Jeff Gordon OVERTAKES 42 CARS IN 2 MINUTES. NASCAR The game 2013 - No Mercy - Drive to End Hunger
Jeff Gordon (Iron Man)
The Rainbow Warrior
Gordon took NASCAR by storm in the 1990s, becoming the youngest driver in the modern era to win a premier series title as a 24-year-old in 1995.
He went on to win three more championships (1997, 1998, 2001). In 1998, Gordon led the Rainbow Warriors—named for his colorful No. 24 Chevrolet—to a modern era-record 13 wins. Overall, he won 93 races, which ranks third on the all-time wins list.
Gordon is a three-time Daytona 500 champion and won the Brickyard 400 a record five times. Charismatic and gifted in front of the camera, he developed one of the sport’s fiercest rivalries with Dale Earnhardt. The confident, youthful Californian served as the foil to the wily, rugged "Intimidator."
Gordon was the first NASCAR driver to host “Saturday Night Live.” He retired from full-time racing as the premier series’ “Iron Man” with a record 797 consecutive starts, and now delivers the sport to its passionate fans as a race analyst for FOX.
Martinsville Speedway is a NASCAR-owned stock car racing short track in Ridgeway, Virginia, just south of Martinsville. At 0.526 miles (847 m) in length, it is the shortest track in the NASCAR Cup Series. The track was also one of the first paved oval tracks in stock car racing, being built in 1947 by partners H. Clay Earles, Henry Lawrence, and Sam Rice, nearly a year before NASCAR was officially formed.[2] It is also the only race track that has been on the NASCAR circuit from its beginning in 1948. Along with this, Martinsville is the only oval track on the NASCAR circuit to have asphalt surfaces on the straightaways and concrete to cover the turns.
24 Jeff Gordon
Drive to End Hunger
07 Robby Gordon
Speed Energy
1 Jamie McMurray
McDonald's
21 Trevor Bayne
Bobby Labonte
Kyle Busch Toyota Camry 2013
Pablo Montoya Chevrolet SS 2013
Martinsville
Ford Fusion
Performance
Win Race
Lap Record
Toyota Camry
M&M's