Kurt Busch wins Darlington pole with a track-record run
May 10, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DARLINGTON, S.C.—High speeds seem to suit Kurt Busch.
A day
after driving an IndyCar at 218 mph during rookie orientation at
Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Kurt Busch put his No. 78 Furniture Row
Chevrolet SS on the pole for Saturday
night's Bojangles' Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway—and he did so in
track-record fashion.
Busch
toured the Lady in Black in 27.032 seconds (181.918 mph) in Friday's
time trials to win the 16th NASCAR Sprint Cup Series pole of his career,
his second at Darlington
and his first since 2011 at Michigan. Busch broke the former track
record of 181.250 mph (27.131 mph) set by Kasey Kahne in 2011.
Series
leader Jimmie Johnson will line up on the outside of the front row after
a lap at 180.974 mph (27.173 mph). Kurt's brother Kyle Busch qualified
third at 180.920 mph.
Kahne qualified fourth Friday at 180.741 mph, followed by Martin Truex
Jr. at 180.284 mph.
"(It
was) real fast in (Turns) 1 and 2," Busch said of the money lap. "Maybe I
left a little on the table getting into 3. It didn't feel that fast,
and when it doesn't, that
means the car was stuck really well.
"That's
just a tribute to these Furniture Row guys. The confidence they had
coming here this weekend stems from a few years ago when they won here
with Regan Smith. All of
the changes we made in practice—all of them made sense… The car's been
feeling pretty good."
Kahne
was the 10th driver to make a qualifying run, and he held the top spot
until Johnson, 26th out, knocked him off the provisional pole. Johnson
stayed there until Busch
smashed Kahne's former track record by .099 seconds.
Busch
won the first pole of his career at Darlington in 2001—almost by
accident, as he tells it today. Busch also was part of the historic
finish in 2003 where he raced side
by side with Ricky Craven and was second to the stripe by .002 seconds.
"When I
first came here as a rookie, you hear all of the Darlington urban
legend about how tough this place is, how it was going to chew you up
and spit you out, how you have
to respect it," Busch said. "I was like, ‘Yeah, whatever, I've got
this.'
"There
were even jokes about how you were supposed to hold it wide open off
Turn 2. That's like a rookie hazing—if you try that, you're supposed to
wreck. I accidentally held
it open off 2 and got the pole. I got lucky that day. I beat Jeff
Gordon for the pole and, honestly, I never thought it was a pole-sitting
lap. It was because of my stupidity that I got it.
"It was
very sweet to get that first pole… Today is great, the 10-year
anniversary with Ricky Craven and the battle that we had. This gives me a
great shot to stay ahead of
the field and win by two thousandths of a second this time."
Note:
Carl Edwards and Dale Earnhardt Jr., second and third in the standings,
qualified 17th and 16th, respectively. ... Busch was 23 years, 29 days
old when he won the Darlington
pole in 2001, making him the youngest ever. ... Johnson will start from
a top-10 position for the seventh time in 11 races this season.
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