Edwards is surprised winner of Sprint Cup pole at New Hampshire
July 17, 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
LOUDON, N.H. – As Carl Edwards put it, “things just feel right.”
That
was Edwards’ take on the state of affairs at Joe Gibbs Racing, after he
put his No. 19 Toyota on the pole for Sunday’s 5-Hour ENERGY 301 NASCAR
Sprint Cup Series race at New Hampshire Motor Speedway (1:30 p.m. ET on
NBCSN).
“Right
now it just feels right,” said Edwards, who toured the Magic Mile in
28.179 seconds (135.164 mph) in Friday’s qualifying session to earn his
first Coors Light Pole Award of the season, his first at New Hampshire
and the 14th of his career.
“It’s
just cool, man. My expectation is to do the best we can (on Sunday). My
hope is that we win this thing. ... We’ve been working very hard to
bring this team together to be the best that we can be. It just feels
right. This is cool. It’s a lot of fun.”
With
JGR teammate Kyle Busch winning last Saturday’s event at Kentucky, the
organization placed all its drivers in the top five, with Denny Hamlin,
Edwards and Matt Kenseth trailing second-place Joey Logano of Team
Penske.
Coincidentally,
Logano (135.021 mph) qualified second to Edwards on Friday, with
Michael Waltrip Racing’s David Ragan third (also at 135.021 mph) and
Busch (134.025 mph) and Hamlin (134.601 mph) fourth and fifth,
respectively.
Edwards,
who improved dramatically on his previous average starting position of
14.9 at New Hampshire, didn’t believe initially that he had won the pole
until he got reassurance from crew chief Darian Grubb.
On the other hand, Logano wasn’t particularly thrilled to run second to a Gibbs driver for the second time in six days.
“Second—it
seems like the story of our week, coming off Kentucky with a strong
second-place run and then qualifying second here as well,” Logano said.
“Not that I’m complaining about it, but it’s not much fun finishing
second, being so close to getting trophies and pole flags and all the
fun stuff.
“There’s not really much fun that happens when you finish second, but we’re close. We’ve got speed in our race car once again.”
Danica
Patrick advanced to the second round of knockout qualifying and will
start 20th, one spot behind Dale Earnhardt Jr. Jeff Gordon, still
seeking his first victory in his last season of full-time Sprint Cup
racing, will start 23rd.
“Yeah,
it’s not been a good day for us with the No. 24 car,” Gordon
acknowledged. “We’ve been struggling getting the car to do what we need
it to do. Just real tight through the center, need to get it to rotate,
need some front grip, so we will go to work on it (Saturday in
practice).
“It’s
disappointing that we didn’t qualify better. We typically qualify well
here and perform well here. We’ll put this day behind us and go work on
it tomorrow and get it ready for Sunday.”
Notes:
Reed Sorenson failed to make the 43-car field. ... Logano posted the
fastest speed in Friday’s time trials (135.448 mph) when he paced the
second of the three knockout rounds, but it’s the final round that
determines the pole winner.
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