NASCAR Newman wins, but Gordon is Nextel Cup point leader



Jeff Gordon has a 107-point lead with eight Cup series races remaining.
DOVER, Del. (AP) -- Jeff Gordon has the lead in the Nextel Cup series, and after four series championships he's proven to be a great closer.
So, he's certainly a force to be reckoned with the rest of the way -- a driver filled with confidence as the NASCAR circuit heads to Talladega Superspeedway.
"Obviously, we have some momentum," Gordon said after taking the series lead Sunday while Ryan Newman was winning at Dover International Speedway. "We finished seventh last week, third this week. That speaks for itself."
Ran well earlier
Gordon's confidence is further bolstered by victories in April at Talladega and July at Daytona. Those are the two NASCAR's tracks where power-robbing restrictor-plates slow the cars.
But Gordon knows there are no guarantees, given the history of multicar crashes at both venues.
"That's the nature of Talladega," he explained. "You can say you're going to try to stay out of trouble, but usually it's out of your control. You're just along for the ride."
Newman has a plan to win the title even though the mathematics make that seem very unlikely.
"If we can finish in the top five in the last nine races, I can pretty much guarantee us a championship," he said. "But we can't finish 33rd, first and then 33rd."
Finished 33rd last week
He certainly can't, given Gordon's 107-point advantage with eight races remaining. Newman is playing catch-up because engine failure relegated him to a 33rd-place finish a week earlier in New Hampshire.
"But this is a big step in the right direction," he said of his victory in the MBNA America 400. "We'll just do the best that we possibly can, and if we don't deserve it then we won't get it."
Gordon agrees with Newman's assessment that consistency will win the title. He isn't that concerned with wins.
"What more can you ask for than top-fives every weekend," Gordon said. "That would do it."
He also believes Newman remains a threat, saying that one bad race should not knock a team out of championship contention.
"If Ryan Newman does what he did today anymore, he'll be right back in the thick of things," Gordon said.
Newman's optimism stems from the belief that practically every team will have one very bad race in the final 10.
"We've got to forget about today right now," he said. "If you're spending time celebrating, you're not spending time working."
Third on Sunday
Gordon finished third behind Mark Martin in the race and is one point ahead of Kurt Busch, who wound up fifth and lost the points lead when he was passed by Dale Jarrett with six laps to go.
"I thought we might have a shot at Mark," Gordon said. "But we had nothing for Newman."
Gordon said his car was good at times and far off at others. He also believes he can run better next week.
"I just hope that doesn't mean we have a bulls-eye on us at Talladega," he said.
New Hampshire winner Busch came to The Monster Mile tied for the series lead with Dale Earnhardt Jr., who fell to third in the title chase by finishing ninth. He's 18 points behind Gordon.