Kyle Busch edges Kasey Kahne for New Hampshire pole
July 13, 2012
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
LOUDON, N.H. -- Kyle Busch qualified the way he practiced on Friday -- at the top of the chart.
Edging
Kasey Kahne by .003 seconds and Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Denny Hamlin
by .004, Busch won the pole for Sunday's Lenox Industrial Tools 301
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at New Hampshire Motor Speedway with a lap
at 133.417 mph.
The
last of 44 drivers to make a qualifying attempt -- because he was
fastest in opening practice -- Busch prevailed in an intensely
competitive Friday qualifying session to win his first Coors Light pole
award of the season, his first at New Hampshire and the ninth of his
career.
Kahne
(133.403 mph) will start next to Busch on the front row, with Hamlin
(133.399 mph) taking the green flag from the third starting spot in the
19th Cup race of the season. Martin Truex Jr. (133.338 mph) will start
fourth, followed by two-time New Hampshire winner Clint Bowyer (133.319
mph).
Ryan
Newman qualified sixth, followed by the Hendrick Motorsports trio of
Jimmie Johnson, Jeff Gordon and Dale Earnhardt Jr. Reigning Cup champion
Tony Stewart, last week's winner at Daytona, starts 10th. Series leader
Matt Kenseth will take the green deep in the field, from the 27th
position on the grid.
Busch came perilously close to the outside wall near the end of his money lap but kept his car clean.
"I
got in the throttle really early in (Turns) 3 and 4, trying to make
speed and was able to finish it," Busch said. "But the car slipped right
at the last second when you get to that older asphalt -- it seems like
this tire (new from Goodyear for this race) is different from the older
tire, where you lose just a pinch of grip -- it slid out right to the
cushion point, I guess you'd say. But, no, there's no mark on the car,
so it's a good day."
Hamlin
posted his lap despite the absence of crew chief Darian Grubb, who is
celebrating the birth of his daughter Gabriella, who arrived Monday
morning. Mike Wheeler, Hamlin's race engineer, took Grubb's place on the
pit box.
Hamlin thought he lost the pole coming to the green on his first qualifying lap.
"Yeah,
I thought maybe I could have gotten to the green a little bit better,"
Hamlin said. "You know your first lap's going to be the money lap, so I
typically run into Turn 1 -- really at all racetracks -- a little bit
easier and try to make up the ground as I go.
"But with qualifying as tight as it is, you've got to maximize everything to get poles, and obviously that was the difference."
Mike Bliss was the slowest of eight drivers required to qualify on speed and failed to make the 43-car field.
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