Dale Earnhardt Jr. tops NASCAR Sprint Cup qualifying at Dover
Sept. 27, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DOVER,
Del. -- Dale Earnhardt Jr. watched and waited, but after several close
calls late in Friday's qualifying session at Dover International
Speedway, the driver of the No. 88 Chevrolet had the pole for Sunday's
AAA 400, the third race in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.
And
if second-place qualifier, series leader and Earnhardt's "worry-wart"
friend Matt Kenseth was disappointed at falling just short
of Earnhardt's track-record speed, so were those looking for a weakness
in Kenseth's performance.
Earnhardt
toured the Monster Mile in 22.243 seconds (161.849 mph) erasing Jeremy
Mayfield's 2004 mark of 161.522 mph. Kenseth was .006
seconds slower at 161.805 mph. Fellow Chase drivers Ryan Newman
(161.740 mph) and Carl Edwards (161.609 mph) qualified third and fourth,
respectively, with Aric Almirola, who matched Edwards at 161.609 mph,
claiming the fifth starting spot.
The
Coors Light pole award was Earnhardt's first at Dover, his second of
the season and the 13th of his career. It's the first time
since 2002 that the sport's most popular driver has won more than one
pole in a season. For the 17th time this season, a track qualifying
record fell.
Yet
Earnhardt felt he hadn't quite gotten the most out of his lap and
waited anxiously as the 17 drivers who followed him in the qualifying
order tried to knock him off the provisional pole.
"I
was expecting to put a good lap down," Earnhardt said. "I thought we'd
be competitive enough to get inside the top 10 pretty easily…
I made a couple of small errors out in the car, but you never drive
every lap perfectly. You always kind of wish you could have done things a
little differently. I think the car had maybe another half a tenth (of a
second) or a tenth in it….
"I
watched the lap tracker on a couple of guys. The 99 (Edwards), they
were a tenth-and-a-half better than us by the time they got into
Turn 3 or the middle of 3 and 4. So, yeah, I thought there was a good
amount of time left out there for a lot of guys, myself included."
When
Kenseth heard he had fallen .006 off the pole-winning lap, he radioed,
"My bad," to his team, but changing conditions had more
to do with Kenseth's second-place effort.
"I
feel bad we missed the pole by just that little bit," Kenseth said.
"(Crew chief) Jason (Ratcliff) and I both had a feeling it was
going to go like that when we saw the sun pop out before we left (on
the qualifying run). It just got too free and lost too much time…
"I
felt like from the seat I got everything it had in it… Gosh, we just
missed it by a little bit -- just too loose, just couldn't stay
in the gas."
Nevertheless,
the driver who has won the first two Chase races will start beside
Earnhardt on the front row. Though Kenseth has enjoyed
unqualified success in his first season at Joe Gibbs Racing, Earnhardt
describes his long-time friend as a glass-half-empty kind of guy.
"Matt
never would expect things to go this well," Earnhardt said. "I'm always
having to pump him up, tell him how good things are going
to be. He's always a worry-wart. I guess that's the best way to
describe him…
"He's
having a great year, but hopefully we can beat him. We want to get up
there and regain our ground and get back into this thing
if we can."
Earnhardt enters Sunday's race 11th in the standings, 62 points behind Kenseth.
Behind
Earnhardt, Kenseth, Newman and Edwards, other Chase drivers qualified
as follows: Jimmie Johnson, eighth; Kurt Busch, ninth;
Joey Logano, 11th; Kevin Harvick, 12th; Kyle Busch, 14th; Jeff Gordon,
16th; Greg Biffle, 19th; Kasey Kahne, 20th; and Clint Bowyer, 23rd.
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