Kasey Kahne tops Kevin Harvick for Michigan pole
June 12, 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
BROOKLYN,
Mich. – Kevin Harvick had his sights set on a clean sweep of knockout
qualifying at Michigan International Speedway—until Kasey Kahne had
other ideas late in Friday’s final round.
Kahne
sped around the two-mile track in 35.645 seconds (201.992 mph) to knock
Harvick off the pole for Sunday’s Quicken Loans 400 NASCAR Sprint Cup
Series race (1 p.m. ET on FOX Sports 1).
Harvick,
who posted a 201.613 mph lap in the final session, had topped the
charts in the first two rounds, matching Kahne’s pole-winning time in
the second.
The
Coors Light Pole Award was Kahne’s third of the season and the 27th of
his career—but his first since the October 2012 Chase for the NASCAR
Sprint Cup race at Kansas Speedway.
Brad
Keselowski (201.449 mph) qualified third, followed by Carl Edwards
(201.067 mph) and Ryan Blaney (201.056 mph), who is running a partial
schedule in the No. 21 Wood Brothers Ford.
With
a 2012 repaving project having narrowed the racing groove at Michigan,
Kahne underscored the value of starting up front—and staying there.
“It’s
going to be really important,” said Kahne, who also gets the benefit of
selecting pit stall No. 1., closest to the exit from pit road. “The
track is going to change a lot, though, come Sunday, with all the racing
going on this weekend and then our practices (on Saturday).
“The
track will be a lot different Sunday. So, there will be some passing
for sure, but it’s not going to be easy. So track position will play a
big role in being there at the end of the race.”
Harvick
remains the only driver to sweep all three rounds of qualifying at a
single track, a feat he accomplished last year at Michigan and
Indianapolis, but he fell .067 seconds of doing so for a third time.
“I
don’t know that I got everything out of it (the final lap), but the
rounds were within seven hundredths (of a second) of each other,”
Harvick said. “The guys were doing a great job, and Kasey just got a
little bit better lap there than we did.”
With
possible rain in the forecast, Blaney was nervous as qualifying
approached, but not because of the competition. If rain had washed out
time trials, the Wood Brothers’ car would not have made the field, based
on fewest qualifying attempts this season—a product of a limited
schedule.
“It
was funny the way it played out,” Blaney said. “It looked like two
cells coming at us (on the radar), and a small slit in the middle of
them, and we passed right through that slit. That was just kind of lucky
for us.
“Like
I said, it would have stung knowing how good of a car we had in
practice if qualifying rained out. We’re fortunate to get it in, and
it’s a bonus to have a good race car.”
Brendan Gaughan, who unlike Blaney would have benefited from a rainout, failed to make the 43-car field.
No comments:
Post a Comment