Matt Kenseth conquers adversity with pole run at Richmond
Apr. 26, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
RICHMOND, Va.—What a comeback.
Less
than a week after winning the STP 400 from the pole at Kansas
Speedway—only to draw a NASCAR penalty of epic proportions for an
underweight connecting rod in his engine—Matt
Kenseth is back on top at Richmond International Raceway.
With a
track-record run at 130.334 mph (20.716 seconds), Kenseth won his second
Coors Light pole award in as many weeks and the 10th of his career.
Kenseth edged Brian Vickers
(130.303 mph), subbing for injured Denny Hamlin for the third straight
week, by .005 seconds.
Kenseth will lead the field to green for Saturday night’s Toyota Owners 400 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at the .75-mile track.
Jeff
Gordon (130.252 mph) qualified third, followed by Kasey Kahne (130.183
mph) and Clint Bowyer (130.158 mph), as the top five drivers broke
Vickers’ 2004 track record of
129.983 mph (20.772 seconds).
Kahne,
currently second in the Cup standings, will start 22 positions ahead of
Jimmie Johnson, who leads Kahne by 37 points. Brad Keselowski, third in
the standings and 38
points back, qualified 23rd. Kyle Busch, winner of the last four spring
races at Richmond, starts eighth.
For Kenseth, and for his sponsors, the pole was a welcome bright spot at the end of a trying week.
“It
feels great,” Kenseth said. “It’s a great race track. I felt like we
were off a little in practice today, and (crew chief) Jason Ratcliff and
that whole group there did
the things they do for me every week and just made great adjustments.
“I
thought we hit it pretty good there in that lap, had great speed. Thanks
to Dollar General, Husky, home Depot (Kenseth’s sponsors) for sticking
with us through all this
stuff this week. We’ll get through this… glad to be on the pole, and
looking forward to tomorrow night.”
After
wrecking during qualifying at Kansas last week and starting from the
rear of the field in a backup car, Gordon thought initially that the
pole at Richmond might be an
appropriate reward for his issues, but he conceded the honor to
Kenseth.
“I was
thinking how much I deserved to get the pole after starting 43rd last
week, but after his week, maybe he deserved it a little bit more,”
Gordon quipped.
Notes:
What are the odds? With qualifying order determined by blind draw, the
Stewart-Haas Racing
Chevrolets of Tony Stewart, Ryan Newman and Danica Patrick were the
first three cars on the grid for time trials. The Richard Petty
Motorsports Fords of Aric Almirola and Marcos Ambrose followed in
positions four and five… AJ Allmendinger, fresh from the IndyCar
event at Long Beach, Calif., qualified 24th in his return to Cup racing
in James Finch’s No. 51 Chevrolet… As part of the penalty for the
illegal connecting rod, Kenseth was stripped of his eligibility in the
2014 season-opening Sprint Unlimited exhibition
race at Daytona for pole winners. He regained it with the pole run at
Richmond.
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