Kasey Kahne rights ship with pole-winning run at Las Vegas
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
LAS VEGAS -- Kasey Kahne was the fastest of the fast Friday at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.
In
a qualifying session that saw 15 drivers break Matt Kenseth's 2011
track record of 188.884 mph, Kahne led the field with a lap at 190.456
mph (28.353 seconds) to earn the top starting spot for Sunday's Kobalt
Tools 400 NASCAR Sprint Cup race at the 1.5-mile track.
Kahne
edged Kyle Busch (190.040 mph) to claim his third Coors Light pole
award at Las Vegas and the 23rd of his career. Kahne won his first
career pole at Las Vegas in 2004.
Kevin
Harvick qualified third at 190.014 mph, followed by Dale Earnhardt Jr.
(189.873 mph) and Clint Bowyer (189.807 mph). Jimmie Johnson, Tony
Stewart, Joey Logano, Greg Biffle and Martin Truex Jr. will start from
positions six through 10, respectively, in the season's third Cup race.
Kahne
was sorely in need of a strong performance. In his first year with
Hendrick Motorsports, Kahne has suffered through disappointing results
in the season's first two races, crashing out of the Daytona 500 in 29th
place and scraping the wall early in the event at Phoenix with a car
many thought capable of winning the race.
"I
feel good about our speed," Kahne said. "At Daytona, so many things
happen there, and you're not in control of a lot of that stuff -- I got
caught up in other people's messes at times. Last weekend, we had a car
as anybody at Phoenix. I qualified well, was really good in practice --
the best car in practice -- and then in the race, we just needed to do
things right and be there at the end.
"I
made a mistake, and we lost a lot of points because of that. We had a
rough day because of a mistake I made. You add all that up, and we
haven't started off very good, but our cars have been fast . . . I feel
like I'm in a really good spot. The way to dig out (of the deficit) is
to qualify well, run well and not make mistakes -- and I feel like we
can do that."
Kahne
and Hendrick Motorsports teammates Earnhardt and Johnson took a higher
line around the bump in Turn 1 than most of their competitors. Kahne
said he scouted Matt Kenseth's record run from last year before picking
his line.
"I
didn't talk to those guys about it, but I watched Dale and also Jimmie
in practice and saw where they were running -- they were a little bit
faster than I was," Kahne said. "And then, right before qualifying, I
did it a little different in the Great Clips (Nationwide) car.
"I
wanted to check on some things, so I had (team engineer) Keith (Rodden)
check back on last year. We wanted to see where Matt Kenseth ran, and
he ran right around the top (in Turns 1 and 2), just basically like I
did, and right around the bottom in 3 and 4. When I saw that, I was
like, 'That's the spot; I'm going to try to make it work.' "
Series
points leader Denny Hamlin was 17th fastest in time trials. Carl
Edwards, last year's winner at LVMS, fought a loose handling condition
throughout his run and qualified 21st.
Scott
Riggs and Robby Gordon failed to qualify for the 43-car field. Gordon
wouldn't have raced at Las Vegas even if he had qualified. He's
scheduled to drive his Trophy Truck in San Felipe, Mexico this weekend
and had Reed Sorenson lined up as a stand-in at LVMS.
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