Johnson posts record speed in winning Martinsville Coors Light Pole
Apr. 5, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
MARTINSVILLE, Va.—So what else is new?
Jimmie
Johnson, who won last fall's race at Martinsville Speedway from the top
starting spot, continued his mastery of the paper-clip-shaped track
during Friday afternoon's
time trials.
In the
first competitive appearance of NASCAR's Gen-6 race car at Martinsville,
Johnson blistered the vaunted short track in 19.244 seconds (98.400
mph) in winning the pole
for Sunday's STP Gas Booster 500, as the top six drivers in the field
topped the former track record of 98.084 mph established by Tony Stewart
in October 2005.
In
winning his third Coors Light pole award at Martinsville and the 30th
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series pole of his career, Johnson edged Marcos
Ambrose by .007 seconds. Brian Vickers
qualified third, followed by Joey Logano, Kasey Kahne and Jeff Gordon.
Kahne and Gordon, Johnson's teammates at Hendrick Motorsports, ran
identical speeds (98.185 mph), with Kahne getting the fifth starting
spot based on his car's higher standing in owner
points.
In his first practice run earlier in the day, Johnson knew his No. 48 Chevrolet SS was fast.
"In the
first run out, we were in (qualifying) trim and made two or three laps,
and I knew right away that we had a great shot at it today," said
Johnson, a seven-time winner
at Martinsville. "At that point, I just needed to do my job and not
mess up.
"So I'm
very proud of that. It's very easy to (mess up) at this race track,
especially once practice ends. You sit and have lunch and relax for a
couple hours and have to do
it all over again. A great day across the board — team, driver, engine,
car, everything that's new. We were able to step up and figure it out
and get the car dialed in."
Early
in Friday's session, the track record fell. Logano, the third driver to
make a qualifying run, toured the .526-mile short track in 19.269
seconds (98.272 mph), breaking
the record set by Stewart, one of his Fontana antagonists from two
weeks ago.
Six
cars later, Ambrose (98.384 mph) knocked Logano off the provisional
pole, and Vickers followed with a lap at 98.287 mph to push Logano back
to third after 14 of 44 cars
had taken time trials. Johnson's pole run late in the session bumped
Logano to fourth.
The No.
2 Ford of defending series champion Brad Keselowski was late getting
through inspection and made it to the grid with seconds left on the
five-minute clock. Keselowski
nevertheless qualified seventh at 98.078 mph.
Notes:
Danica Patrick will start 32nd for her first race at Martinsville and
the first for a female driver in NASCAR's top division at the venerable
short track. ... Subbing
for injured Denny Hamlin, Mark Martin qualified 35th in the No. 11 Joe
Gibbs Racing Toyota. ... Mike Bliss failed to make the 43-car field.
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