Denny Hamlin wins second straight pole at the Monster Mile
May 31, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DOVER,
Del. -- A broken back hasn't slowed Denny Hamlin down, as his
competitors in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series learned once again
during Friday's qualifying session for Sunday's FedEx 400 benefiting
Autism Speaks at Dover International Speedway.
Sidelined
for five weeks after suffering a compression fracture of his first
lumbar vertebra in a last-lap crash at Fontana, Calif.,
in late March, Hamlin won his second straight pole of the season, his
second straight at Dover and the 15th of his career.
Hamlin
claimed the Coors Light pole award with a lap 157.978 mph (22.788
seconds) at the one-mile concrete track that had given him
fits until he qualified first and finished eighth in last September's
Chase race at the Monster Mile.
When
Hamlin climbed from his car after the run, he indicated he would be
happy with a starting spot in the top 10, but his time stood
up to all challengers.
"I thought that all the strong cars were later in the field," explained Hamlin, who was the 19th
of 43 drivers to attempt
qualifying. "Especially the last two (Kasey Kahne and Kyle Busch) were
very strong. When I ran the lap, I wasn't in love with it.
Fundamentally, I didn't do that great of a job, but I knew the track
conditions were really bad.
"We
were sixth in practice, and we were only a tenth (of a second) off of
what we ran in practice (in cooler conditions). In the back
of my mind, I'm preparing for the worst, hoping for the best."
Martin
Truex Jr. (157.798 mph) qualified second, followed by Kyle Busch
(157.756 mph), Matt Kenseth (157.736 mph) and Ryan Newman (157.715
mph).
Mark
Martin, Kevin Harvick, Brad Keselowski, Joey Logano and Jamie McMurray
nailed down starting positions six through 10, respectively.
Kenseth,
a three-time winner in the series year and Hamlin's teammate at Joe
Gibbs Racing, joked that the driver of the No. 11 Toyota
was making things tough on his fellow drivers since his return.
"I
don't know why Denny has to come back and show off all the time right
away," quipped Kenseth, who felt he got everything he could
out of his car on the qualifying lap.
In
a season where track records have fallen on a regular basis with
NASCAR's new Gen-6 car, no driver in Friday's time trials came close
to Jeremy Mayfield's 2004 mark of 161.522 mph. That was no surprise,
given the hot, slick conditions that confronted the field during
qualifying.
But
Joe Gibbs Racing, the preeminent organization in Cup racing with five
victories so far this year, owned three of the top four starting
spots, as Toyota drivers swept the top four positions on the grid for
Sunday's race.
Seven-time
Dover winner and Cup points leader Jimmie Johnson got sideways off Turn
4 on his money lap and qualified 24th at 155.206
mph. Johnson needs a victory on Sunday to break a tie with Richard
Petty and Bobby Allison for most career wins at the Monster Mile.
No comments:
Post a Comment