Jeff Gordon wins the pole for his final Daytona 500
Feb. 15, 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.—Jeff Gordon won a high-stakes game of “Beat the Clock” on Sunday, with the pole for his final Daytona 500
the ultimate prize.
Gordon
crossed the start/finish line to start his pole-winning lap as time
expired in the final round of knockout qualifying at Daytona
International Speedway.
His
time of 44.711 seconds (201.293 mph) was .035 seconds better than that
of Hendrick Motorsports teammate Jimmie Johnson, who secured the outside
front-row starting spot
for next Sunday’s 57th running of the Great American Race (1 p.m. ET on
FOX).
The
first use of group knockout qualifying at Daytona, under a format
introduced at Talladega last fall, determined only the two front-row
starting positions for the 500. However,
the next four fastest drivers — with speeds counted from any of the
three qualifying rounds — also locked themselves into the field, with
specific starting positions to be determined after Thursday night’s
Budweiser Duel at Daytona (7 p.m. ET on FOX Sports
1).
Those
drivers were Aric Almirola, whose 202.340 mph speed in the first round
was the fastest of any session; Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Carl Edwards and
Jamie McMurray.
The
pole was Gordon’s fourth at Daytona and the 78th of his career. Gordon
has announced his retirement from full-time competition at the end of
the season and has said this
year’s Daytona 500 will be his last.
The front-row sweep was the fourth for Hendrick Motorsports.
“This
is definitely huge for many reasons,” Gordon said. “It’s one I’ve been
stressing about for a while. This format is crazy and chaotic, and it
can be extremely rewarding
when you have a day like we had… and to be able to bring that kind of
group effort together.
“In the
past, this has been one of the easiest days I’ve had all year long.
Just go out there and hold it wide open and run a couple of laps. It’s
all about the team and the
car and the preparation they put into it. All that hard work still goes
into this effort, but I play a bigger role, the spotter plays a bigger
role, and there’s just so much more strategy, trying to play this chess
match and the time game and the wait game.
It’s really intense.”
With
less than two minutes left in the first five-minute qualifying session,
Reed Sorenson’s ill-fated attempt to block Clint Bowyer into Turn 1
sparked a five-car wreck that
took out Bowyer’s No. 15 Michael Waltrip Racing Toyota.
Also
damaged in the crash was the No. 11 Toyota of Denny Hamlin, who was
fastest (199.840 mph) in the first session among drivers who drew
odd-number qualifying positions.
But after cars with even-numbered positions ran incident free in the
second session of the first round, Hamlin was relegated to 11th, and
Aric Almirola topped the speed chart at 202.370 mph.
None of
the four Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolets, all of which were in the
odd-number session of Round One, made the top 24 required to advance to
the second round. But no driver
was more incensed than Bowyer with the new qualifying system for the
Daytona 500.
“We
used to come down here and worry about who would sit on the pole in the
biggest race of the year,” Bowyer said. “Now all we do is come down here
and worry about how a start-and-park
(Sorenson) like this out of desperation is going to knock us out of the
Daytona 500.”
Bowyer
may have been the most strident opponent of the new system, but he
wasn’t the only one. NASCAR Executive Vice President of Racing
Operations Steve O’Donnell said the
sanctioning body is open to discussions on how to improve the process.
“If you
look at group qualifying as a whole, we felt it worked really well, but
certainly there are some challenges on superspeedways,” O’Donnell said.
“One of the reasons
we moved away from single-car qualifying is — and I think you’ve heard
that from the drivers as well — a lot of things go into it, aero
packages, oils, different setups, based on one lap not really based on a
race setup.
“You
also heard Jeff Gordon and others also talk about putting it back in the
drivers’ hands a little bit more. Those are things that we liked. I
would say we certainly don’t
want to see wrecks of any kind. It’s not lost on us how much work goes
into these cars… for the biggest race of the year.”
For his part, Sorenson took responsibility for the wreck and apologized.
“As you
can see, I was just trying to block,” Sorenson said. “That's what got
Matt Kenseth the win (Saturday) night (in the Sprint Unlimited). I was
doing everything I could
to stay in front of Clint. Pretty obvious what I was trying to do. I
didn't mean to wreck anybody or anything like that.
“Just a
product of this qualifying, trying to get that one lap. I didn't want
it to end that way, that's for sure. I apologize to all the guys. Try to
get a car here and try
to get in the race on Thursday.”
The wreck left Sorenson scrambling, given that his Xtreme Motorsports team came to Daytona without a backup car.
Johnson
led the second round with a lap at 201.925 mph, followed by Hamlin,
McMurray and Gordon. All four Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolets advanced
to the final round, as did
all four Joe Gibbs Racing Toyotas.
No comments:
Post a Comment