The Virginian-Pilot
                             THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT 
              Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: Monday, October 30, 1995               TAG: 9510300128
SECTION: SPORTS                   PAGE: C1   EDITION: FINAL 
SOURCE: BY BOB ZELLER, STAFF WRITER 
DATELINE: PHOENIX                            LENGTH: Medium:   92 lines

RUDD KEEPS WIN STREAK IN GEAR JEFF GORDON FINISHES 5TH, ALL BUT CLINCHING THE SERIES POINTS TITLE.

Halfway through Sunday's Dura Lube 500 at Phoenix International Raceway, Ricky Rudd had no clue he was driving the winning car.

A couple of pit stops, a few adjustments and 150 laps later, Rudd's car was unstoppable, and he beat Derrike Cope to the finish line by 0.53 seconds. And while Jeff Gordon all but locked up the 1995 Winston Cup championship with a fifth-place finish, Rudd preserved a streak of winning at least one race a year since 1983.

``I wouldn't have picked us to be the winner halfway through the race because we weren't doing anything,'' the 39-year-old Chesapeake native said. ``We just had a car that was absolutely unbelievable there for the last 30, 40 or 50 laps.''

Dale Earnhardt finished third, followed by Rusty Wallace. But Earnhardt gained only 15 points on Gordon, reducing the margin from 162 to 147 points. That means all Gordon has to do is finish 41st in the season finale on Nov. 12 at Atlanta.

``I think we can do that,'' Gordon said as he walked from his car to the team transporter. ``Man, I'm excited. But it's not over yet. I really wanted to wrap this thing up leaving Phoenix. We came close.

``It was a long day. I thought we were in trouble there for a little while. But I feel real good. I was a little worried these last couple of races (finishing 30th and 20th). So we're really happy about today. We just kept working on the car and kept that 3 (Earnhardt's car) in sight.''

Gordon's quest for the title, which has made him and his team more conservative, has helped open the door for other drivers to win Cup races.

Rudd's first victory of the season - the 16th of his career - comes on the heels of fellow Virginian Ward Burton's first career victory last weekend at Rockingham.

Rudd, who started way back in 29th, didn't take the lead until lap 194, when he passed Earnhardt. Rudd led twice for a total of 63 laps. Ernie Irvan led the most laps - 111 in a single midrace stretch - before his engine failed.

``The key, I think, is going back to the last four or five races,'' Rudd said. ``We led the most laps at Charlotte. The team has been gaining momentum the last couple of weekends. And generally when you see a team start to gain momentum, then they have a shot at winning.''

Although Rudd pulled well ahead of Cope and the rest of the field in the final 14-lap sprint following the last yellow flag, he did some dandy battling with Cope and Mark Martin.

In fact, there was a lot of great racing on the 1-mile oval Sunday.

At one point with about 100 laps to go, Rudd and Mark Martin, who finished eighth, were battling side-by-side with no pressure from behind. That's because Cope and Earnhardt were also battling side-by-side behind them.

The duel between Rudd and Martin lasted for about 20 laps, with Rudd holding the outside groove and Martin down low.

``He had a faster car, but I was doing exactly what I wanted to do,'' Rudd said. ``I wanted to give Mark the bottom of the race track. You have to be careful when you run that outside line. I was just using every bit of race track trying to get the motor wound up.

``But I knew if I could keep him down there for 10 or 15 laps, he wouldn't have any rear tires at the end of it.''

Later, Rudd had a less-lengthy but similar duel with Cope. The race-winning pass came on lap 290 of the 312-lap race. Cope was stuck at Rudd's side for several more laps, but Rudd shot out ahead for good on lap 292 when Cope bobbled as they came out of turn four side by side.

``I think we were probably both scared of each other,'' Rudd said. ``When two people are hungry for a win, you don't know what's going to happen. He got everything out of that 12 car, I know that.''

Cope, who had his best finish of the season, said, ``I couldn't hang on. Ricky just had a better car than us at the end. We went with two tires the last two (pit stops) and those left side tires were just hurt.''

But the two-tire pit stop was in full favor here Sunday, as it was at Charlotte earlier this month.

``My car liked two tires a lot,'' Rudd said. ``It seems like this year is the year for two tires (on pit stops). A lot of the guys at Charlotte took two and went faster than we did with four'' new tires.

As for the winning streak, now extended to 13 years (Earnhardt is tops at 14 years), Rudd said, ``The streak will be nice this winter, when you're sitting around with idle time and you think about it.

``I really didn't think much about the streak until a lot of press people reminded me. And then all of a sudden, I realized that it was a pretty nice accomplishment and I didn't want to see it go away.'' ILLUSTRATION: Ricky Rudd has won at least 1 race each year since 1983. He's

now 8th in points.

RESULTS

[For a copy of the results, see microfilm for this date.]

by CNB