Ageless Mark Martin nips Jimmie Johnson for Dover pole
June 2, 2012
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DOVER, Del. -- The old man did it again.
Mark
Martin, 53, the last driver to make a qualifying attempt Saturday at
Dover International Speedway, ran .005 seconds faster than Jimmie
Johnson to secure the top starting spot for Sunday's FedEx 400, the 13th
NASCAR Sprint Cup race of the season.
The
Coors Light pole award was Martin's third of the season, his fifth at
Dover and the 54th of his career, eighth most all-time -- but it didn't
come easily. Martin, posted a lap at 158.297 mph (22.742 seconds), but
had to push his car beyond the edge to nip Johnson (158.263 mph) for the
top spot on the grid.
"I'll
never do that again," quipped Martin after his run. "I anticipated the
car being loose, but I didn't ask (crew chief) Rodney (Childers) if he
tightened it up. I knew the conditions were looser than they were in our
mock qualifying run (Friday), and I didn't want to ask him because I
didn't want to be concerned.
"I
knew that I only had to make it one mile without wrecking, and I was
going to drive to the limit and slightly beyond, and I felt like I did
that. I wouldn't want to do that again. But I couldn't sit on these
poles without the fastest racecar, and MWR (Michael Waltrip Racing) and
Rodney Childers in particular and the guys on our team are doing that."
Ryan
Newman (158.235 mph) qualified third, followed by Clint Bowyer (158.047
mph) and Matt Kenseth (157.985 mph). Kevin Harvick, series leader Greg
Biffle, Kyle Busch, Kurt Busch and Denny Hamlin will start the race from
positions six through 10, respectively.
Martin's last-ditch effort prevented Johnson from claiming his first Cup pole since Sept. 26, 2010, at Dover.
"The
lap was pretty strong," Johnson said of his second-place run. "I knew
off the corner -- off (Turns) 2 and 4 -- I just couldn't get the power
down, being loose, and I left a little on the table. I felt it was more
like a 10th (of a second), 10th and a half that I left out there, and
Mark found five thousandths . . .
"Qualifying's
never been my strong suit, but I've been second a lot. But it is what
it is. On the track, I'll just have to take care of it and do a little
better job there."
Notes:
Josh Wise and Cole Whitt failed to make the 43-car field. . . . Martin
won his first NASCAR race at Dover in 1987, when he took the checkered
flag in the Budweiser 200 Nationwide Series event.
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