Kasey Kahne looks to rebound with pole run at Talladega
Oct. 6, 2012
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
TALLADEGA,
Ala. -- A move to Hendrick Motorsports equipment has made all the
difference in the world where Kasey Kahne and Talladega are concerned.
In
his second trip to Talladega Superspeedway in the No. 5 Chevrolet,
Kahne scored his first pole at the 2.66-mile restrictor-plate track.
That followed a previous best starting
position of fifth for Talladega's event this past spring.
In
Saturday's time trials, Kahne toured Talladega in 50.017 seconds
(191.455 mph) to edge Ryan Newman (191.145 mph) for the top starting
spot in Sunday's Good Sam Roadside Assistance
500 by .081 seconds.
The
Coors Light pole award was Kahne's third of the season and the 25th of
his career. Clint Bowyer (191.119 mph) qualified third, followed by
defending NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
champion Tony Stewart (190.993 mph) and Greg Biffle (190.955 mph), as
Chase for the Sprint Cup drivers claimed four of the top five starting
positions (the exception being Newman).
"They
(Hendrick) just put a big emphasis on these types of tracks and this
type of racing," said Kahne, who is tied for fifth in the Cup standings,
32 points behind leader Brad
Keselowski. "I've never been anywhere before where they do that.
"As
far as the engine goes, the body, the car -- everything they can work
on they do. That makes all of our cars look really good when it comes to
qualifying . . . With all the
emphasis that they put on this track, it feels really good to drive
that car."
As Kahne well knows, a good starting spot at Talladega doesn't guarantee a strong finish.
"It
means I'm going to start first -- that's it," Kahne said. "I'll try to
lead the first lap and get that extra bonus point (for leading a lap).
If we're up there, we might as
well try to stay there and lead the most laps and get another point. . .
.
"I
think we really need to race, and race hard. We're a long way back
right now. If we can't make points up at a track like this, we're
probably not going to make those points
up."
Keselowski
will start 22nd in the No. 2 Dodge, with five-time champion Jimmie
Johnson, currently second in the standings, taking the green flag in
17th.
Keselowski didn't appear particularly concerned about his mid-pack starting spot.
"I
think we've proven that the only lap that matters is the last one,"
said Keselowski, who won the May 6 race at Talladega. We have a good
(car). You have to stay out of trouble,
be solid on pit road and put yourself in position to make a run at the
end. We'll see how it plays out."
Newman
said he ran only five laps of practice in two sessions combined on
Friday and didn't know what to expect during qualifying. Bowyer, on the
other hand, was stunned by his
third-place effort, a performance that will change his strategy for the
fourth race in the Chase.
"I
am blown-away shocked that we're in the top three," said Bowyer, who is
fourth in the series standings, 25 points behind Keselowski. "Very,
very proud of (crew chief Brian)
Pattie and everybody on our (team).
"We
haven't been qualifying very good on these restrictor-plate tracks, and
today it caught me off guard. My whole plan for the weekend. . . . I
kind of figured we were going
to qualify poorly and ride around in the back. We're in the front. I'm
going to try to stay there."
Other
Chase drivers qualified as follows: Jeff Gordon, sixth; Martin Truex
Jr., ninth; Dale Earnhardt Jr., 12th; Matt Kenseth, 15th; Kevin Harvick,
21st and Denny Hamlin 23rd.
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