Newman claims seventh New Hampshire pole with record run
Sept. 20, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
LOUDON,
N.H.—Before Friday's qualifying session at New Hampshire Motor
Speedway, Ryan Newman quipped that he would give 100 percent on both
laps—a reference to the edict NASCAR
chairman and CEO Brian France announced last weekend at Chicagoland
Speedway.
As it
turned out, Newman wasn't kidding. On his first circuit, he broke the
track record Kasey Kahne had set earlier in the session. On the second
lap, Newman broke the record
he had set 28 seconds earlier.
To be
exact, Newman toured the Magic Mile in 27.904 seconds (136.497 mph) to
shatter the mark of 135.922 mph established by Brad Keselowski in July.
Kahne (136.082 mph) and
third-place qualifier Jeff Gordon (136.063 mph) also beat the previous
record.
Kurt
Busch qualified fourth at 135.868 mph, followed by Martin Truex Jr. at
135.636 mph, as Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup drivers claimed the top
four starting positions
for Sunday's Sylvania 300, the second event in the Chase.
Chase
driver Joey Logano will start sixth and Paul Menard seventh. Kevin
Harvick, Matt Kenseth and Greg Biffle, all competing for the Sprint Cup
title, claimed the eighth through
10th starting positions, respectively.
"Everything
about qualifying weighs in to having a better chance in the race, with
the pit selection and with track position to start and, obviously,
knowing you have a fast
race car," said Newman, who won his seventh Coors Light Pole award at
the 1.058-mile speedway, a track he termed the "birthplace of track
position," where a strong qualifying effort is especially helpful.
"We'll
see what we can do with our Quicken Loans Chevrolet tomorrow in race
trim. We've been in qualifying trim the entire day, so I'm pretty sure
and pretty confident we can
make it all pay off."
The
pole was Newman's second of the season and the 51st of his career, ninth
on the all-time list. A win Sunday wouldn't be the first time Newman
has converted a pole into
a victory at New Hampshire. He won from the top starting spot during
his 2002 rookie season and again in 2011.
Unlike
Newman, whose first and second laps were both good for the pole, Gordon
picked up speed considerably from his first lap to his second, but not
by design.
"When I
went into the run and took off from pit road, I was really going to try
to get it done on the first lap," said Gordon, who is making the most
of his 11th-hour addition
to the Chase after manipulation of the outcome of the final
regular-season race at Richmond knocked him out of the 10-race playoff,
unfairly, in NASCAR's view.
"I came
off Turn 4 (approaching the green flag) just wiggling and sliding, and I
thought, 'OK, maybe I can make up for it in (Turns) 1 and 2, and then
off of 2 really bad,
and at that point, it was just all about regrouping and trying to put a
second lap together."
Gordon succeeded beyond his expectations.
"I was
shaking when I got out of the car," Gordon said, "because that first lap
was so hairy and on the edge that, the second lap, I had to really try
to get the car to run
really straight and not make any mistakes, but I knew we had a lot of
ground to make up.
"When they said I was third, I was really excited, because I knew we certainly weren't anywhere close to that on the first lap.
The
remaining five Chase drivers filled the following positions on the grid:
Jimmie Johnson 11th, Kyle Busch 12th, Clint Bowyer 16th, Dale Earnhardt
Jr. 17th and Carl Edwards
26th. Edwards tagged the outside with the right rear of his car on his
first lap, requiring the repair of cosmetic damage before Saturday's
practice.
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