Gordon dominates Sonoma road course

? Jeff Gordon wrapped up a perfect weekend Sunday, starting from the pole and racing to an overpowering victory in the NASCAR race at Infineon Raceway.

Gordon picked up his fourth victory on the 1.99-mile, 10-turn road course, winning for the third time from the pole. It also extended his own Nextel Cup record for road racing wins to eight and gave him three for the season and 67 for his career.

“We’ve had some bad finishes lately, and we wanted this one real bad,” said Gordon, who got out of his No. 24 Chevrolet soaked with sweat and after leading 92 of 110 laps on a hot afternoon. “I drove out and got as big a lead as I could and gave a lot of it up there at the end. It was real tough.”

It didn’t look that way.

Gordon beat Jamie McMurray to the finish line by 1.032-seconds — about 10 car-lengths, with road racing specialist Scott Pruett third.

McMurray said he never thought he had a shot at Gordon in Sunday’s Dodge/Save Mart 350.

“He was just so strong out there,” last year’s top rookie said. “I think that Jeff was kind of cruising there at the end.”

Kurt Busch started third and vaulted past both Gordon and Rusty Wallace to grab the lead on the first lap, but Gordon quickly moved back into the top spot and stayed there the rest of the way except during pit stop sequences.

He made his final stop on lap 68 during one of six caution periods. When he got back on track, Gordon found himself behind Casey Mears and rookie Kasey Kahne, both of whom had pitted earlier.

Gordon quickly disposed of Kahne on the restart on lap 70, but it took him until lap 74 before he could work his way past Mears. Once Gordon got back on top, he was never challenged again.

Meanwhile, McMurray got past Wallace and Mears to grab second on lap 79, then spent the rest of the race trying to catch Gordon.

Wallace was in fourth when he ran out of gas a lap from the end. He wound up 28th. Michael Waltrip finished fourth ahead of series leader Jimmie Johnson.

Tony Stewart found himself in the middle of another controversy after the race when Stewart attempted to pull Brian Vickers from his car. Members of Vickers’ team grabbed Stewart and hustled him away.

Late Sunday, NASCAR President Mike Helton said the sanctioning body was still gathering information about the incident.

Vickers said he had no idea why Stewart was upset with him.

Stewart was unavailable for comment.