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Kenseth holds off Gordon to win Marketplace 400

BROOKLYN, Mich. -- With Jeff Gordon closing in and the
checkered flag in sight Sunday at Michigan International Speedway,
Matt Kenseth was thinking about three races he could have won and
didn't.

"What I thought of was Las Vegas, Bristol and Chicago because
we were in a position to win all three of them and I got run into
twice and passed once," said Kenseth, who held on for his third
NASCAR Nextel Cup race of the season and the 13th of his career.

In all three of those races, Kenseth said an almost sure victory
went away because he wore out his tires on the final stint and
allowed other drivers to catch him.

Not this time.

Kenseth easily kept four-time NASCAR champion Gordon at bay in
the final laps of the GFS Marketplace 400 by conscientiously taking
care of his tires after his final pit stop.

"I just tried to be a little smarter at the beginning of the
last run, go slower and make sure I didn't use up the front
tires," Kenseth said. "I really was thinking about how not to
lose the race."

The finish lacked the drama of last month's duel in Chicago,
when Gordon caught Kenseth and then controversially spun him out of
his way to race on by for the victory.

And although Gordon appeared to have a faster car at the end
this time -- he charged from 12th place on a restart with 36 laps to
go in the 200-lap race -- he ran out of time and finished 10 car
lengths behind Kenseth's No. 17 Roush Racing Ford.

Kenseth definitely knew Gordon was coming, though.

Exchanging radio chatter with Kenseth, crew chief Robby Reiser
warned, "The 24 is coming."

"I know he's coming, but I've been taking care of the tires and
we'll be OK," Kenseth calmly replied.

"We saved just enough," the winner said.

"I wish we had a few more laps," Gordon said. "I needed maybe
three more and I would have been on his bumper. I would have liked
to show him and everybody else I know how to pass him clean."

Kenseth solidified his hold on second place in the Cup
standings, and is now just 58 points behind leader Jimmie Johnson.

Johnson overcame a flat tire on the second lap of the race to
finish 13th. He and Kenseth have all but clinched their spots in
the 10-race Chase for the championship with only three races
remaining until the start of NASCAR's playoffs.

Tony Stewart, the two-time and defending Cup champion, finished
third, and was followed by Kasey Kahne, Mark Martin, Dale Earnhardt
Jr.
and Greg Biffle, all of whom are still fighting for spots in
the Chase.

But four other drivers took big hits in their effort to make it
to the Chase.

Jeff Burton, the pole-sitter, had engine failure after just 17
laps and fell from fourth to ninth in the standings after a
42-place finish. Kyle Busch dropped two spots to seventh after he
bounced off the wall and blew out a tire, leaving him in 39th place
on Sunday.

Kurt Busch, the 2004 champion and Kyle's older brother, saw his
chances of getting to the top 10 fade as he also had tire problems
and hit the wall twice. He was 40th and fell from 12th to 14th --
279 points behind 10th-place Earnhardt.

Carl Edwards, who led 32 laps and was running in the top 10 with
less than 30 to go, crushed a fender in a collision with another
car and fell to 22nd. He moved ahead of Busch to 13th, but is 244
points out of 10th heading into Saturday night's race at Bristol.

Kenseth started third and led a race-high 87 laps.

He faded toward the rear of the top 10 after taking an early
lead, but eventually showed some power in a give-and-take battle
with Earnhardt for the lead just past the halfway point. He stayed
on track on lap 131 when the other leaders pitted during one of the
record 10 caution periods and remained on top most of the way to
the end.

Kenseth, the 2003 Cup champion, took the lead for the sixth and
final time on lap 169, passing rookie Clint Bowyer and pulling
away.

While some of the top 10 drivers were shuffled, nobody fell out.
Earnhardt, who led 40 laps before a slow pit stop pushed him back
in the field, held onto 10th place. He is 49 points ahead of Kahne,
his closest pursuer.