
DOVER, Del. -- Jeff Gordon emerged from his grime-smeared Chevy Impala parked on Dover International Speedway's pit road red-faced, soaked with sweat and looking as if he'd just gone 15 rounds with Mike Tyson in the heavyweight champion's prime.

He'd cut his Chase-opening 15th-place finish at New Hampshire last weekend more than in half, with a sixth-place behind race-winning Hendrick Motorsports teammate Jimmie Johnson and three other Chase contenders. But despite that, his point deficit to championship leader Mark Martin grew 20 points to 122 behind, despite picking up two spots, to eighth.
So nearly half an hour later, when he emerged in street clothes from his hauler looking worlds more refreshed -- his mood was definitely not much better than if Tyson had knocked him out a couple times in those 15 rounds.
"I'm really disappointed," Gordon said. "I feel like we had a second-place car and when you have a second-place car you've got to finish second or contend for the win."
His openly calm, but pointedly downcast demeanor resulted from an air gun malfunction on a pit stop with less than 80 laps to go, which came after a 100-lap stretch in which he'd run second to Johnson, who led the race's final 225 laps.
When the race's seventh of nine cautions flew at Lap 326, Gordon pitted running second to Johnson. After the air gun failed, Gordon restarted the race at Lap 329 running seventh, and quickly fell back to eighth. Fifteen laps later, when the next caution flew, he pitted again for four tires and was running 12th when the race restarted.
But he knew his chance to win -- if it ever existed -- had evaporated at Lap 327.
"The No. 48 [Johnson] was in a league of their own but I felt like we were second best," Gordon said. "We had a problem with a gun on pit road and I don't know what you do about that -- but we'll try to fix it for the next time. It's just nice to run good." (Continued)
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