Logano edges Penske teammate Keselowski for GEICO 400 pole
Sept. 13, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
JOLIET, Ill.--Probation did little to slow down Penske Racing.
Less
than three hours after NASCAR placed the organization on probation for
alleged collusion last Saturday at Richmond, Penske drivers
Joey Logano and Brad Keselowski qualified 1-2 for Sunday’s GEICO 400 at
Chicagoland Speedway, the first race in the expanded Chase for the
NASCAR Sprint Cup.
Logano,
who streaked around the 1.5-mile track in 28.509 seconds (189.414 mph),
led a parade of 14 drivers who broke Jimmie Johnson’s
2005 qualifying mark of 188.147 mph during Friday’s time trials. He
edged Keselowski (189.248 mph), his teammate, for the pole by .025
seconds.
The
Coors Light pole award was Logano’s second of the season and the
seventh of his career. Juan Pablo Montoya (189.062 mph) qualified
third, followed by Kasey Kahne (188.785 mph) and rookie Ricky Stenhouse
Jr. (188.772 mph).
"The
mile-and-a-half, two-mile race tracks are where we’ve been our
strongest throughout the year," Logano said. "The shorter tracks
have been a little tougher for us. We know in these races (at
intermediate tracks) that we really have to capitalize, and the other
ones we have to be on damage control and try to get our cars as fast as
we can…
"We’ll work hard (Saturday) in practice and get our car as good as we can get it, and we’ll wait and see what happens."
Keselowski
felt his teammate made a statement with his pole-winning run, though
not necessarily in response to the adversity his organization
has faced over the past week.
"Any
time you run well, it’s a statement," Keselowski said. "It doesn’t have
to be just when you’re facing adversity that you can see.
There’s a lot of adversity as drivers we face all the time. Some of it
is in the media, and some of it isn’t.
"Running
well against the best competition in the world that competes in Sprint
Cup is always an accomplishment, whether there’s off-the-track
drama or not."
NASCAR
placed Penske Racing and Front Row Motorsports on probation Friday for
allegedly trying to strike a deal for Front Row’s David
Gilliland to finish behind Logano at Richmond, as Logano was
striving--successfully as it turned out--to qualify for the Chase.
Logano finished 22nd and Gilliland 23rd, with Logano knocking Jeff Gordon out of the Chase by one point.
In
the interest of fairness, and in light of the competitive manipulations
by more than one team, NASCAR added Gordon to the Chase on
Friday, expanding the field from 12 to 13 drivers. Gordon responded by
qualifying sixth for Sunday’s race.
In
addition to Logano, Kahne and Gordon, other Chase drivers secured the
following starting spots: Greg Biffle, seventh; Carl Edwards,
eighth; Jimmie Johnson, ninth; Matt Kenseth, 10th; Kyle Busch, 12th; Kurt Busch, 16th; Kevin Harvick, 17th; Dale Earnhardt Jr., 18th; Ryan Newman, 20th; and Clint Bowyer, 24th.
No comments:
Post a Comment