Hamlin sets new track record and wins pole at Pocono
June 6, 2014
By Seth Livingstone
NASCAR Wire Service
LONG
POND, Pennsylvania – A four-time NASCAR Sprint Cup winner at Pocono
Raceway, Denny Hamlin, continued to excel on the 2.5-mile triangular
layout on Friday, setting a track
record in qualifying for Sunday’s Pocono 400.
But
Hamlin says Pocono is a different animal than the track at which he won
his first two Cup races for Joe Gibbs Racing in 2006.
“It’s
so different that you could almost rename the race track,” said Hamlin,
whose lap at 181.415 mph edged Kurt Busch by .007 mph. “The old stats
don’t necessarily mean that
you’re going to have a great weekend, but this is a great sign.”
Driving
on a track that was repaved for the 2012 season and retooled in Turn 2
with the addition of an apron for this year’s events, Hamlin was only
24th-fastest during Friday’s
mid-day practice session. That’s when Hamlin said his team went to work
on his FedEx Toyota Camry.
“This
was very similar to what we did our rookie season,” said Hamlin, who
last went to victory lane at Pocono in June 2010. “We just kept making
it two- to three-tenths faster
ever session. We were definitely not a pole-winning car in practice or
even in the first round of qualifying. A little bit (of the improvement)
was repetition – me getting all I can out of the race car – and a lot
was Darian Grubb (crew chief) making the right
adjustments.
"Typically,
when you have a car that can get the pole, that tells me you have all
the parts and pieces and should be capable of winning. As tough as
passing is (at Pocono),
it’s better to be up front than having to battle your way through
traffic.”
Pocono
has always been one of Hamlin’s favorite layouts. In addition to
posting his first two Sprint Cup victories from the pole, he has posted
13 top-10 finishes in 16 career
starts. But success has been more fleeting in recent years. Last
August he crashed in Turn 3 on the 16th lap of the race and finished
43rd.
“We
haven’t been that strong here since the repave,” Hamlin said. “Handling
is not as big an issue at this race track since the repave. Now, it has a
lot of grip. And we haven’t
qualified that well. Back when I was winning in 2006, ’07, 2010, on the
old track, you could make up tons of positions. That would never happen
today because the cars are running so fast and they’re so equal.”
Busch,
who’ll start alongside Hamlin, had previously shattered Jimmie Johnson’s
track record in the second round of Friday’s knockout qualifying at
181.087 in his Stewart-Haas
Racing Chevrolet.
“When
you don’t get the pole, it’s bittersweet,” Busch said. “The sweet side
is that you know the car has speed in it. After my (final) lap, I felt
I’d left a little change
– a little pock change – on the lap in Turn 1. But I was really
surprised we had the speed to contend for the pole today.”
Brad Keselowski and Kevin Harvick qualified on the second row, while Jeff Gordon and Kyle Busch also broke the 180-mph mark.
Keselowski will start in the top 10 for the 11th time in 14 races and knew he was close to securing his third pole this season.
“Two-hundreths (of a second) on a 2.5-mile track – that’s pretty dang close,” Keselowski said.
Toyota
driver Brian Vickers had the fastest car in Friday’s practice and was
fastest – ahead of Kurt Busch and Gordon – in the first round of
qualifying.
“We’ve
been really strong in the first round but just can’t figure out how to
keep that (speed) in the next two qualifying rounds,” Vickers said.
Not
everyone was so fortunate or so fast on Friday. Jimmie Johnson, fresh
off consecutive Sprint Cup victories, was 20th in qualifying. Series
points leader Matt Kenseth failed
to advance through the first round of knockout qualifying and will
start 26th.
“The
driver blew Turn 2,” Johnson said. “I just got too greedy and lost the
nose in corner exit. I knew it killed the lap. Sure enough, when I came
back around, it was only
good enough for 20th. I feel bad for my guys, but this one is on me.”
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