boats and an airplane." Gordon was introduced to Ingrid Vandebosch by a mutual friend in 2002, but they didn't begin dating until 2004. Gordon owns a private jet, a British Aerospace BAE-125-800 also known as a Hawker 800. The tail number on this jet matches his car number, N24JG. Gordon owns a Lazzara 106 yacht ironically called the 24 Karat. Gordon's wife, Ingrid Vandebosch, was voted No. 18 in COED Magazine Online's list of "Top 20 Sexiest Athlete Wives of 2007."

In popular culture

Gordon has made cameo appearances in Looney Tunes: Back in Action, Taxi, Herbie: Fully Loaded, an upcoming music video for Kanye West, and in the sitcom The Drew Carey Show. In January 2003, Gordon became the first NASCAR driver to host NBC's Saturday Night Live. He has also co-hosted Live with Regis and Kelly ten times. Gordon has lent his name to "Jeff Gordon 24 Energy", a limited edition beverage from the makers of Pepsi-Cola. In 2005, Gordon released his own wine, a Carneros Chardonnay.

References

^ Gordon's Racing Career.

  • [http://www.speedtv.com/articles/auto/grandam/27817/]
  • [http://www.grand-am.com/Events/SessionResults.asp?SessionID=803]
  • Goody's Cool Orange lap-by-lap.
  • Modern Era Pole Winners.
  • Modern Era Race Winners.
  • Charlotte Lap-by-Lap.
  • Charlotte Nascar results.
  • Gordon Wins UAW-500 at Talladega
  • Jeff Gordon Engagement.
  • "Gordon-Vandenbosch Engagement".
  • [http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070620/ap_on_sp_au_ra_ne/car_nascar_gordon_baby;_ylt=AqWYrbZ3zZaBEHE5_QO4MA4R07QF]
  • [http://www.people.com/people/article/0,,20043195,00.html]
  • [http://jetjit.com/n24jg.htm]
  • [http://www.yachtingmagazine.com/yachting/destinations/article/0,24579,1112575,00.html]
  • [http://coedmagazine.com/sports/4076]

    External links

    Official website Official Team website Jeff Gordon at the Internet Movie Database Driver's statistics at racing-reference.info nascar.com driver's page Jeff Gordon Racing School The Jeff Gordon Foundation Athletes for Hope

    Preceded by Jimmy Hensley NASCAR Rookie of the Year 1993 Succeeded by Jeff Burton

    Preceded by Dale Earnhardt NASCAR Winston Cup Champion 1995 Succeeded by Terry Labonte

    Preceded by Terry Labonte NASCAR Winston Cup Champion 1997, 1998 Succeeded by Dale Jarrett

    Preceded by Bobby Labonte NASCAR Winston Cup Champion 2001 Succeeded by Tony Stewart

    Preceded by Dale Jarrett Daytona 500 winner 1997 Succeeded by Dale Earnhardt

    Preceded by Dale Earnhardt Daytona 500 winner 1999 Succeeded by Dale Jarrett

    Preceded by Dale Earnhardt, Jr. Daytona 500 winner 2005 Succeeded by Jimmie Johnson

    v • d • e

    NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Champions

    Byron • Rexford • Thomas • Flock • Thomas • L. Petty • Flock • Baker • Baker • L. Petty • L. Petty • White • N. Jarrett • Weatherly • Weatherly • R. Petty • N. Jarrett • Pearson • R. Petty • Pearson • Pearson • Isaac • R. Petty • R. Petty • Parsons • R. Petty • R. Petty • Yarborough • Yarborough • Yarborough • R. Petty • Earnhardt • Waltrip • Waltrip • Allison • T. Labonte • Waltrip • Earnhardt • Earnhardt • Elliott • Wallace • Earnhardt • Earnhardt • Kulwicki • Earnhardt • Earnhardt • Gordon • T. Labonte • Gordon • Gordon • D. Jarrett • B. Labonte • Gordon • Stewart • Kenseth • Busch • Stewart • Johnson • Johnson

    Hendrick Motorsports

    Sprint Cup drivers Casey Mears (#5) | Jeff Gordon (#24) | Jimmie Johnson (#48) | Dale Earnhardt, Jr. (#88)

    Driver development program (under JR Motorsports) Landon Cassill | Brad Keselowski | Curtis Truex

    Partnerships and affiliations Furniture Row Racing | Haas CNC Racing | JR Motorsports | Phoenix Racing

    Sprint Cup crew chiefs Alan Gustafson (#5) | Steve Letarte (#24) | Chad Knaus (#48) | Tony Eury, Jr. (#88)

    Other Rick Hendrick | Ricky Hendrick | Darian Grubb | Brian Whitesell

    Bill Davis Racing

    Sprint Cup Drivers Dave Blaney (#22)

    Craftsman Truck Series Drivers Mike Skinner (#5) | Phillip McGilton (#22) | Johnny Benson (#23)

    Development drivers Michael Annett

    Owner(s) Bill Davis



    Top 5 Search Results

    Jeff Gordon Official site featuring shopping, games, trivia, photos, motorsports and more.

    NASCAR.com: Jeff Gordon Official NASCAR driver profile.

    Jeff Gordon - Wikipedia Hyperlinked biography and background for the NASCAR star.

    Jeff Gordon Online With information, images, and NASCAR statistics.

    ESPN - Jeff Gordon - NASCAR Sprint Cup ... information on Sprint Cup driver Jeff Gordon including statistics, photos, race logs and ... Jeff Gordon #24 " Add Widget. 2008 STANDINGS. RANK. POINTS ...


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