Denny Hamlin wins Martinsville Coors Light pole with track-record lap
Oct. 25, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
MARTINSVILLE, Va.—It was an afternoon of few surprises.
Martinsville
Speedway’s two most prolific NASCAR Sprint Cup Series winners in the
past seven years will start 1-2 in Sunday’s Goody’s Headache Relief Shot
500 at the .526-mile
short track.
Denny
Hamlin won the Coors Light pole for the seventh race in the Chase for
the NASCAR Sprint Cup, turning a track-record lap in 19.013 seconds
(99.595 mph). Hamlin, who has
four Martinsville victories, will start beside second-place qualifier
Jimmie Johnson (99.344 mph), who has eight Martinsville wins to his
credit, most among active drivers.
Johnson,
the series leader, will start in close proximity to all three Joe Gibbs
Racing drivers, including his closest pursuer for the Cup title, Matt
Kenseth (four points
back), who qualified fourth at 99.183 mph. Kyle Busch will start third,
having matched Johnson’s speed to the thousandth of a second and losing
a tiebreaker based on owner points.
The
Coors Light pole award was Hamlin’s fifth of the 2013, a personal best
for a single season, the 17th of his career and his third at
Martinsville.
Having
missed four races because of a fractured vertebra, Hamlin isn’t part of
the Chase, but he said Friday that he might be able to goad Johnson into
overtaxing his equipment
by setting a torrid pace from the outset.
“I
could make his life tougher in the sense of setting a pace that he has
to chase or something like that,” Hamlin said. “If we can get our car
pretty good in race trim, I
think that you could force someone to push the envelope.
“Obviously,
he’s won many championships—he knows how to win ‘em. He’s finished
second to me here before, but yet won the championship, so he knows what
he’s doing. I think
he probably won’t let me goad him into doing something that he wouldn’t
normally do—he’s too good for that—but, obviously, with my teammates
right there on him, they’ll probably be putting a lot of pressure on him
to set a fast pace.”
For his part, Johnson says he’s not nervous with the three Gibbs car surrounding him, even though Busch suggested he should be.
“I wasn’t until Kyle got so excited,” Johnson quipped.
Kevin
Harvick, who is tied with Busch for third in the Chase standings, 26
points behind Johnson, earned the 10th starting spot. Jeff Gordon, fifth
in points, was one spot
better, as all five of the top championship contenders qualified in the
top 10.
Danica
Patrick qualified 41st in a backup car after wrecking in Turns 1 and 2
early in Friday’s opening practice. Twenty minutes after Patrick hit the
wall, boyfriend and fellow
rookie-of-the-year contender Ricky Stenhouse Jr. crashed at nearly the
same spot.
After
the accident, which one writer called a “sympathy wreck,” Stenhouse’s
crew repaired the damage to the No. 17 Ford, which qualified 20th.
The
track qualifying record was the 18th set this year in the NASCAR Sprint
Cup Series. All told, 18 drivers bettered the previous mark of 99.244
mph set by Johnson on April
5.
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