Mark Martin edges Kasey Kahne for Phoenix pole
March 1, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
AVONDALE,
Ariz.—Mark Martin may not be the oldest driver to win a pole in the
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series — yet — but with his top qualifying effort
Friday at Phoenix International
Raceway, the seemingly ageless driver remained the second oldest driver
to win a pole.
Martin,
54, was the only driver in time trials for Sunday's Subway Fresh Fit
500 to top 138 mph. Martin's lap at 138.074 mph, a record for the spring
event at PIR, was good
enough to edge Kasey Kahne (137.862 mph) for the top starting spot.
Jimmie
Johnson was late to the grid after his car had issues on NASCAR's newest
inspection process, the laser platform, but that didn't prevent the
Daytona 500 winner from
knocking out a lap at 137.804 mph to secure the third starting spot for
Sunday's race.
Kyle
Busch (137.673 mph) qualified fourth, followed by Jeff Gordon (137.164
mph). Tony Stewart, Kevin Harvick, Denny Hamlin, Matt Kenseth and Ryan
Newman will start from positions
six through 10 in the second Cup race of the season.
The
chassis Martin drove to the pole position was the same one that
qualified fastest in the sprint race at Phoenix last year. Even with the
new body style of the Gen-6 race
car, his Camry was still fast.
"We did
bring a different car here last fall," said Martin, who won his third
pole at Phoenix. "We thought it was the cat daddy, and we didn't run as
well as we might have,
and so it didn't come back. I didn't know until we were standing out
there qualifying, and he (crew chief Rodney Childers) mentioned that
this was the car from the spring."
The
pole was Martin's 56th, breaking a tie with Bill Elliott for seventh on
the career list. Driving a 24-race Cup schedule, Martin won the Coors
Light pole award four times
last season, and Kahne looks to the No. 55 Toyota Camry as one of the
top contenders every time Martin is on the track.
"I
watch everybody qualify, and when he goes out, he's probably the guy,
more than anyone else, that's probably going to beat me — or it's going
to be close," Kahne said. "That's
just the way it is with Mark right now. Last year it was the same way.
"He has
a really good connection with Rodney, and the situation he's in, and
they're fast when it comes to qualifying — every week."
After
his car passed inspection, Johnson's crew pushed the No. 48 Chevrolet to
the front of the grid in plenty of time to make the qualifying run.
"It's
really different now, because the machine (laser platform) runs its
course, and everybody stands around waiting, and the lasers do what they
do, and you're either 'pass'
or 'no,'" Johnson said. "We had a couple of 'No's' to start, and then
it was right.
"It was something in the back of the car. That's what the guys were saying."
A week
after leading the Daytona 500 field to green from the pole position,
Danica Patrick will start 40th after a disappointing qualifying lap at
132.890 mph (27.090 seconds).
"It was
just loose," Patrick said. "I just couldn't turn the car . . . We
really tried to chase that. We knew that from last year being here, that
it was going to get loose
in qualifying, and in practice, at the end, we made a change, and the
car was dancing all around on top of the track.
"We
thought we fixed it for qualifying, but we had the same problem again.
It's really disappointing. I know it's good to qualify further up on
these short tracks to stay on
the lead lap. We know we always get better in the race, and that's the
strong part of the weekend usually for us, but to have a really great
weekend all around, you've got to qualify better."
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