Matt Kenseth knocks former teammate Carl Edwards off Kansas Coors Light pole
Apr. 19, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
KANSAS CITY, Kan.—Matt Kenseth did no favors for old friends Friday at Kansas Speedway.
With a
track-record lap at 191.864 mph (28.145 seconds), Kenseth knocked former
Roush Fenway Racing teammate Carl Edwards off the provisional pole at
the 1.5-mile intermediate
track and held the top starting spot for Sunday's STP 400.
Edwards
watched in disbelief as Kenseth, the next-to-last driver to make a
qualifying attempt, bettered Edwards' time by .017 seconds to win his
first Coors Light pole award
in a Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota and the ninth of his career.
"I didn't think Matt would be a factor," Edwards said ruefully, "but he pulled that out somehow."
Sunoco
rookie Ricky Stenhouse Jr. (191.734 mph) qualified third, .002 seconds
off Edwards' time. Sam Hornish Jr. will start fourth after a lap at
191.401 mph. Kyle Busch qualified
fifth in a backup car after wrecking his primary JGR Camry in practice.
The top
four drivers broke Kasey Kahne's former track record of 191.360 (28.219
seconds), set in October 2012 in the first competition after Kansas
Speedway was repaved.
"You
know, I struggled through (Turns) 1 and 2 all day, and I tried something
really different there in qualifying," said Kenseth, who grazed the
wall during practice but didn't
sustain significant damage to his car. "I watched Ricky and a couple of
other guys get through there, and I kind of changed my approach to the
corner.
"I knew
I got through there pretty good, but I didn't know it was that good,
but, man, I didn't think I could do any better in 3 and 4. It felt
pretty good."
Jeff
Gordon's No. 24 Chevrolet SS slid sideways off Turn 2 and crashed into
the outside wall before he could complete his first qualifying lap. On
Sunday, Gordon will start
from the rear of the field in a backup car.
"I was committed," Gordon said, as he sat in the car after the spin. "Yep, I'm fine. Unfortunately the car is not."
After
climbing from the car, Gordon added, "You know what—I really meant what I
said about the commitment. I feel like (the crew) deserved a better lap
than what we put up
in practice. I think the car was better than that.
"It
felt real good coming through (Turns) 3 and 4 (on the warmup lap). I
wanted to get back to the gas early and hard down there to try to run
the lap times that some of these
other guys are running, but obviously it didn't stick."
In
Friday's practice session, Kyle Busch, last weekend's race winner at
Texas, flattened the right side of his No. 18 Toyota against the outside
wall. The team rolled out a
backup car but transferred the engine from the primary car into the
backup.
Accordingly,
because the brush with the wall occurred before qualifying, Busch will
keep the fifth starting spot he earned during time trials.
Notes:
Series leader Jimmie Johnson qualified 21st, and was the fastest of the
four Hendrick Motorsports drivers. ... In a session dominated by Toyota
and Ford, the fastest
four Chevrolet drivers were Ryan Newman (ninth), Paul Menard (12th),
Kurt Busch (13th) and Jamie McMurray (14th). ... Brian Vickers qualified
16th in his second race subbing for injured Denny Hamlin. ... Joe
Nemechek failed to make the 43-car field.
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