ROANOKE TIMES 
                      Copyright (c) 1997, Roanoke Times

DATE: Tuesday, February 18, 1997             TAG: 9702180091
SECTION: SPORTS                   PAGE: B-1  EDITION: METRO 
DATELINE: DAYTONA BEACH, FLA.
SOURCE: BOB ZELLER STAFF WRITER


GORDON WON ONE FOR THE TEAM

COOPERATION AND CAMARADERIE marked Speedweeks for the Hendrick Motorsports team.

As the Daytona 500 rolled to a slow conclusion Sunday under a yellow flag, winner Jeff Gordon spent a good bit of time talking with his teammates on the radio.

At first, he assumed the race would resume with a final lap under the green flag.

``I'd say we're on our own now,'' Gordon told Ricky Craven. ``This is where we're not teammates. We're on our own. But I know [car owner] Rick [Hendrick] would be proud if we came home 1-2-3.''

Gordon was leading, Craven was sitting in third and between them was teammate Terry Labonte. Moments later, with about a lap-and-a-half to go, Labonte came on Gordon's radio.

``I tell you what. This is going to be the coolest thing ever if we finish 1-2-3,'' Gordon told Labonte, still assuming the race would resume.

``Well, we're coming around for the white flag now,'' Labonte told Gordon. ``We're still yellow. We can't go to green, so it's over. Good job.''

Gordon thought for a moment, then said, ``I guess it is.''

Thus, it was Labonte who gave Gordon the news about his biggest race victory. And at 25 years old, Gordon became the youngest winner of the 500. Richard Petty was 26 when he won his first Daytona 500 in 1964.

The rapport between Labonte and Gordon in this big moment was somewhat ironic, because Labonte always has downplayed the team concept at Hendrick Motorsports. He and crew chief Gary DeHart have kept their distance from the other two Hendrick teams.

But in this year's Speedweeks, a new spirit of camaraderie emerged among the three Hendrick teams. Perhaps it was because of Hendrick's battle with leukemia, on top of the federal trial he faces in the American Honda bribery scandal.

Perhaps it was because Labonte, having beaten Gordon for the Winston Cup championship, is able to show a more generous spirit toward his younger rival. Gordon, after all, was a good sport about his 1996 title defeat. And a humbling loss such as that takes the edge off any perception that he's been winning too much too soon in NASCAR racing.

In any case, there's a new spirit of teamwork at Hendrick Motorsports, and it emerged during Speedweeks.

``Today was a huge leap for Hendrick Motorsports, as far as teamwork is concerned,'' Gordon said in the press box during his winner's interview, citing a meeting before the Twin 125 qualifying races. ``We actually sat down as three drivers and talked how we would work together for the 125s. Not just what we could do to help each other, but we just had an understanding that we would try to work together and if we can help each other, we will, and if we can't, we'll understand.''

As it turned out, they didn't draft together when it came down to Gordon's pass of Bill Elliott in the 500. Elliott nearly took Gordon into the infield trying to block him, so Labonte and Craven went to the outside.

``Yet, they were probably the ones that allowed me to get by him,'' Gordon said. ``They went three-wide to the outside of him, and Bill didn't know who to block.''

But drafting partnerships at Daytona are as mercurial as shifting breezes. And the new spirit of cooperation among the three drivers at Hendrick Motorsports already had blossomed off the track.


LENGTH: Medium:   72 lines
ILLUSTRATION: PHOTO:  AP. Ricky Craven (left) sprays teammate and Daytona 500 

champion Jeff Gordon with champagne in Victory Lane on Sunday.

Gordon, Terry Labonte and Craven finished 1-2-3 in cars owned by

Rick Hendrick. color. KEYWORDS: AUTO RACING

by CNB