Denny Hamlin knocks JGR teammate Busch off California pole
March 23, 2012
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
FONTANA,
Calif. -- Kyle Busch had the pole for Sunday's Auto Club 400 at Auto
Club Speedway -- until Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Denny Hamlin took it
away from him.
Hamlin
circled the two-mile track in 38.626 seconds (186.403 mph) to claim his
second Coors Light pole award at Fontana and the 10th of his career,
and he did it by taking the opposite approach from his teammate --
running the bottom of the track through Turns 1 and 2 rather than the
top groove.
Busch
and Mark Martin both ran 185.534 mph, with Busch getting the second
starting spot for the fifth race of the season by virtue of a higher
finish in last year owners' standings.
Martin
will start third, followed by series points leader Greg Biffle (185.510
mph) and Kasey Kahne, who also tied for the fourth spot, with Biffle
winning the position on owner points.
Hamlin
ran a spectacular lap despite ignoring the example of teammate and
eighth-place qualifier Joey Logano, who ran the top of track and picked a
line through the corner many drivers who followed him in the qualifying
order sought to emulate.
Hamlin
thought the gusty wind would have more of an effect on the high line,
and the driver of the No. 11 Toyota had run the bottom of the track
during his mock qualifying runs in practice.
"Everyone
had a different way of doing it," Hamlin said. "It seemed like there
were some guys who were five lanes up and some who just worked their way
down. We were one of the few cars that ran all the way on the bottom.
"That's
where we practiced, and I didn't want to change that. I'd done all my
qualifying runs early in the day and practiced race runs on the bottom.
Really, I think I would have been less efficient running the top, even
though it might have been faster. My safest route was to take the
bottom, and I just took what it gave us."
After seeing Logano take the provisional pole with his run on the top in the first two corners, Busch did the same.
"I've
never run 1 and 2 up in the third lane like that," Busch said. "I think
Joey kind of started the trend there, and a lot of people picked up it
and started running some really good times. And lo, and behold, one of
the only guys that runs the bottom -- Denny -- beats you."
A
Toyota driver has never won a Cup race at Fontana, but with Camrys in
the top three positions on the grid, the odds have improved for the
Japanese car maker.
Robby
Gordon, Joe Nemechek and rookie Timmy Hill failed to qualify for the
43-car field. Nemechek had not missed a Sprint Cup event since failing
to qualifying at Phoenix in November 2010. Friday's DNQ broke a string
of 41 straight successful attempts.
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